- Georges Bégué
Georges Bégué or George P. Begue
Social Security Death Index [http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi] ] (22 November 1911 –18 December 1993 ) was a Frenchengineer and agent in theSpecial Operations Executive .Georges Bégué was born
November 22 1911 inPérigueux ,France . His father was a railway engineer and the family moved to Egypt when Bégué was a child. Bégué also trained as an engineerUniversity College of Hull where he learned English and met his wife. He went through his military service as asignaller .At the outbreak of the
Second World War , Bégué was recalled to his unit. Because of his knowledge of English he was assigned to liaison with the British troops. He eventually escaped to Britain during theDunkirk evacuation . After the surrender of France, he joined theRoyal Signals as a sergeant.In 1940 SOE recruited Bégué to the new French section, and gave him the alias Georges Noble. After a short training course, he was parachuted to
Indre on the night ofMay 5 1941 with a heavy transmitter in a suitcase. He was the first SOE agent in France. He contacted socialistMax Hymans inValencay and eventually convinced him that he was not a trap.Bégué settled in
Châteauroux with his transmitter and sent the first message to LondonMay 9 1941 . SOE sent three other agents, includingPierre de Vomécourt , to join him. During the following six months Bégué helped to establish resistance network and agents in France and arranged arms drops. Bégué was the main contact to SOE in London and sometimes transmitted three times a day. His suggestion that BBC overseas service would be used to send pre-arranged coded messages was accepted and led to widespread use.One SOE agent
Gerry Morel went off his own way to recruit resistance members andMilice , theVichy France police, arrested him atLimoges onOctober 3 1941 . His arrest led to more arrests and eventually to Bégué who was arrestedOctober 24 in aMarseilles safe house . He was sent to join other SOE agents in theBeleyme prison in Périgueux. They were later transferred to prison camp inMauzac on March 1942. Bégué managed to create a duplicate key and the group escapedJuly 16 1942 .Bégué and others hid in Mauzac in the middle of a forest and continued to Lyon on
July 23 in separate groups. They contactedVic escape network and eventually walked to neutral Spain over the Pyrenees. Bégué was interned atFigueres and sent toMiranda de Ebro prison camp but were later released to continue his way to Britain. He arrived to London in October 1942.Bégué was appointed Signals Officer in the F section under
Maurice Buckmaster . He was also awardedMilitary Cross .After the war Bégué emigrated to the United States. He worked in a number of menial jobs before he could officially become an electronics engineer. He also took US citizenship.
George Bégué died
December 18 1993 inFalls Church, Virginia .References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.