Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T22:11:42.988Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Espionage in Africa: the Case of the Duchess

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Robert Pearce
Affiliation:
St Martin's College, Lancaster

Extract

The effects of the Second World War on British colonial Africa were far-reaching and unexpected. Colonial governments, hitherto concerned with establishing and preserving law and order, with administration, the collection of taxation, and with slow economic development, had perforce to divert their energies into more varied and unorthodox channels. Troops were recruited from the colonies and in addition local Home Guards were formed. African colonies acquired a new strategic importance and became the scene for new intelligence and counter-espionage activities: this was especially so after the French government signed the armistice with Germany on 22 June 1940. On the following day the British government promised that if French overseas territories continued the war against the Nazis Britain would guarantee their integrity and economic stability, as well as providing funds to pay the salaries and pensions of French colonial officials. The governor of Nigeria, Sir Bernard Bourdillon, did much to encourage the rallitmcnt of neighbouring Vichy colonies to the Free French cause of General de Gaulle. It was part of French propaganda to exaggerate British involvement in the French colonies and to paint de Gaulle as simply a tool of British imperialism; and it was part of Britain's propaganda to minimize her own role and to stress that the British were simply supporting the initiatives of the Free French. As a result we have not yet been presented with a balanced and scholarly assessment of the contribution which the British in Nigeria made to the ralliement of French Equatorial Africa and the Cameroons in August 1940.

Type
Communications
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 See Pearce, R. D., The turning point in Africa: British colonial policy, 1938–48 (London, 1982).Google Scholar

2 Bell, Philip M. H., A certain eventuality: Britain and the fall of France (London, 1974), p. 171.Google Scholar

3 See Bell, A certain eventuality; Brian, Weinstein, Eboué (Oxford University Press, 1972)Google Scholar; Henry, Maule, Out of the sand (Odhams, 1966).Google Scholar

4 FO [Foreign Office Papers, Public Record Office] 371/24331/c 9557. Bourdillon to secretary of state, 6 Sept. 1940.

5 Greene, G., Ways of escape (Bodley Head, 1980), pp. 93100Google Scholar; Muggeridge, M., Chronicles of wasted time, ii (Fontana, 1975), 130205.Google Scholar

6 White, S., Dan Bana (Cassell, 1966), pp. 170–1.Google Scholar

7 Ibid.

8 Alan, Burns, History of Nigeria, 4th edition (London, 1951), p. 106.Google Scholar

9 CO [Colonial Office papers, Public Record Office] 554/124/33556/1. Bourdillon to secretary of state, 22 Dec. 1939. Charles Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.

10 Gunther, J., Inside Africa (London, 1955), pp. 845–6. CO 554/127/33556/1. Michie to chief secretary, 21 Feb. 1941, 3 Mar. 1941.Google Scholar

11 Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.

12 CO 554/124/33556/1. C. C. Woolley to secretary of state, 7 June 1940.

13 Ibid. Bourdillon to secretary of state, 18 Nov. 1940. CO 554/139/33760. Richards to secretary of state, 23 Mar. 1944.

14 Nigerian Legislative Council debates: Bourdillon, 15 Mar. 1943.

15 CO 323/1800/13112/42. Governor's deputy to secretary of state, 27 Apr. 1940.

16 CO 554/124/33557/1. Bourdillon to secretary of state, 15 Aug. 1940. (In October the Spanish government, under pressure from Sir Samuel Hoare in Madrid, cancelled this instruction.)

17 FO 371/28257/z 8085. Bourdillon to secretary of state, 21 Sept.: 1941.

18 W. Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979.

19 C. Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.

20 Ibid.

21 C. Michie to the author, 27 Oct. 1979.

22 Ibid.

23 Foot, M. D. R., ‘Was SOE any good?’, Journal of Contemporary History, xvi, no. 1 (1981), 169. (He answers his own question with a resounding Yes.)Google Scholar

24 Calvocoressi, P. and Wint, G., Total war (Allen Lane, 1972), p. 275.Google Scholar

25 Foot, ‘Was SOE any good?’, p. 174.

26 Ibid. p. 172.

27 Typescript of interview with Sir Miles Clifford, Oxford Colonial Records Project, Rhodes House.

28 FO 371/24337/c 12930. Secretary of State to West African governors, 28 Nov. 1940.

29 Michie to the author, 27 Oct. 1979.

30 Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979.

31 Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.

32 Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979. Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.

33 Memoirs, p. 109 (unpublished). I am grateful to Sir Rex Niven for access.

34 ‘J.E.A.’, Geoffrey: Major Geoffrey Appleyard, DSO, MC and Bar, MA, being the story of ‘Apple’ of the Commandos and Special Air Service Regiment (London, 1946), pp. 71–8Google Scholar. See also Bickham, Sweet-Escott, Baker Street irregular (London, 1965): ‘Operation Postmaster’ is mentioned, p. 59, though an incorrect date is given.Google Scholar

35 Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979, 27 Oct. 1979; Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979. I am grateful for the help given by these two men. National Archives, Ibadan: CSO [Chief Secretary's Office] 26/38126/s. 1/T: see especially ‘Operation Duchess’ by Thomas Coker. Thanks are due to the British Academy for providing a research grant which enabled me to spend several months in Nigeria.

36 Sweet-Escott, Baker Street irregular, p. 59.

37 R. H. Wright (former private secretary to Bourdillon) to the author, 8 Apr. 1979.

38 ‘J.E.A.’, Geoffrey, p. 73.

39 Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979.

40 ‘J.E.A.’, Geoffrey, p. 74.

41 CSO 26/38126/s.1/T. ‘Operation Duchess’ by Coker: log entry for 14 Jan. 1942.

42 Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979.

43 London Gazette, 10 Oct. 1944: the awards for the civilians were announced at this time but were antedated to 4 Dec. 1942. For the military see ‘J.E.A.’, Geoffrey, p. 109, and London Gazette, 28 July 1942.

44 CSO 26/38126/s.1/T. Coker to chief secretary, 20 May 1946; I. G. MacGregor to chief secretary, 27 Apr. 1948.

45 Ibid. Richards to secretary of state, 20 June 1947.

46 Sweet-Escott, Baker Street irregular, p. 59.

47 Newington to the author, 9 Oct. 1979; Michie to the author, 19 Sept. 1979.