Our Secret WW2 (1939–1945)

Beyond the front lines, Britain waged a secret war of espionage, sabotage, and deception during WWII. This project captures the experiences of those involved in covert operations, including intelligence officers, codebreakers, and agents of the Special Operations Executive (SOE).

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An interview with

Henri Diacono

Henri Diacono was of Maltese parentage but born in Algiers. After SOE training at Thame...

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An interview with

Joan Taylor

Joan Taylor [nee Tapp] was an WTS FANY (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry) with the SOE....

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An interview with

Ruby Marchant

Ruby Marchant worked in the main house at Bletchely Park. Remarkably she only told her...

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An interview with

Marcel Jaurant-Singer

Marcel Jaurent Singer was a Wireless operator and resistance organiser in occupied France.

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An interview with

Doreen Page

In 1944, Doreen Page was studying German at London university. When her call up papers...

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An interview with

Yvonne Baseden

Yvonne was a WAAF and a FANY. She had Anglo-French parentage and was bi-lingual which...

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An interview with

Stan Hope

Stan Hope was an RAF evader on the Comète Line. After travelling through Belgium [with...

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An interview with

Arthur Brown

Sergeant Arthur Brown originally joined the Royal Artillery in 1943. He soon found that it...

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An interview with

Gordon Mellor

Gordon Mellor was an RAF Evader. Shot down over Belgium and, aided by members of...

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An interview with

Geoffrey Pidgeon

Geoffrey Pidgeon provides a remarkable interview of his account as a teenage ‘Techie’ for MI6. ...

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An interview with

Stanley David

Stanley David completed over 50 operations in the RAF as an Air Gunner between January...

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An interview with

Lise de Baissac

Lise Villameur (née de Baissac), was one of the first two female agents to be...

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About Our Secret WW2 (1939–1945)

During World War II, secrecy was essential. Britain’s intelligence agencies, including MI5, MI6, and the Special Operations Executive (SOE) were crucial in undermining enemy operations and supporting resistance efforts across occupied Europe. Their covert activities, from sabotage to codebreaking at Bletchley Park, were vital to the war effort but remained hidden for many years under the Official Secrets Act.

The Secret War project sheds light on these stories through a collection of 60 interviews conducted by Martyn Cox, alongside 10 newly recorded interviews with veterans who participated in Britain’s covert operations. The veterans, ranging from administrative staff to field agents operating in enemy-occupied Europe, offer a unique insight into the wartime efforts that remain largely hidden from public knowledge.

As well as being part of Legasee’s growing archive, the project’s interviews are preserved at the University of Sussex, ensuring that their stories can be shared with future generations.

In 2016, the project engaged with students from St Marylebone C of E School, providing them with an opportunity to learn about and contribute to preserving this critical part of history. The students gained first-hand experience with oral history techniques and played a vital role in making the veterans’ voices heard.

A temporary exhibition was launched, offering visitors a chance to explore the history of the SOE through the veterans’ own accounts. The success of the exhibition sparked an innovative idea to develop a walking tour app around London, highlighting key locations significant to the SOE’s work during the war.

The Secret War project was made possible by funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund, allowing us to preserve and share these invaluable personal histories.

Are you a teacher?

Download our Our Secret WW2 (1939–1945) teaching resource...

Educational Resources - Longdendale
An interview with

Joan Taylor

A WTS FANY who served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) transmitting messages to and from agents in occupied countries.

Joan Taylor, a member of the Women's Transport Service First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY), served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during World War II. Born in London, Joan's family relocated to Buckinghamshire and later to Surrey due to the war. At 19, Joan joined FANY, attracted by its unique reputation and diverse roles. She underwent training at Overthorpe Hall in Banbury, learning Morse code, coding, and other essential skills. Later, at Fawley Court and Thame, she honed her skills in wireless operation and coding, working with agents who were being trained for deployment in occupied countries. Joan's service took her to various locations, including Grendon Hall, where she worked as part of an operational team transmitting messages to and from agents in the field. She was later deployed to Massingham in North Africa, where she continued her signals work, primarily supporting missions in France and Italy. After Massingham, Joan was stationed in Bari and Siena, Italy, where she continued her signals work until the war's end. She reflects on her wartime service with pride, recognising the importance of her role in supporting the Allied effort.
Photo Gallery icon 7 Photos
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Marcel Jaurant-Singer

A wireless operator and resistance organiser in occupied France during the build up to the D-Day invasion

Marcel Jaurant-Singer joined the French Resistance in 1941. In 1942, he was sent across the Pyrenees and was transported – with the help of Allied operatives – to England, where he would be trained as a Special Operations Executive (SOE). Upon arrival in England, Marcel was sent to Commando training in Scotland, before returning to England to complete his wireless training at Thame park – he managed all this despite not speaking a word of English. In March 1944, Marcel was parachuted back into France where he quickly established an undercover network. Marcel goes on to recount his life as a wireless operator, outlining the cat and mouse game of avoiding detection by German troops – including the need to cycle up to 60km per day! Marcel’s contact with London in the build up to D-Day resulted in him taking charge of arming and training 350 men to prepare for the invasion. He talks in detail of how they used the existing infrastructure of secret caves and hills from WW1 to carry out these operations. Marcel’s interview ends with a brief discussion of his experience working alongside female SOE agents. This completes a fascinating insight into the structure of secret operations in occupied France and the development of French resistance forces in the build-up to D-Day.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Doreen Page

Doreen was conscripted from university during WW2, at age 20. She served as an interpreter on the Ultra project and in Berin during the Airlift.

Doreen was studying German at university in WW2 when she was called up, age 20, and assigned to Naval Intelligence at Bletchley Park. This was in June 1944 at the start of the German V1 ‘flying bomb’ offensive. She was part of the Ultra intelligence unit and translated de-coded documents intercepted from the German Enigma system. After translation she classified and sorted the documents so that they could be accessed by senior officers. She worked in the same hut as Alan Turing, one of the crucial scientists in the Ultra system. One of the main tasks she worked on was tracking U-boat movements in the Atlantic as they tried to threaten Allied convoys. She also worked on locating the German battleship Tirpitz so that it could be attacked and sunk by the RAF. After the end of the war she was assigned to Berlin, in occupied Germany, where her knowledge of German and military procedure stood her in good stead. She worked with senior officers in Naval Intelligence and was in Berlin during the first part of the Airlift. After two years in Germany she returned to Britain. Here she worked for the War Office, translating documents for the War Crimes tribunal. This task she found both horrific and interesting. When this ended Doreen found a job outside the service, at Lloyds Bank. She was employed in their foreign section, where the red tape was worse than in the intelligence services! This irritated her and she left after one year.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Yvonne Baseden

Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent, Yvonne Baseden, reflects on her covert mission in France, capture, and survival in notorious Ravensbrück.

Yvonne Baseden’s remarkable wartime experience began with her service in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF). While working at the Directorate of Allied Air Cooperation and Foreign Liaison, she met Pearl Witherington, who—unknown to Yvonne—was an agent for the Special Operations Executive (SOE). It was this connection that Yvonne believes led to her being recruited by the SOE.  Due to the SOE’s covert nature, Yvonne was officially attached to the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY), a common practice for female agents during World War II. Bilingual in English and French, she was considered a natural fit for operations in occupied France. Her first mission involved parachuting into France as a wireless operator to assist the French Resistance. However, after successfully completing Operation Cadillac—a major arms drop supporting liberation efforts—her location was compromised. Captured and transferred to Dijon prison, she was interrogated and faced threats of being sent to Gestapo headquarters in Paris. Despite this, Yvonne never revealed her true identity as an English agent, maintaining her cover as a French Resistance fighter.  Instead of being sent to Paris, Yvonne was transferred to Ravensbrück, the largest female-only concentration camp. She recalls the pressure of concealing her SOE status, aware that other female English agents in the camp had been executed. Fortunately, Yvonne was rescued by the Swedish Red Cross in the final days of the war and taken to Malmö, Sweden for recovery before safely returning home. 
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Stan Hope

Stan Hope was captured in 1942 and, despite attempts to escape, was not liberated until May 1945

Stan joined the RAF in July 1940 and was assigned to a reconnaissance unit and returning from a mission his aircraft had engine failure, and he baled out over occupied Belgium. After walking for two days he was able to board a train to Brussels where his ability to speak French helped him. Here he met the Resistance who used the Comète Line to smuggle him to a village near the Spanish border. Here his group was discovered by German troops. Despite being in civilian clothes with false papers he, and his comrades, avoided being shot. They were interrogated quite roughly and he spent four months in solitary confinement. Eventually he was taken to a Gestapo prison and later to a POW camp where he faced further interrogation. Near the end of the war he and his comrades were moved to several different camps before eventually being freed in May 1945.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Arthur Brown

Arthur Brown talks about his WWII service in the SOE as a radio operator including his adventures in occupied rural France following D Day

Arthur Brown joined the army in 1943 as a radio operator in the Tank Regiment but soon became fed up with the training and volunteered for the Special Operations Executive (SOE). He joined Operation Jedburgh, which involved three-man teams—an allied commanding officer, a radio operator, and a local officer—being parachuted behind enemy lines around D-Day to work with resistance fighters in France and the Low Countries. There were around 100 ‘Jedburgh’ teams deployed in the European theatre mainly between June and September 1944. On the 9th of June, Brown, now a Sergeant, his team leader, the highly decorated Scottish officer, Major Tommy MacPherson and a French officer, Michel ‘Bourbon’ were dropped into central France to assist the Maquis. The ‘Jedburgh’s were dressed in military uniform to avoid being executed as spies, if captured. Brown’s role was to send coded radio messages back to the UK updating their operations but he became ill and had to be hidden by the Maquis, being moved around to avoid detection. After France was liberated, he and MacPherson continued similar operations in Italy until the German surrender. When faced with a possible posting to Germany, Brown volunteered to go to Burma and served there with other former ‘Jedburghs’ until the war's end. 
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Gordon Mellor

A Lancaster Bomber Navigator shot down over Belgium remembers escaping to Spain assisted by the Comète Line resistance group

Gordon Mellor was the Navigator in a Lancaster Bomber shot down over Belgium.  He survived and was fortunate to meet members of the Comète Line, who secreted him to Belgium, France and eventually over the Pyrénées and into Spain. He recently discovered that not only had his group been infiltrated by the Germans, but one of his RAF travelling companions was the cousin of Lord Haw Haw. He passed away in January 2018. Please note that not all of Gordon’s interview is currently online. Contact us if you would like to see more.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Geoffrey Pidgeon

Geoffrey Pidgeon, recruited at only 14 by MI6, shares his extensive knowledge of wireless communications and intelligence gathering during WWII

In this engaging interview, Geoffrey Pidgeon explains how his father’s role in stores at Bletchley Park, combined with his teenage pastime of model building, led to a job offer with the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS). After securing his parents' permission to leave school, Geoffrey accepted the offer. Initially joining the Communication Section, later known as Section VIII, he began working in the workshops at Whaddon Hall. At just 14, he was the youngest member of the team—and potentially the youngest in the entire SIS. This marks the beginning of an extraordinary wartime experience. Geoffrey eventually went on to work for the newly created Mobile Construction Team, installing wireless equipment in vehicles and aircraft to assist with the interception of enemy communications. His professional experiences, alongside his personal life in Stony Stratford, placed him in a unique position to witness and participate in the highly confidential world of wartime intelligence gathering. This enables him to provide a deeply insightful account of how wireless communication and its rapid development played a crucial role in the success of Allied operations, as well as the integral nature of the ‘Y’ Service and the work at Bletchley Park.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Stanley David

He was involved in the war from fifteen and became a gunner in the RAF.

At the age of fifteen Stanley left school and became an Air Raid Precautions messenger. When he reached eighteen he volunteered for the RAF. He became a gunner on a bomber and carried out over 50 missions. Once his aircraft was caught by searchlights and received anti-aircraft fire, which they escaped by corkscrew diving 9000 feet. Many of the flights were with 624 Squadron, assigned to Special Operations Executive, dropping agents and supplies into enemy occupied territory. These drops were often at very low altitude and at the maximum of the aircraft range, with barely enough fuel to return home. He realised at the time that many of the agents, several of whom were women, would not survive very long. Looking back Stanley thought that he, and others, were too young and foolish to be scared. He regards his time with the RAF as the most interesting part of his life.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Lise de Baissac

Lise de Baissac was an SOE agent who was parachuted into France twice, the second time distributing weapons to the Resistance before D-Day.

Lise de Baissac was a British citizen who was born in Mauritius but moved to Paris at 15. In 1940 she fled to Cannes and travelled via Portugal to London, where a cousin put her in contact with SOE. She was parachuted into France twice, once spending a year in Poitiers receiving agents and the second time in April 1944, working with her brother to distribute weapons to the Resistance before D-Day. She explains the training, how they were deployed to France, locating potential landing grounds, their flimsy communications and the limited instructions they were given. She reflects on her lucky escape after her first deployment, when her French helpers were arrested and one later died. She provides a vivid account of her experiences, including sad memories of people fleeing the German advance, her fears the first time she presented her false identity card, her terror when confronted by a German soldier trying to steal her bike.
Photo Gallery icon 1 Photo
Service:
Interviewed by:
Ailsa Camm