Oliver Churchill
William Oliver Churchill | |
---|---|
Born |
1914 Stockholm, Sweden |
Died |
1997 (aged 82–83)
|
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/branch | British Army |
Years of service | 1939–1945 |
Rank | Major |
Service number | 96284 |
Unit |
The Worcestershire Regiment Special Operations Executive |
Battles/wars | Second World War |
Awards |
Distinguished Service Order Military Cross |
William Oliver Churchill DSO, MC (1914–1997) was a Special Operations Executive (SOE) officer during the Second World War. Shortly after the Italians had switched allegiance to the Allies in September 1943, he was parachuted into German occupied Corfu to inform the Italian commander that the Allies would support him, and in August 1944 was parachuted into northern Italy behind German lines to act as British Liaison Officer with the partisan leaders.
He was the younger brother of Walter Churchill and Peter Churchill.
Early life
His father was William Algernon Churchill (1865–1947), a British Consul who served in Mozambique, Amsterdam, Pará in Brazil, Stockholm, Milan, Palermo, and Algiers. His father was also an art connoisseur, and author of what is still the standard reference work on early European paper and papermaking, Watermarks in Paper.[1] His mother was Violet (née Myers).
Oliver was born in Stockholm in 1914 and educated at Stowe School and Cambridge University where he read Modern Languages at King's College, after which he studied architecture at Cambridge before his studies were interrupted by the war.[2]
Wartime activities
As war became imminent, Churchill joined the Territorial Army and was soon called up to The Worcestershire Regiment.[3] Oliver, like his brother Peter, joined the Special Operations Executive (SOE)[4] and in December 1941 was posted to Malta and the Middle East to train Italian partisans and later involved in clandestine, behind-the-lines work in Greece and Italy. His nom de guerre was Anthony Peters.[2]
Corfu
Operation Acheron In early September 1943 the Italian Armed Forces surrendered and transferred their allegiance from the Axis Powers to the Allies. General Eisenhower considered Corfu of importance to the Allies in the Balkan campaign and decided to immediately send a small force to reinforce the Italian troops against German invasion. Churchill and a radio operator, Signalman Harrison, were briefed to contact the Italian commander in Corfu and inform him of the allies intention to reinforce the Italians and to ensure the Italian resistance continued until the Allied troops arrived. Churchill was briefed ‘Little was known of the situation in Corfu. Fighting was to be expected anywhere. We might be fired on by either or both sides.’[5]
On 21 September 1943, two weeks after transfer of allegiance of the Italian Armed Forces to the Allies, and a week after Germany invaded Corfu, Churchill and Signalman Harrison were flown from Cairo and parachuted into Corfu by night in Operation Acheron[5][6] and made contact with the Italian commander, Colonel Lusignani. Unfortunately the radio equipment was damaged by the parachute drop making contact with SOE Headquarters in Cairo difficult, during which time they had to take cover from German air raids. Radio contact was made initially but then the radio failed and further communication could not be made with Cairo for further instructions. On 25 September after discussions with Colonel Lusignani, who informed him the Germans had broken through their defences and were advancing on the town, and that the Italian forces would have to surrender, Churchill decided to exfiltrate himself and the radio operator from the island. With the Germans approaching, they spent several days dressed in peasant clothing evading capture before he could arrange their escape by sea.[5] The Italians were taken prisoner of war and Colonel Lusignani and other Italian officers were executed.[6]
It took several days before an unreliable motorboat skippered by a septuagenarian could be made seaworthy and its departure from Palaiokastritsa was then delayed for two days by strong winds and currents. With a crew of three who Churchill described as "one dotard, one drunkard and the father of a thief"[5] and 11 Italian soldier and sailor escapees who joined the boat, he and Harrison were taken by night to the islands of Mathraki, Ereikoussa and Fanos, before making an overnight crossing of the Adriatic towards the heel of Italy. The wind changed direction during the night and blew them off course, passing to the west the heel of Italy into the Bay of Taranto. Churchill described "By first light we saw land. But for one of the Italian sailors from Corfu, the captain would have turned about. He did not recognise the coast, and thought we had sailed in a circle and were off Albania. The captain was too bleary-eyed to read the compass and the boson helpless with the sails. All this the sailor saw to, as well as keeping the mechanic at the pumps. Our sailor saw that we were in the Bay of Taranto. The drift had carried us five hours off our course."[5] The boat was turned round and sailed around the peninsula to land at Otranto. He was then transferred to a ship and taken to Brindisi where he was debriefed by Captain De Haan at the Italian SOE base at the Allied Military Mission, before being instructed by Cmdr Holdsworth, Commander of No 1 Special Force, to return to base at SOE Headquarters in Cairo.[5]
Italy
Operation NUNNERY II On 8 July 1944 Churchill was given Operation Instructions from G.S.O II Italian Section to parachute into Val d’Aosta, in Northern Italy 50 miles (80 kilometres) north of Turin, during July moon in Operation NUNNERY II to establish a British Liaison Mission with the local H.Q.[2] There is no record in the National Archives that this operation actually took place.
Operation Floodlight/Fairway In August 1944 Churchill was parachuted by night into German occupied Northern Italy on the steep mountainside above Ranzanico on the edge of Lago di Endine, north east of Bergamo, in Operation Floodlight/Fairway[7] with General Cadorna, Commander of the Partisan Movement in Northern Italy, to act as head of British liaison mission to the command of the Partisan Movement in Northern Italy, where he spent several months behind enemy lines.
Incorrect details of their landing ground had been given, possibly deliberately by a local faction, resulting in them arriving in the wrong location and all of the stores, apart from the wireless transmitters, but including his personal kit and 1 million lire which had been issued to him for the operation, were taken by the locals. The group of parachutists comprising Churchill, General Cadorna, Augusto De Laurentis (Liaison Officer to Milan Committee), and Sergeant Nicola Delle Monache (Wireless Operator), had great difficulty finding the proper reception committee and a few hours after reaching the safe house found their cover was blown and the SS had burnt down the safe house, and so they had to leave in great haste to avoid an SS search party which had been sent to look for them.[7] After this, they were out of radio contact for about 20 hours.
They then walked carrying their parachutes to the Fiamme Verdi headquarters in Cividate Camuno, which proved to be an eight-hour march away. Churchill had twisted his ankle during the parachute landing on the steep terrain and took shelter in a farmhouse in Esine near Cividate Camuno for a few days to recuperate before climbing up a steep mountain path to a remote farm building above Esine, which was unlikely to be discovered by German patrols. De Laurentis went to Milan almost at once in order to reconnoitre, and about a fortnight later the ground was prepared sufficiently for General Cadorna to go to Milan also, and this was successfully arranged with the help of the Franchi organisation. Churchill remained with the Fiamme Verdi for about four weeks as it was considered unsafe for him to go too, but became convinced that nothing would be achieved unless he also went to Milan, and wrote to see whether this could be arranged. He received a reply from General Cadorna saying that under no circumstances should he go as conditions were far too difficult and dangerous, and suggested that if he went, he would probably last only a few hours. In the same post he received a letter from Edgardo Sogno saying that everything had been prepared for him to go to Milan and that he should come at once. Churchill decided to accept Sogno’s invitation and went on 14 September. During first seven days in Milan he had to change houses six times, though not entirely due to security reasons.[7]
The partisan leaders he worked with included:
- Alfredo Pizzoni who was chairman of the CLNAI (Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale – High Committee for National Liberation Italy) since its establishment until the end of the war; who on 7 December 1944 with Giancarlo Pajetta, Ferruccio Parri and Edgardo Sogno was a signatory of an agreement with the Allies represented by General Henry Maitland Wilson, SACMED (Supreme Allied Commander for the Mediterranean) which, in addition to recognising the role played by the CLNAI resistance, financed their guerrilla warfare with a loan of 160 million lire a month. The agreement, to cooperate fully with the Allies and for the subordination of the military CLNAI allied forces, ensured the survival of the Italian Resistance and its success more from a political than a military point of view.[8]
- Lionello Levi Sandri leader of the Fiamme Verdi partisan brigade in Brescia who went on to become a European Commissioner.
- Edgardo Sogno who created the Organizzazione Franchi partisan group which helped hundreds of Italian Jews and others seek safe haven in Switzerland and who represented the Italian Liberal Party at the CLNAI.
- Luigi Longo, a communist politician who went on to become secretary of the Italian Communist Party.
- Ferruccio Parri leader the Action Party (Partito d'Azione) and president of the CLN (Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale), who went on to become Prime Minister of Italy in 1945.
Churchill was based in Milan with the partisans of different factions, and made trips to Biella to meet Major Alistair MacDonald, leader of the Cherokee Mission[9] and Turin to meet other partisan leaders, narrowly missing capture on some of these visits. In mid-November he received an insider tip from the police advising him that his position was becoming precarious and he should leave as soon as possible for his own safety[8] and on 2 December he took the train to Como using the alias of Giulio Kravic, an Italian Slovene, as a convenient method of explaining his foreign accent, and then crossed the frontier over the mountains on foot and reported to the Swiss authorities using the alias Paolo Brichetto, one of the names agreed on between the Swiss and the Franchi organisation. After meetings with SOE representatives John Birkbeck in Lugano and Jock McCaffery in Berne, he returned to the SOE Italy base in Monopoli, where he remained until being recalled to the UK on 27 January 1945 to report on recent operations and be awarded the DSO.[7] He went back to Italy on 26 March and, after the surrender of German forces in Italy on 2 May, finally returned to the UK on 6 May.
This officer was parachuted into N. Italy on 12 Aug 44 to act as head of the British Liaison Mission to the command of the Partisan Movement in Northern Italy. Since this date he has been Chief Liaison Officer to the C.L.N.A.I and to the Partisan Central Command, both tasks of great responsibility. During the entire period under review he has shown outstanding ability, considerable initiative, and has at all times been reliable in his information. Captain Churchill is head of our most important mission.— Lieutenant-Colonel R T Hewitt, Commanding Officer of the Allied No 1 Special Force in the Italian Campaign[2]
Post-war
After the war he married Ruth Briggs, who was a key member of the British intelligence code-breaking team[10][11] at Bletchley Park during the war.
They moved back to Cambridge where Oliver practiced as an architect. He died in Cambridge in 1997.
Oliver's eldest son, Toby, is a leading disabled entrepreneur in the UK who founded a company manufacturing communication aids for people who cannot speak.
References
- ↑ Watermarks in Paper
- 1 2 3 4 SOE Personal File at National Archives
- ↑ British Army Officers 1939–1945
- ↑ List of SOE agents
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Report on Operation Acheron at the National Archives
- 1 2 Corfu History 1943 – 33 Mountain Infantry Division Acqui
- 1 2 3 4 Report on Operation Floodlight/Fairway at the National Archives
- 1 2 Mission Accomplished : SOE and Italy 1943–1945, David Stafford, The Bodley Head ISBN 978-1-84792-065-2
- ↑ Report on Operation Cherokee at the National Archives
- ↑ Codebreakers – The inside story of Bletchley Park, edited by F. H. Hinsley and Alan Stripp, Oxford University Press
- ↑ Bletchley Park Roll of Honour
Bibliography
- La neve cade sui monti – Dal diario di un ribelle Vitale (Tani) Bonettini – Edizioni Valgrigna 1975 / Edizioni Quetti – 1989
- C1 "SILVIO" Vallecamonica – Nella Resistenza Bresciana Giulio Mazzon – Edizioni Arti Grafiche Jasillo – Novembre 1997
- Dizionario della Resistenza Bresciana – A-M – First volume of two. Rolando Anni – Tipografia Camuna S.p.a – ISBN 978-88-372-2279-6
- Una vita per la libertà e la giustizia Lionello Levi Sandri – Istitito storico della Resistenza Bresciana
External links
- Special Forces Roll of Honour
- Secondment to Operation Floodlight (see footnote)