- William Frank Thompson
William Frank Thompson (1920-
10 June 1944 ) was a Britishofficer who acted as aliaison officer between theBritish Army and theBulgaria ncommunist andantifascist partisans duringWorld War II .Thompson was born in
Darjeeling ,West Bengal ,British India to a British family. His younger brother was the English historian, socialist and peace campaignerE. P. Thompson . [cite web |url=http://www.monkeytravel.org/bul7.html |title=The Iskar Gorge and the Bulgarian Partisans |publisher=Monkeytravel.org |accessdate=2008-09-10 ]In 1939, while studying at the
University of Oxford , he became a member of theCommunist Party of Great Britain under the influence of his close friendIris Murdoch . Despite his affiliation, he did not support the party's policy of neutrality dictated by theMolotov-Ribbentrop Pact and joined theBritish Army as a volunteer, serving inEngland ,North Africa ,Syria ,Iraq ,Sicily ,Serbia and Bulgaria. He was part of theSpecial Operations Executive .On
25 January 1944 , along with three othercommandos ,Major Thompson was sent on aparachute landing mission to establish a link between the British staff and the Bulgarian partisans led bySlavcho Transki ; he landed nearDobro Pole , Macedonia. The commandos carried a radio to keep in connection with the staff inCairo ,Egypt andBari ,Italy , but it broke down. On23 May , Thompson took part in the clash at the village ofBatuliya between theBulgarian Gendarmerie and the SecondSofia Brigade of National Liberation of the partisans. He was wounded by the gendarmerie forces, captured andexecuted by firing squad in the nearby village ofLitakovo .After the war and the establishment of a Communist government in Bulgaria, the nearby villages of Livage, Lipata, Tsarevi Stragi, Malak Babul, Babul and Zavoya were merged and renamed to Thompson in the British officer's honour on the idea of Transki, who had been promoted to
General .References
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* мост за заздравяване сътрудничеството между община Своге и посолството на Великобритания |accessdate=2008-08-23 |publisher=Община Своге |language=BulgarianFurther reading
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