André Hue
André Hunter Alfred Hue (7 December 1923 – 11 January 2005) was an Anglo-French businessman, soldier and spy best remembered for his work as an operative with the Special Operations Executive (SOE) in France and Burma during World War II.
Early life
Hue was born in Swansea, Wales to a French father and Welsh mother.[1] Hue's father, also named André, was a World War I veteran who had been badly wounded, having taken a bullet in his head, which remained there until his early death in 1938. The elder Hue served as an officer in the French merchant marine who worked on a ship taking coal from Swansea to La Havre while his wife Caroline Hunter did not speak French, but insisted their children be brought up knowing French. Fluent in both English and French, Hue grew up in Le Havre.[1] Hue's father died when he was young and he was working as a sailor in the French merchant marine by 1939.[1]
In the Resistance
On 17 June 1940, the SS Champlain, the ship Hue was working on as a purser struck a mine off La Rochelle and sank, forcing Hue who was taking a shower at the time to swim ashore naked.[1] Without a family in France, Hue ended up working as a railroad clerk in the town of Guer in Brittany, where he was recruited into the French resistance by François Vallée of the SOE "Parson" circuit.[1] Hue provided information about the railroad time tables so the Royal Air Force could target trains carrying German troops and supplies.[1] Afterwards, Hue become involved in smuggling Allied airmen shot down over France and in February 1944 he crossed the English Channel to Britain, so he could join the SOE.[1] Hue's training reports called him "a very active, energetic, enthusiastic man with a reasonably stable personality, although inclined to excitement at times".[2] After passing courses that taught him combat, sabotage and parachuting, Hue parachuted into France on the night of 5 June 1944 together with a number of men from the French Special Air Service (SAS) regiment.[1] The 3rd and 4th Battalions of the SAS in 1944 were all French. Much to his surprise, Hue found himself having to dodge Cossacks that were hunting for him.[3] The Cossacks were from the Ostlegionen (Eastern Legions) of the Wehrmacht as Soviet POWs who joined the German Army were known.
As a SOE agent, Hue's tasks to ensure the delivery of supplies from the SOE to the marquis and to co-ordinate operations between the French SAS team and the resistance.[1] Hue who was attached to the Hillbilly circuit (network) in Britany later remembered that arranging supply drops to the resistance took up most of his time while attempting to evade the Wehrmacht, the SS and the Milice.[4] This was highly dangerous work, and Hue was frequently involved in fighting with the German forces, during which Hue showed great courage, resourcefulness, and an ability to keep calm.[1] The British historian Max Hastings in review of Hue's memoir The Next Moon wrote:
The Germans reacted with their usual energy, especially in Brittany where the SAS were relatively close to the fighting front. The civilian population suffered terribly, both in the fighting and from subsequent reprisals. Maquisards with Sten guns, even supported by a few paratroopers, were hopelessly outmatched by enemy forces with vehicles and heavy weapons. Hue and most of his comrades spent much of their time in France running away from the Germans, not because they were cowardly, but because this was the only realistic option. They had been thrown into an almighty mess.[2]
Hue's base was at farmhouse outside of Saint Marcel, where Hue had planes from Britain land during the night to bring in supplies.[5] Hue noted in his book The Next Moon that he feared the Milice much more than the Germans because the Milice being French could always notice anybody whose accent did not sound entirely French.[5] Hue wrote he been selected for this job because "The men they wanted to organise and coordinate this phase of the war had to be from that rare breed, Englishmen who spoke French as their primary language."[5] On one occasion, the Germans captured and shot 5 SAS men together with 17 French civilians while Hue was only 50 yards away and on another occasion, Hue was trapped in a barn which was set on fire by the Germans, and from which he managed to escape.[1] Unlike the SAS, Hue wore civilian clothes and had to be careful not to be seen talking to the SAS too much in public.[1]
On 18 June 1944, Hue's base at the farmhouse, which was defended by about 4, 000 Maquisards was attacked by the Germans.[5] Hue had the farmer, Pondard and his family escape into the forest first as they would have been executed for sheltering maquisards had they been captured.[5] Hue who was leading a maquis band in Brittany later recalled about the Battle of Saint Marcel as the firefight at a farmhouse is known:
Now every weapon that the enemy possessed was brought to bear on our front line in a cacophony of shots and explosions which could not drown an even more sinister noise: the occasional crack of a single bullet. A man within feet of me slumped to the ground with blood spurting two feet into the air from the side of his neck...We had anticipated an infantry assault-possibly backed up with light armour-but snipers, a threat we had not met before, were difficult to counter. Within minutes of the first casualty, another seven of our men lay dying within the farm complex: all had been shot from long range.[6]
As the snipers continued to cut down his men while he could hear the sound of panzers coming up in the distance, Hue ordered his men to retreat into the woods under the cover of darkness.[6] Hue was able to use his radio to call in a RAF airstrike on the German tanks, which disorganized the Wehrmacht enough so he and his men could escape into the forest.[5] Summarizing up the Battle of Saint Marcel, Hue wrote:
The majority of the younger men had never been in battle, and seeing their friends' brains and guts oozing on to the grass and mud made them sick in the head and stomach. Just as terrifying to the young Frenchmen was the sight of those who were wounded and who yet had to die without help. I was not surprised that so many had enough. I was perhaps astonished that the number of defectors were so low.[6]
In August 1944, Hue helped execute an operation where the SAS and the resistance took over most of the villages in Brittany to aid the advance of the Americans.[1] After his work in Brittany, Hue parachuted again, to the town of Nevers in Burgundy, which he again co-ordinated operations between the SOE and the resistance.[1] Hue was awarded a Distinguished Service Order (DSO) for his work in France.[1] In March 1945, Hue parachuted behind Japanese lines in Burma, where he organised supply drops from the SOE to anti-Japanese guerrillas and led attacks against Japanese forces.[1] When Hue landed in Burma, the Japanese attacked the landing zone, forcing Hue to spend 29 days in the jungle before he was able to join up with the resistance.[7] Hue in a report was very critical of SOE's security in Burma, writing the Japanese should never had been allowed to ambush the landing zone.[7]
After the war: spy and businessman
At the end of World War II, Hue held the rank of major in the British Army.[1] In January 1946, Hue was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour and awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French republic.[7] Hue served in the Palestine Mandate during the last years of British rule, and afterwards he served in Cyprus.[1] In 1954–55, he served as the British military attaché in Cambodia, during which time he met his future wife Maureen Taylor who worked in the British embassy in Phnom Penh as a secretary.[1] Cambodia had been a French protectorate, and the Khmer elite all spoke French while the British Army did not have many officers fluent in Khmer. In 1957, Hue married Taylor and had one daughter by her.[1] Hue worked for MI6, the British intelligence service in the Far East.[1] After leaving MI6 in 1967, Hue worked for the British-American Tobacco company in Paraguay, Senegal, and Malawi before having a successful career as a businessman in France.[1] In 1980, Hue moved to the town of Chichester in Sussex, where he was served as member of the town council.[1] Hue spent much of the 1990s writing his memoir The Next Moon with the writer and former Royal Marine Ewen Southby-Tailyour recounting his service with the SOE, which was published in 2004.[1] In his last years, Hue suffered from Alzheimer's disease, which killed him in 2005.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Foot, M.R.D (12 January 2005). "André Hue SOE agent who told his story in 'The Next Moon'". The Independent. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
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(help) - ^ a b Hastings, Max (9 February 2004). "Amateur, in the best sense". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
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(help) - ^ Hue, André & Southby-Tailyour, Ewen The Next Moon, London: Penguin, 2009 pages 162-168
- ^ Crowdy, Terry French Resistance Fighter France's Secret Army, London: Opsrey 2007 page 43.
- ^ a b c d e f Freer, Fiona (1 February 2016). "A great read, The Next Moon". Fiona Freer, Writer, Historian, Speaker. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
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(help) - ^ a b c Crowdy, Terry French Resistance Fighter France's Secret Army, London: Opsrey 2007 page 55.
- ^ a b c "Andre Hue - SOE". Army Rumour Service. 14 January 2005. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
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- 1923 births
- 2005 deaths
- British Special Operations Executive personnel
- French Special Operations Executive personnel
- People from Swansea
- Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
- Recipients of the Croix de Guerre (France)
- Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur
- French people of British descent
- French people of Welsh descent
- British people of French descent
- Secret Intelligence Service personnel
- French Resistance members