André Grandclément

André Grandclément (1909–1944) was a leader in the French resistance during the Second World War, who became a double agent.

Early life

André Marie Hubert Grandclément was born in Rochefort on 28 July 1909, the son of Admiral Raoul Gaston Grandclément[1] and Amelie de Barole. He was educated in Paris, Beirut, and Tunis. He joined the army in 1928, and married for the second time in 1929. After suffering a serious fall from a horse in 1934 he left the army and became an insurance broker in Bordeaux.

Wartime activities

In 1941 he founded a resistance network in the Bordeaux area. After joining the Civil and Military Organization in 1942, he became its head in Aquitaine and, with the help of the British Special Operations Executive, he strongly developed his regional network, arming and training several thousand agents, and setting up an escape route and a radio link with London.

After Claude de Baissac, organiser of the Special Operations Executive SCIENTIST network was informed by France Antelme of the existence of the very strong resistance organisation in Bordeaux led by Granclément, which was eager to receive weapons and equipment, he made contact with Granclément and by mid-1943 the number of weapons drops was estimated at 150, equipping 42,000 potential fighters.[2][3]

When de Baissac was flown to Britain in July 1943, SCIENTIST's wireless operator Roger Landes took control of the network just as a Gestapo crackdown led to many arrests, including Granclément's wife.[4] Fearing for his wife's life, and suspicious of communist influence within the Maquis, the Right-wing André Granclément agreed to help the Germans, and the number of arrests increased and the SCIENTIST network began to collapse. Landes had long considered Granclément to be a security risk but agreed to meet him, the Germans having let Granclément attend the meeting, during which he explained his intentions to expose dozens of arms dumps which would destroy many months work. Landes drew his pistol but hesitated to shoot Grandclément in cold blood and let him go.[5] It proved to be a costly error of judgement as two months later Grandclément's actions had crippled SCIENTIST, and led to the capture and execution of the circuit's arms instructor, Victor Hayes.[5] Landes was forced to flee, and was then recalled to London, leaving on 1 November 1943.[6] In London he was suspected of being a double agent, but his name was cleared and he returned to Bordeaux in March 1944 as organiser of the ACTOR network, a new circuit tasked with making contact with surviving Resistance groups in the area and coordinating sabotage to support the D-Day landings.[5]

In July 1944 Grandclément and his wife, Lucette, were captured by Resistance forces near Bordeaux. Having let Grandclément walk away in September 1943, Landes gave the order for his execution.[5] Grandclément and his wife were told that they were to be flown to England to argue their case, and were taken to the supposed landing site. Once there, Landes told Grandclément that he would have to be separated from his wife for security reasons, and then shot Grandclément's wife, while Grandclément was executed by one of Landes's men.[5]

Although Landes learned after the war that Lucette Grandclément was opposed to her husband's actions, he later explained that he had concluded that he could not let her go, given the risk she presented to his group.

gollark: <@301477111229841410> I have a webserver which does other things, and the memory usage is very very low. So is CPU. I don't get much traffic.
gollark: Browser extensions are generally autoupdated, so they probably *could* release a malicious version which steals them and get a bunch before anyone notices.
gollark: I would be surprised if it could actually run an entirely different language to the one it's designed for. Technically you could maybe run a Python interpreter written in JS, but that would be difficult and hilariously inefficient.
gollark: Obviously your password is decrypted at some point by a password manager. I'm not sure how you'd expect it to work.
gollark: They can still stick there to dissuade people even if they aren't actually binding.

References

Further reading

  • MRD Foot, SOE in France an account of the work of the British Special Operations Executive in France, 1940–1944, HMSO, London, 1966.
  • Paddy Ashdown, Game of Spies : the Secret Agent, the Traitor and the Nazi, Bordeaux 1942–1944, HarperCollins Publishers, 2016, p. 376.
  • René Terrisse, Grandclément, traître ou bouc-émissaire ? (Grandclément, traitor or scapegoat?), Aubéron, 1996, 326 p. ISBN 9782908650419
  • Patrice Miannay, Dictionary of double agents in the Resistance, Le cherche-midi, 2005. ISBN 2-74910-456-4, "Granclément, André", p. 146-148.
  • Pierre Montagnon, The Maquis of the Liberation: 1942–1944, Pygmalion, 2000, 430 p. ISBN 9782756409054. "The Grandclément Affair"
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.