Ivy Forster

Ivy Forster (1907 – June 1997) was a politician from Jersey. During World War II she and her family sheltered Russian forced labourers brought to the islands by the Nazis, activity that resulted in her sister being killed in a concentration camp. After the war, Forster was elected to the States in 1948, becoming its first female member.

Ivy Forster
Member of the States
In office
1948–1954
ConstituencySt Helier
Personal details
Born1907
DiedJune 1997

Biography

Forster was born in 1907,[1] one of nine children of the seaman Vincent Le Druillenec.[2]

During World War II and the German occupation of the Channel Islands, both she and her sister Louisa sheltered Russian forced labourers. Forster and her husband Arthur took in Grigori Koslov in December 1942, with Koslov living in their attic. In 1944 a letter informing the Germans about Louisa sheltering another Russian, Feodor Buryi, was intercepted. Although Buryi was moved to Ivy's house, the Geheime Feldpolizei found evidence of his stay at Louisa's home. Louisa was arrested on 25 May and Ivy a week later, by which time Buryi had moved on. Their brother Harold was later arrested as he had been seen visiting Louisa. All three were convicted; Louisa and Harold were initially jailed in France, before being sent to concentration camps; Louisa died in Ravensbrück concentration camp,[3] while Harold was a survivor of Bergen-Belsen.[4] Ivy was spared deportation due to being given an exemption on health grounds after a doctor pretended that she was suffering from tuberculosis and instead served her prison sentence in Jersey.[3] Koslov and Buryi both survived the war.[2] The events were later made into a film, Another Mother's Son, released in 2017.

In 1948 she contested elections to the States in the St Helier constituency and became the first woman elected to the island's legislature.[5] She was re-elected in 1951, but lost her seat in 1954.[5] She died in June 1997 at the age of 90.[5] After her death she was named as one of the 29 British Heroes of the Holocaust.[6]

gollark: ... is it j8st *not reminding*, now?
gollark: --remind 70m ApioTest 70m
gollark: --remind 50m ApioTest 50m
gollark: --remind 4m ApioTest 4m
gollark: --remind 2m ApioTest 2m

References

  1. Lyn Smith (2013) Heroes of the Holocaust: Ordinary Britons who Risked Their Lives to Make a Difference p103
  2. Paul Sanders (2004) The ultimate sacrifice: The Jersey islanders s who died in German prisons and concentration camps during the Occupation 1940–1945, pp65–71
  3. Louisa Mary Gould née Le Druillenec Frank Falla Archive
  4. Harold Osmond Le Druillenec Frank Falla Archive
  5. Prominent women States of Jersey
  6. Courage of four Island heroes Jersey Evening Post
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