- Jacqueline Nearne
Infobox Military Person
name=Jacqueline Nearne
caption=
born=birth date|1916|5|27
died=death date|1982|8|15
placeofbirth=Brighton
placeofdeath=London
nickname=Jacqueline/Josette
allegiance=United Kingdom ,France
branch=Special Operations Executive ,FANY
serviceyears=1942-1944 (FANY/SOE)
rank=
unit=Stationer
commands=
battles=
awards=MBE
relations=Eileen Nearne ,Francis Nearne
laterwork=United Nations Jacqueline Nearne (b. Jacqueline Françoise Mary Josephine Nearne,
27 May 1916 ,Brighton, England - d.15 August 1982 ,London, England ) was a secret agent for the BritishSpecial Operations Executive (SOE) in Nazi-occupiedFrance duringWorld War II .The eldest daughter of an English father and a Spanish mother, Nearne went to live with her family (including her younger sister
Eileen Nearne and brotherFrancis Nearne ) in France in 1923. Aged 18 she moved toNice to work as a commercial travelling representative for a office equipment comany. When France fell, she made her way to England via Portugal and Gibraltar.On her arrival in England, she applied to the WRAC but was turned down as she had no experience of driving in the dark and on the left hand side of the road. In 1942, she was recruited into the
First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (the FANYs) alongside her younger sister Eileen (aka "Didi"), who also became an agent. Her fluency in French quickly brought her to the attention ofF Section ("F" for French), one of the many different branches of the SOE. An early recruit (in the second batch of women to train), she trained as a courier in mid-1942. She was also taught Morse code transmissions using a suitcase radio, which would help her in her work with the French Resistance. She was the first girl, along withOdette Sansom , to train at Training School 51Ringway Parachute School.She was presented with a necklace and a gold watch by
Colonel Maurice Buckmaster before setting out on her mission. On the evening of25 January 1943 she was secretly parachuted into France under the code-name 'Jacqueline' to work for the vast 'Stationer' circuit in central France. Her life as a secret agent was one filled with constant danger, and the threat of being exposed as an agent or betrayed by a comrade. Despite this she would travel by train, often on long and arduous journeys. She had maintained contact with agents, wireless operators and with the neighboring 'Headmaster' circuit, as well as forming a vital link between several other SOE networks operating in-and-around the Paris region. She also carried spare parts for radios, which she transported in a cosmetics bag, and organized reception committees for newly arrived agents. After fifteen strenuous months in the field, she finally returned to Britain in April 1944 by means ofWestland Lysander .Throughout her time in Occupied France she was known as Josette Norville, which served as her documentary name in order to protect her true identity and operation.
She was awarded the MBE in 1945.
After the War she looked after her sister Eileen in London, before moving to
New York to work in theProtocol Department of theUnited Nations . She kept a long-distance friendship withLisé de Baissac in France. In the 1950s,Brian Stonehouse painted a portrait of her which now hangs in theSpecial Forces Club in London.External links
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0623797/bio Internet Movie Database bio]
* [http://www.sameshield.com/spies/nearne.html Sameshield.com]
* [http://www.ddhe.co.uk/p2_D24377_Now%20It%20Can%20Be%20Told.htm DDHE]
* [http://cicentre.com/BK/BOOKS_Peake_Melton.html Peake Melton]
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