American citizen, Varian Fry, opens the Centre Americain de Secours (American Center for Relief) in the port city of Marseille in the Vichy-government controlled unoccupied zone.
It will establish an escape network that goes on to save an estimated 2,000 Jewish and ant-Nazi refugees, many of whom were artists and intellectuals.
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Fry was born in New York City on 15 October 1907 and by the age of nine, already showed a humanitarian streak when he held a fund raiser for the American Red Cross during World War One.
He went on to study at Harvard and whilst there, was introduced to Eileen Avery Hughes, his senior by seven years and editor of the Atlantic Monthly (now The Atlantic) who he married in 1931.
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Fry's work as a journalist took him to Berlin in 1935 and it was there that he saw first-hand how German Jews were being increasingly persecuted. He would later state that "I could not remain idle as long as I had any chances at all of saving even a few of its intended victims."
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In New York on 25 June 1940 (the day on which France ceased hostilities with Italy and the official capitulation to Axis forces), a meeting was held at the Hotel Commodore and resulted in the founding of the Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC) supported by hundreds of prominent people such as Eleanor Roosevelt.
Fry later volunteered to travel to Marseille to establish what conditions were like for refugees, how people at risk from the Nazis could be helped to escape to Portugal or Morocco, and find people there who could help with the ERC.
He was due to go for three weeks, he would stay for thirteen months.
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Arriving in Marseille with 3,000 dollars strapped to his leg and a list of people to help, he rented an office and set to work, soon joined by fellow Americans like Chicago heiress Mary Jayne Gold, whose wealth helped fund Fry's work.
With Vichy France preparing to deport German refugees back to their home country, there was no time to lose.
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Fry soon had dozens of people queuing outside his office and he was able to secure US visas with the help of Hiram Bingham IV, the American Vice Consul in Marseille, despite the opposition to the ERC's work from Secretary of State Cordell Hull.
Mexican diplomat Gilberto Bosques Saldívar also helped secure visas, securing passage on ships still sailing from the port.
An escape line was run from a rented villa, helping people cross into Spain and then to Portugal.
On 24 March 1941, 222 people escaped on a passenger ship bound for Martinique.
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Fry was expelled by the Vichy France authorities after thirteen months flowting the law in front of their noses. The ERC would continue for a few more months, saving a few hundred more people before it closed down.
He returned to New York and the role he played in saving so many was largely forgotten.
He died in 1967.
In 1994, Yad Vashem attributed Fry with the honour of Righteous Among the Nations.
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To mention only a handful of the refugees that Fry and his American and French colleagues saved.
German born Hannah Arendt, historian and philospher.
French surrealist and poet, André Breton.
German novelist and playright, Lion Feuchtwanger.
Austrian writer and actor Hertha Ernestine Pauli.
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In the early hours of 16 July 1942, eleven French and British SOE agents, held in a French prison camp at Mauzac in the Dordogne, make a successful break for freedom. 1/8
A wave of arrests in October 1941 in the non-occupied zone saw many SOE agents fall into the hands of the Vichy police. Among them was Georges Bégué, the first SOE F Section agent to be parachuted into France in May 1941. 2/8
After spells in prisons in Marseille, Limoges and Périgueux, the SOE agents were transferred to Mauzac in March 42. Gaby Pierre-Bloch, whose husband Jean was at Mauzac, and Virginia Hall, an American working for the SOE, tried to hatch plans for an escape, but had thus far failed. 3/8
29 June 1940 - Hermann in Paris and the Rose thorn in his side...
It has now been two weeks since the Germans marched into Paris and people are slowly becoming accustomed to the sight of German troops enjoying a drink at the terrace cafés.
One of Paris' most famous restaurants, sees Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring and his entourage arrive.
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Göring is in Paris to see what art he can loot, as he has already done in Amsterdam.
The French museums had already began evacuating some their most precious works, and in one, a French woman would become a particular thorn in the side of the Nazi plunderers. 2/7
When the Nazi jackboots sounded on the Champs Elysées, 41-year old Rose Valland was working as a volunteer at the Musée Jeu de Paume, Place de la Concorde where she had organised exhibitions on foreign contemporary art. 3/7
21 June 1940
Adolf Hitler flies in to Compiègne in northern France and is taken by car to a clearing in a nearby forest where, just 21 years and 7 months before, an armistice was signed to cease hostilities in a war that had seen so much death and destruction.
The clearing at Rethondes has been carefully prepared. SS troops line the road leading to the area where the railway carriage has been pulled out of its memorial building. A Nazi flag covers the Alsace-Lorraine memorial with its inscription
"TO THE HEROIC SOLDIERS OF FRANCE. DEFENDERS OF THE COUNTRY AND OF RIGHT. GLORIOUS LIBERATORS OF ALSACE-LORRAINE."
That of Maréchal Foch, is left uncovered, as if to witness the terrible defeat of France.
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Present at the clearing is American journalist and writer William L. Shirer. He types down what he sees. He is seen here (left) under a tree with the building that housed the carriage in the background.
"The time is now, I see by my notes, 3:18 PM in the forest of Compiègne. Hitler's personal standard is run up on a small post in the center of the circular opening in the woods. Also in the center is a great granite block which stands some three feet above the ground. Hitler, followed by the others, walks slowly over to it, steps up, and reads the inscription engraved in great high letters on that block. Many of you will remember the words of that inscription. The Führer slowly reads them, and the inscription says: "HERE ON THE ELEVENTH OF NOVEMBER 1918 SUCCUMBED THE CRIMINAL PRIDE OF THE GERMAN EMPIRE. VANQUISHED BY THE FREE PEOPLES WHICH IT TRIED TO ENSLAVE."
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Shirer continues, "It is now 3:23 PM and the German leaders stride over to the armistice car. This car, of course, was not standing on this spot yesterday. It was standing seventy-five yards down the rusty tracks on the shoulder of a tiny museum built to house it by an American citizen, Mr. Arthur Henry Fleming of Pasadena, California.
Yesterday the car was removed from the museum by German Army engineers and rolled back those seventy-five yards to this spot where it stood on the morning of November 11, 1918."
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German forces are now advancing towards the city of Lyon which has been declared an open city.
Général Olry, commanding the French Alpine army, sees the Lyon front as an essential lynchpin in the defence of the front line in the Alps that has been under attack from the Italians since 10 June.
Olry therefore orders units to the north and south of Lyon to fight to the end.
One such unit to do so in the village of Chasselay is the 25e Régiment de Tirailleurs Sénégalais, made up of colonia7l troops with a white officer cadre.
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The Tirailleurs put up a staunch fight, holding up the Germans for a day. On the 20th, the fight is over and the French officers tell their men to lay down their arms. The Germans are furious as Lyon had been declared an open city and they were not expecting resistance. 2/7
The Senegalese troops are separated and marched across fields and assembled in a meadow and then the massacre begins as they are gunned down by machine guns from tanks. A French captain tries to intervene and is shot in the leg. 3/7
Like every day at 9.15 pm French time, the opening notes of Beethoven's 5th, forming the Morse for V for Victory, sound across the airwaves of BBC's Radio Londres.
The speaker of the 'Ici Londres, , Franck Bauer, then reads out personal messages that are known to individual Resistance groups...
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BBC Radio Londres had begun using the message system back in September 1941 when SOE radio operator Georges Bégué sent back the first message of this type.
The idea was simple, at the start of the programme each evening, which brought general news from the Allied side of the war to people in occupied France, messages only known to specific groups or networks were read out in what were presented as personal messages.
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As preparations began for D-Day, hundreds of written messages had been sent out from London to all officially recognized groups several weeks before. Then, on 1 June, SOE and BCRA run networks received via Radio Londres, 146 and 15 alert messages respectively.
Whilst these messages did not alert them specifically to an impending invasion (although most must have guessed it), the alert messages meant that imminent action in terms of specific tasks, such as sabotage, would be called upon in the next seven days.
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After suffering heavy losses crossing the Aire canal in the Béthune sector. SS Totenkopf troops face a rearguard action by men of the 2nd Royal Norfolk Regiment, 1st Royal Scots and the 8th Lancashire Fusiliers, along a defensive line in the hamlets of Riez du Vinage, Le Cornet Malo and Le Paradis.
Men of the Royal Norfolks hold out in a farmhouse and fight until out of ammunition before surrendering to SS troops of the Totenkopf division.... they are gathered and led down the road.....
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99 prisoners of war are lined up against a barn wall a little further down the road. In the meadow facing them are machine guns.
An order is barked out by the unit's commander, Fritz Knöchlein and the guns open up.
Only two men will survive, Privates William O'Callaghan and Albert Pooley, who play dead under the bodies of their comrades.
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Bill O'Callaghan
"As I was turning into the gateway, I noticed a machine gun in front of us which appeared to be mounted in front of what I thought looked like a farm lavatory. After having passed through the gateway the gun was then on my right. The whole column continued to march forward along the side of the house, with their hands still behind their heads, when suddenly firing started. The men started falling from the front of the column. When I saw the men falling I threw myself forward and fell into a slight depression in the ground, and in falling stretched my arms out before me, and sustained a slight flesh wound in the left arm.
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