Wednesday
16 July 1941 could have been a disastrous day for the Organisation in
Marseille. That was the day French police arrested Elisabeth Haden-Guest
and Adolphe Lecompte after they called on Room 530 at the Noailles Hotel.
Also arrested at the Noailles over the next few days were Francis Blanchain,
Mario Prassinos, Frank Viner, Jean Fourcade, Nadia Pastre, Paul Dubar
and Jan Jankowski.
Today the Berengier designed Hotel de Noailles is an office block, but
in 1941 it was the particularly fashionable and luxurious hotel on the
Canabière where Tom Kenny stayed.
Tom Kenny isn't mentioned much in the literature about the PAO, but
when his name is included, he is usually described as a Canadian businessman,
sometimes as a friend of Ian Garrow, and best remembered for falling
in love with and marrying the young 'Sue' Martinez. Tom was certainly
Canadian but exactly what his business in France was at the beginning
of the war is not clear.
Early in 1940, during the so-called 'phoney war', Tom was apparently
on holiday in the south of France. Tom already knew Nancy, the twenty-seven
year old Australian journalist who had married French industrialist
Henri Fiocca the previous year. The Fioccas lived in Marseille and much
of Nancy's free time was spent at the bar of the Hotel du Louvre et
de la Paix on the Canabière, where she and Henri were friends
with the general manager, André Digard. It was André who
introduced them to his sister Emma and her daughter Micheline from Cannes.
Nancy and Micheline Digard became friends and it was Nancy that brought
the teenage Michette back from her studies in England after war was
declared. It was also at the Louvre et Paix that Nancy introduced Emma
and Micheline to Tom Kenny. Tom soon fell in love with Micheline - aka
Suzanne Martinez.
Sadly, the luxurious Pot designed Hotel du Louvre et de la Paix at 49
Canabière is no longer a hotel either. In July 1941 it had 250
rooms, 20 salons and two restaurants but it was requisitioned by the
French Navy later that year and subsequently occupied by the German
Kriegsmarine. In 1980 the building was sold and completely refurbished.
It reopened as a C&A store in 1984 and today it's another office
building.
The Kennys had emigrated to Canada from Ireland in the 1820's and became
very successful businessmen. Tom was the first son of Lt Colonel Edward
George Kenny of the Canadian 66th Princess Louise Fusiliers, Halifax
NS and Gertrude McParland of Kingston, Ontario. Lt Col E G Kenny was
the first son of Thomas Edward Kenny, first President of the Royal Bank
of Canada (the Merchants' Bank of Halifax until 1902) from 1870 to 1908.
The RBC headquarters moved from Halifax to Montreal in 1907.
Thomas Edward James Kenny was born 26 April 1910 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Tom's father died the following year and his mother later married an
Irishman, Major Edward Knox-Leet. Tom was brought up in Canada and went
to boarding school at Beaumont, Old Windsor, but when his mother, sister
and step-father moved to Europe, Tom took his summer holidays with them
on the French Riviera. In 1932, Tom was studying architecture in Belgium
- he was registered (as an Englishman from Halifax) as living at St-Gilles-lez-Bruxelles.
It is possible that he already had links to the British Intelligence
Service - his uncle, Captain Patrick William Kenny, worked close to
Sir Vernon Kell in the fledgling MO5 (created in 1909, became MI5 in
1916) from before the First War. It may also be worth noting that Tom's
half-brother, Desmond Knox-Leet, after spending many months in the Royal
Navy in Gibraltar, became a war-time translator at Bletchley Park.
In a 1948 statement, Kenny says that in November 1940, he was charged
(he does not say by whom) along with Captains Garrow and Wilkins, with
organising "un réseau de renseignements [information or
intelligence] et d'evasion" which later became the "Reseau
PAT". At first, he says, this reseau was largely financed by the
English who lived on the Cote d'Azur.
The first 'published' mention I have of Tom Kenny is from Captain Leslie
Wilkins in his 1941 MI9 report when he says he withdrew his parole at
Fort St Jean in December 1940 and took up quarters in Marseille to "continue
his work with Capt Murchie, Capt Garrow and Mr Kenny". Louis Nouveau,
writing in his 1958 book "Des Capitaines par Milliers" says
he first met Ian Garrow, James Langley and Tom Kenny that same month.
Elisabeth (Lisa) Haden-Guest, who arrived in Marseille in February 1941,
claimed in her 1993 book 'Dream Weaver' (which acknowledges both Louis
Nouveau and Helen Long as sources) that Garrow and Kenny had organised
a secret escape route for British servicemen and wanted her to join
them. She describes Tom Kenny as a "blond (sic) attractive Canadian
who spoke perfect French and was in love with the seventeen year old
daughter of the owner of the Hotel Martinez in Cannes. Garrow and Kenny
often used that hotel, and the escape network owes a lot to the Martinez
family". She repeated in a letter in 1994 that "Garrow started
it all with Kenny and that they needed a bilingual girl
while
Kenny organised the guides".
The next published mention is from Lt Richard Broad's MI9 report where
he details a meeting in mid-February with "Donald Caskie, Ian Garrow
(who acted as liaison between Ste Marthe prison, where Broad's men were
held, and the American Consul), Capt L A Wilkins, Tom Kenny, an officer
(sic) named Illingworth and Capt Murchie, who acted as their chief."
On 15 August 1941, Charles Murchie wrote from his Barcelona prison cell
at the Castillo Montjuic, to Sir Samuel Hoare, the British Ambassador
in Madrid, and said that "From about February I was joined by Captain
Garrow and one Kenney [sic] (a Canadian) to whom I left the whole business
of sending people through Spain ..."
Historic
Note: Captains Charles Murchie and Ian Garrow, although often working
together, had quite separate circles of contacts in Marseille, so that
many who worked with one man seemed quite unaware of the other. Claiming
either man to be chief of the Organisation in the winter of 1940/41
is both misleading and inaccurate.
Richard Broad's story is told in William Moore's book 'The Long Way
Round' and although it doesn't mention this meeting, it does describe
Tom Kenny on page 141 as "another fugitive officer [who] had managed
to obtain cash [for the escape organisation] from a friend in Cannes".
That would be Emmanuel Martinez, his future father-in-law.
Tom's
name appears several times in Helen Long's 1985 book 'Safe Houses are
Dangerous'. Although the book describes Tom as (financially) generous
to the budding escape line, and a good and enthusiastic supporter of
Ian Garrow, it goes on to say that he was nevertheless naïve and
had no experience of clandestine activities. Helen presumably took much
of her information on Tom from Elisabeth Haden-Guest, who seems to have
believed what she was told by the French police about Tom following
the arrests at the Noailles. However, as Elisabeth says herself, they
were all interrogated separately and so she couldn't have known first-hand
what Tom said.
On 29 April 1941 Tom Kenny and Micheline Digard were engaged to be married.
On 26 May 1941 Tom Kenny made a highly detailed technical sketch of
the docks at St Nazaire. I also have a copy of an undated but equally
detailed map of an unknown German airfield, annotated T E Kenny. The
neat style of the drawings reflects Tom's architectural training, and
the apparent numbering system suggests these are just some of many.
Mere possession of such documents during war-time would have been enough
to warrant arrest as a spy.
F/Lt F W Higginson's MI9 report also mentions Tom Kenny. Higginson had
been shot down near Dunkirk 17 June 1941 and quickly put in touch with
the northern Organisation. He was sheltered overnight by Desiré
Didry at his home at St Omer before being taken to stay with Mr Paul
at La Madeleine on the outskirts of Lille. 'Mr Paul' was Sgt Harold
'Paul' Cole - aka Paul Delobel. On 29 June, Paul and Higginson took
the train to Abbeville where the Abbé Carpentier provided papers
for them to cross the Somme from the Zone Rouge to the Zone Occupée.
They went on to Paris that night. Two days later they continued to Tours
and crossed the demarcation line at St Martin-le-Beau before catching
a train to Marseille, arriving 2 July. Higginson stayed with Dr Georges
Rodocanachi and it was in his apartment that Higginson met Ian Garrow,
Pat O'Leary, Bruce Dowding, Elisabeth Haden-Guest, Nancy Fiocca and
Tom Kenny. He claims to have been present when they heard the "Adolphe
droit rester" radio message from London, meaning that O'Leary should
stay on with the Organisation in Marseille. On 4 July, Tom took Higginson
south to Perpignan where they stayed at the Hotel Regina waiting to
make contact with a guide to take Higginson across the Pyrenees. Tom
combined this trip with a visit to Michael Pareyre to collect 45,000
francs, sent for the Organisation from Gibraltar.
On Tuesday 15 July 1941, Tom married Suzanne Martinez in Cannes. Sue
is referred to as Micheline Digard in Russell Braddon's 1956 book 'Nancy
Wake' and the truth is a little complicated. Micheline is called Sue
Martinez by most English writers but she was Micheline until her marriage.
She is the daughter of Emmanuel Michele Martinez, founder and owner
of the fabulous Hotel Martinez on the Boulevard de la Croisette in Cannes.
Martinez was an Italian married to Marie Maldiney but in 1919 he had
met and fallen in love with Emma Digard. As a catholic - and Italian
- Martinez could not get a divorce and it was Emma who was seventeen
year old Suzanne's adopted mother.
Next day the French police sprung their trap at the Hotel Noailles in
an attempt to capture Ian Garrow. I believe that Garrow was sharing
a room at the Rodocanachi apartment with O'Leary at this time.
Elisabeth Haden-Guest always maintained that the police had been tipped
off about Room 530 at the Noailles. She says that one of the French
policemen told her that they had been betrayed by "one of their
own" and she insisted that Harold Cole has to have been the man
responsible. I think she is wrong. A more likely explanation, assuming
any Briton was involved, is that the information came from the Seamens'
Mission on rue Forbin where the meetings at the Noailles were common
knowledge.
Most accounts of the arrests say that Tom Kenny was also arrested at
the Noailles. In fact he was still in Cannes with his new wife and was
arrested on the terrace of the Martinez Hotel on Friday morning. Tom
was arrested because, in addition to his own Room 505, where he had
been staying before his wedding, Room 530 was reserved in his name.
Room 530 was a regular meeting place for the Organisation and on that
Wednesday Elisabeth arrived first and then Adolphe Lecompte. Shortly
after Lecompte reached the room, the telephone rang. Elisabeth answered
it and told Lecompte there was a message for her downstairs. When she
failed to return, Lecompte (Pat O'Leary) realised there was a problem
and left himself. He, like Elisabeth, was arrested.
There is no account of the arrests by O'Leary himself and so most of
the information comes from accounts by Elisabeth Haden-Guest. She admits
that the details are largely assembled from things she heard later rather
than first-hand knowledge. Note that O'Leary had been trained by the
Security Services in England and had only recently escaped from the
Fort du St Hippolyte. Having been in Marseille just a couple of weeks,
he wasn't known to the local authorities.
Elisabeth says she was with O'Leary in the hotel room when the receptionist
phoned to say there were two men downstairs who wanted to see her. When
she went down, two Sûreté inspectors took her to their
headquarters at the Évêché. Later that day O'Leary
was brought in. When Elisabeth had failed to return, he had assumed
there was a problem, taken an empty suitcase from the room and walked
out of the building - he was arrested, as Adolphe Lecompte, in front
of the hotel. Elisabeth told the police that she had only recently met
Lecompte in the Café Gaulois and that he had approached her when
he heard her speaking English. Lecompte's story was that he was an ex-soldier
who had come down from the north [his papers were supplied by Cole as
issued in Lille, and O'Leary had a Belgian accent] and as a good Frenchman,
was hoping to be able to join De Gaulle's forces. When he realised the
police were pro-Vichy, he changed his story to say he was simply looking
for work. Adolphe Lecompte was released a few days later.
NB.
Jean Fourcade says they called the otherwise unidentified police station
the Évêché because it was near the cathedral.
Later
that afternoon Francis Blanchain was brought in. Elisabeth says none
of them knew Blanchain but his story was that he had come to the Noailles
looking for Tom Kenny to see if he knew of a way out of France, as he
wanted to go to America. When told that Kenny wasn't at the hotel, he
had left a message for him. Because Blanchain had a British Birth Certificate
but French ID Card and demobilisation papers, the police held him for
some months. Twenty-eight year old Francis Blanchain was born in England
of French parents and held dual nationalities. Known as 'Achille', he
was later involved in several PAO operations, including the escapes
of Airey Neave and Whitney Straight, before being evacuated from France
on the felucca Seawolf in September 1942. He is described by Neave as
"a young, dark, strongly built man
with an air of quiet
determination and a certain aloofness".
The following day Elisabeth was questioned and the only thing the police
really wanted to know was the whereabouts of Ian Garrow. It would seem
that while the police could turn a blind eye to French citizens working
in the business of getting Allied servicemen out of France, they were
less tolerant of foreigners being involved. Garrow was the current and
very prominent leader of the organisation in Marseille, and the French
wanted him. Elisabeth was also a high profile foreigner - in France
she claimed to be English but was born in East Prussia in 1910 as Louise
Ruth Wolpert. She grew up in a rich family and was living in Berlin
in 1924 when she adopted the name Elisabeth after meeting the Austrian
actress Elisabeth Bergner. She had a complicated life (see 'Dream Weaver'
for details) and in 1939 married American ballet dancer and choreographer
Peter Haden-Guest - she had their four year old son Anthony with her
in Marseille.
That same day (Thursday) Mario Prassinos was brought into the Évêché
police station. Mario was already major player in the Organisation and
had just returned from Perpignan with money for the group, which he
intended to hand over at the Noailles. His story was that he had gone
to see Kenny to congratulate him on his marriage to Sue Martinez. He
told the police the money was his own and that he didn't know anyone
in the escape business. He was released next day and promptly reported
the arrests to Louis Nouveau. Airey Neave met Prassinos at the Nouveau
apartment in 1942 and says the short, middle-aged Mario was wearing
"the smartest business clothes
like a character from some
pre-war film set on the French Riviera".
Next to be brought in was Frank Viner. Viner (or Weiner) was a thirty-one
year old Czech 'journalist' who, at the time of his arrest, was living
with Stella Lonsdale at the Hotel Scribe, 93 rue de Rome. Stella was
another strange character on the fringes of the Organisation who later
travelled to England where she spent most of the war in prison as a
suspected enemy agent. Viner had tried to join Garrow in the apparent
belief that Garrow worked for the British SIS. Garrow didn't trust either
him or Stella and tried to keep both at arm's length. Viner was held
overnight and then released, he says, by the French Special Police,
who treated him leniently because of their pro-Ally sympathies. Viner
left Marseille on 28 July and made his way to Gibraltar (via Miranda
del Ebro) where he was interviewed 2 October 1941.
Jean Fourcade was also arrested at the Noailles when he came looking
for Elisabeth. Fourcade was young Anthony's unofficial guardian and
had been planning to take Anthony on holiday with him. In recent (2002)
communications with Christopher Long, Fourcade says he had done some
occasional work with Garrow on the escape line but this meeting was
purely innocent. Again he was soon released and says he lost contact
with the group after this episode. Incidentally, Fourcade refers to
Tom Kenny as Lt Johnson - this is the only mention of such a pseudonym
I have seen anywhere.
Nadia de Pastre, daughter of American Countess Lily de Pastre, was on
her way to Antibes, when she called in at the Noailles to see Elisabeth.
She was questioned and released four hours later. You can see by now
how discreet these meetings at the hotel were
Then Paul Dubar was brought in. Dubar worked with the Organisation in
the north and had come down from Lille to meet with the Marseille group.
His story was that some English people in Lille had asked him to go
to the Seamens' Mission and find the padre (Donald Caskie) but the Mission
was closed. A woman there had told him that if he wanted to meet some
English people, he should go to the Noailles and ask for Mr Kenny.
Jean Fourcade also says that a Polish Captain named Jan Jankowski was
arrested at the Noailles but I have no further information about him.
Conditions at the Évêché were such that prisoners'
meals were taken at a nearby café. Elisabeth says she was having
coffee on Friday evening when she saw Tom sitting there too. She says
she told Tom that she hadn't said a word to the police and asked him
not to say anything either. Elisabeth is then rather disparaging about
Tom Kenny, saying she was subsequently asked questions on subjects only
Kenny could have revealed. She also suggests Tom may have talked about
the Organisation to his mother-in-law, Emma Digard, and that she had
passed this on to the police, presumably in an effort to get Tom released
for his co-operation, but this was all speculation on Elisabeth's part.
Suzanne could not visit Tom after his arrest because, as an Briton by
marriage, she was now under résidence obligatoire and restricted
to Cannes. Two days after Tom's arrest and having had no news, it was
Emma that went to Marseille to find out what had happened to Tom. She
spent several days with Tom at the Évêché before
he was sent to Fort St Nicolas.
Elisabeth Haden-Guest didn't know Emma Digard - if she had then she
would have realised just what a tough lady Emma really was. Even before
she met Emmanuel Martinez, she was a wealthy and very independent woman.
Emma also had many contacts in Marseille, and since she was particularly
fond of her new son-in-law Tommy, she used those contacts to see what
they could do to speed up the ponderous judicial system. One thing she
did discover, through a friend of her brother André, was Capitaine
Dutour's preferences at a certain brothel. Once she mentioned to Dutour
that she knew the Madame there, they had an understanding.
Within a few days everyone except Tom, Elisabeth and Francis Blanchain
had been released. Tom and Francis Blanchain were taken to the military
prison at Fort St Nicolas and Elisabeth to the civilian women's prison
of Les Presentines. The three were held 'au secret' and unable to contact
the outside world until 11 August, when they were all brought before
a Military Tribunal where Capitaine Dutour was the Officer in Charge.
Gaston Defferre had been appointed as Tom and Elisabeth's (and I think
Blanchain's) defence lawyer and from this time on, they passed messages
via the lawyer or his secretary Ginette Kahn. Defferre also exchanged
letters with Emma Digard and Sue Kenny. Elisabeth says that Tom told
her that the charges of espionage had been dropped and that they were
to be tried on matters relating to the escape line instead.
It
was Emmanuel Martinez who arranged to have Gaston Defferre, Avocat au
Barreau of 79 rue Montgrand, act as Tom's defence council, and Martinez
who paid the lawyer's bill. Defferre, an active socialist who twice
became mayor of Marseille after the war, as well as a member of parliament
and government minister, was also a friend of the Rodocanachi and Zarifi
families.
As
she left the Tribunal, Elisabeth says she was called to Dutour's office
where she found Ian Garrow. She was then shown Garrow's statement which
admitted that he was the head of an escape organisation and that Tom
and Elisabeth had been helping him get British soldiers out of the Occupied
Zone. When they reached the Free Zone, the soldiers were given their
pay and encouraged to go to Fort St Hippolyte - the French internment
camp where Allied military personnel were currently being held.Captain
Ian Grant Garrow was arrested on 10 October after visiting Elisabeth
at Les Presentines. It is believed that Sûreté agents from
Vichy were responsible for the arrest rather than the Marseille police,
who had allowed Garrow to visit Elisabeth on several occasions without
detaining him. At this point Patrick Albert O'Leary took charge of the
escape line which later came to bear his name, or (equally fictitious)
initials.
The
real reasons for Garrow's arrest are not clear. It was probably the
belief that, in addition to helping evading soldiers from the north,
Garrow was engaged in intelligence gathering - this would have been
a far more serious charge to the anglophobe Vichy French authorities.
Elisabeth has suggested that this idea was reinforced by their dealings
with Stella Lonsdale, who had accompanied Garrow on some of his visits
to Elisabeth after her arrest.Garrow
was held for three months at Fort St Nicolas before transfer to Mauzac
concentration camp on the Dordogne river near Bergerac. He was brought
to trial on 22 May 1942 and sentenced to three years imprisonment with
six months solitary confinement. In early December 1942, Garrow was
rescued from Mauzac in a complicated operation by the PAO. He was taken
into Spain via Françoise Dissard in Toulouse at the end of January
and flown back to England 7 February 1943.
Tom
Kenny was released from Fort St Nicolas on 24 November 1941 after all
charges against him were dropped.Elisabeth
Haden-Guest was released from Les Presentines on 27 November 1941. She
and Anthony soon left the country and celebrated the New Year in Lisbon.
Whether the release of Elisabeth and Tom (and Francis Blanchain) were
a result of, or at least expedited by, the diplomatic communications
between the American, British and Canadian Consular authorities cannot
be ascertained. Certainly they came to the attention of people in high
places through Lisa's marriage to a prominent American and Tom's family
connections to the US Roosevelt family - Tom's late father had been
a cousin of Theodore Roosevelt. Tom's uncle in Montreal, Joseph B Kenny,
also received personal updates of Tom's situation from Ottowa, forwarded
from the Canadian Legation in Washington. There may also have been interest
from the British Intelligence Services - in 1943 Tom received news that
Sue had reached Gibraltar in a personal letter from Maurice Buckmaster,
Head of F Section SOE.
On
25 Feb 1942 an Emergency Certificate was issued for Mrs Suzanne Kenny,
British subject by marriage, born Paris 29 April 1923, wife of Thomas
Edward James Kenny born Halifax, Nova Scotia 26 April 1910. It was issued
by the American Consulate in Marseille and signed by Harry M Donaldson,
Vice-Consul USA, in charge of British interests, Marseille.
Despite
all charges being dropped against him, the French Military Authorities
required Tom to live somewhere inland from the coast while they decided
if Tom could be classified as unfit for military service and allowed
to leave the country. He was sent to Uzès (Gard), about twenty
kilometres north of Nimes, where Sue joined him a week later. Tom and
Sue were kept under 'residence forcée et surveillée' at
the Terminus Hotel, reporting to the local gendarmerie each day - this
was later relaxed to once a week as the gendarmes took their lunchtime
aperitifs at the Terminus and saw the Kennys there anyway. In May 1942
Emmanuel Martinez arranged for Tom and Sue to move closer to Cannes,
at Valence (south of Lyons and on the rail link to Marseille). They
stayed for two weeks at the Villa d'Athenes before moving into a small
apartment in avenue Sadi Carnot. At the end of September they finally
moved back to Cannes and again it was Emmanuel Martinez who arranged
it. With Martinez as their guarantor, and with regular residence permits,
they moved into Room 608 of the Hotel Martinez.
Once
back in Cannes, and with Emmanuel Martinez' consent, Tom soon established
a rapport with Colonel Eric Sawyer, "chef des Services Secrets
Britannique" and Cmdt Khan, "adjoint [assistant] au Colonel
Vautrin, Cmdt la Region Militaire et chef du Reseau Francais".
Sawyer, a long-term British resident in Nice, was involved with the
arrival of two SOE agents at Cap d'Antibes and wanted Tom's help.
NB.
Brendan Murphy (Turncoat pg 85) says that the American Consul in Marseille,
Hugh Fullerton, had heard that Sawyer had claimed to have been under
pre-war orders from the British War Office never to allow himself to
be repatriated. He also says Sawyer, who had been a banker, was the
man who had delivered 850,000 francs (sic) sent from Switzerland, to
Donald Caskie at the Seamen's Mission.
Historic
Note: MRD Foot (SOE in France pg 208) describes Col Vautrin as head
of a local French counter-intelligence service and a friend of the Baron
de Malval. He says "this friendship saved [SOE circuits] 'Urchin'
and 'Spindle' from disaster several times".
On
11 November 1942 the Germans moved into southern France.
On
5 December 1942 Sue gave birth to Edward Patrick Kenny.
It
seems that Tom continued with his resistance work because on 10 December
1942, just five days after the birth of his first son, Tom says he left
"le maquis" to say goodbye to his wife in Cannes. He explained
to Emmanuel Martinez that he had been ordered to leave immediately for
Gibraltar but that it would be impossible to take his wife and son with
him. Martinez gave him an envelope containing 50,000 francs and a note
saying "Bonne chance - A bientôt - Martinez".
On
29 Dec 1942 T E Kenny made a highly detailed technical sketch of the
docks at Marseille.
On
11 Jan 1943 Tom Kenny crossed (illegally) into Spain. He reached Gibraltar,
via Barcelona and Madrid, at the end of the month
In
February 1943 Sue followed Tom to Spain. A guide named J K Trouvé
collected Sue and baby Patrick and took them to Perpignan. They stayed
the night in a hotel but when Sue woke in the morning, Trouvé
had gone, and taken all her belongings with him. Sue and Patrick were
saved by an Austrian officer in the German army who helped them to cross
illegally. Sue, who was still only nineteen years old, was arrested
in Spain and interrogated at Puigcerda before transfer to Figueras.
She was only released when Capt P G H Dorchy, Vice-Consul in Barcelona,
who had been expecting her arrival, learned where she was. She reached
the British Consulate 17 February and went on to Madrid 8 March. On
24 March 1943, Sue and Patrick finally arrived at Gibraltar - just days
after Tom had left for England.
After
Trouvé had abandoned Sue and her baby, he returned to Cannes
to 'collect' the rest of her luggage and more money. A bizarre footnote
was that in November 1945, Trouvé wrote to Sue in Paris asking
if she would vouch for his having been her passeur - he had been arrested
and now needed her help
Sue's
departure from Gibraltar was delayed when she was admitted to the Colonial
hospital with German measles but she finally left the Rock in June.
On board the ship to England she was reunited with her friend Nancy
Fiocca. They arrived at Gourock 17 June 1943.
In
December 1942 Nancy had been involved with the rescue of her friend
Ian Garrow from Mauzac. When Pat O'Leary and Paul Ulmann were betrayed
by the infiltrator Roger le Neveu and arrested in Toulouse on 2 March
1943, it was Nancy that went to Marseille to warn the rest of the Organisation.
Within three weeks, most of the Marseille network had also been arrested
and Nancy's days in France were numbered. By the end of the month, Françoise
Dissard had arranged to have Nancy, Renée Nouveau, radio operator
Philippe Valat and PAO courier Danielle Reddé taken across the mountains
with a group of evading airmen. Nancy later joined SOE using her maiden
name of Wake.
In
June 1943 Thomas E J Kenny was commissioned into the RAF and served
with the RAF Intelligence Service for the rest of the war.
Thomas
Edward James Kenny died 10 February 1971 at Saint Cloud, France.
Tom
is survived by his wife Sue (Martinez) Kenny, who lives in Paris, and
their three sons: Edward Patrick, also in Paris, Michael Phillip in
Epsom, Surrey and John James of San Pere de Ribes, Barcelona.