Henry Thackthwaite

Major Henry Hopkinson Augustus Thackthwaite OBE (1 April 1904 – 8 November 1982) was a British soldier and SOE veteran.

Henry H.A. Thackthwaite
Born(1904-04-01)1 April 1904
London
Died8 November 1982(1982-11-08) (aged 78)
London
Years of service1939 1946
RankMajor
UnitRoyal Army Service Corps
AwardsOBE, Legion of Honour, Croix de guerre

Family background and pre-WWII

Thackthwaite was born to Henry Hopkinson Thackthwaite and Fernande Madeline LeMarie in the Hanworth area of west London. Both his mother and paternal grandmother were French, his wife was Belgian and he was completely bi-lingual from an early age. From 1917-1923, Thackthwaite attended St Paul's School[1] in Hammersmith before going up to read Physiology at Corpus Christi, Oxford, he graduated in 1927 and was awarded his BA in 1928 and a honorary MA in 1965.[2]

Thackthwaite married Jeanne Charlotte-Marie Piette (1907-1989) sometime before 1939, possibly abroad. There are no children.

Prior to the start of WWII, Thackthwaite worked in the Beaminster area of Dorset as a teacher/translator, the 1939 National Registration Act (NRA) taken in September of that year shows him with his wife living at his parents house along with his French mother-in-law and her daughter.[3]

Second World War

Thackthwaite is noted in the 1939 NRA as 'Army Officer, Emergency', he joined the Royal Army Service Corps on 30 March 1940 and promoted to Second Lieutenant in May 1940.[4][5]

The SOE's RF Section came into being in the spring of 1941 to represent those members of the French Resistance who were firmly Gaullist in their loyalties and was separate to F Section.[6] RF Section was located at 1 Dorset Square,[7] London and in sequence headed by Capt. Eric Piquet-Wicks followed by Lt.Col. J.R.H. Hutchinson from August 1942 to the autumn of 1943, then (briefly as caretaker) Bickham Sweet-Escott[8][9] and finally by Lt.Col. L.H. Dismore.

From January 1942 onwards, Thackthwaite was making contributions to RF section's 'History'.[10] These appear in the National Archives under HS7/123 and HS7/124.[11] He is credited elsewhere for recruiting Frederick Cardozo into the SOE while on training exercises in Scotland in 1943.

Operation UNION-I

On 6 January 1944,[12] Capt.Thackthwaite [alias Procureur], along with US Capt. Peter Julien Otiz [alias Chambellan] (OSS) and Camille Monier (BCRA) [alias Magyar alias Léon] were parachuted from a Handley Page Halifax belonging to RAF 138 Squadron and piloted by F/Lieut Pick onto DZ (Drop-zone) Agonie. DZ Agonie was near the village of Eymeux, 10kms to the north-east of Romans-sur-Isère. Colonel Pierre Fourcaud [alias Sphère] had been scheduled to accompany the team but had broken a leg during training, he joined the group on 8 February 1944, landing at LZ (Landing-zone) Orion.[13]

The objective of this operation was to assess and co-ordinate the organisation of the local maquis forces in the Vercors covering the three départments of Isère, Drôme and Savoie. After landing Thackthwaite and Ortiz changed from civilian jump clothes to military uniforms and according to Thackthwaite became "the first allied liaison officers to appear in uniform in France since 1940".

The Vercors plateau extends over almost 1000 sq kms and is over 1000m above sea level. In addition to the resident population, Thackthwaite found about 3000 maquisards, 500 of which were lightly armed and "[who] could be organised into a HQ company supplied with Vickers, mortars and Piats".[14]

UNION-I led to the much larger UNION-II operation led by Ortiz from 1 August 1944.[15][16]

Thackthwaite was exfiltrated on 3 May 1944 from the LZ Aigle to the north west of Manziat near Maçon, there is a memorial on the side of the road commemorating the use of the landing zone. The pick-up was performed by RAF Squadron 161 using a Lockheed Hudson aircraft piloted by F/L Affleck, amongst others collected was Paul Riviere [alias Marquis].[17]

It was this mission that led to Thackthwaite's OBE,[18] awarded in March 1945, his citation reads (in part) thus: "Major Thackthwaite was responsible with his colleagues for establishing contact with those elements of the resistance necessary to facilitate the re-organisation of the Maquis groups in his region. By his tact, administrative ability and knowledge of the Resistance Movements in FRANCE, he was largely instrumental in securing the acceptance of the mission by the heads of those movements, and in organising the necessary parachute operations to equip a considerable proportion of the Maquis groups", the citation continues "...(he) was ordered to return to this country (...) to take up an important administrative position of the SOE (RF)".[19]

This coincided with the capture of Yeo-Thomas on 21 March 1944 by the Gestapo while conducting operation Asymptote. The withdrawal of Thackthwaite is highly significant; having two senior RF Section members in the field, one captured, presented a huge security risk. Yeo-Thomas would spend the remainder of the war as a POW masquerading mostly as F/L Kenneth Dodkin (RAF). He arrived in Paris on VE day, 8 May 1945 and was able rejoin Thackthwaite and José Dupuis at the British Officer's Club in the rue du Faubourg St Honoré for dinner.[20]

EMFFI

The État-major des Forces Française de l'Interieur (EMFFI) was set up just ahead of the D-day landings in June 1944, its role was to merge the various resistance forces operating in France.[21] By July, the two sections of SOE - F and RF were brought under the overseeing control of EMFFI with the majority of F Section becoming the 2e (intelligence) and 3e (operations) bureaux. The RF section became 6e bureau charged with 'special missions'.[22] Thackthwaite, along with others from RF 'moved' into 6e Bureau of EMFFI

Operation JUDEX

In late 1944, EMFFI mounted a dual operation 'JUDEX'[23][24] from an office in the Hotel Cecil in Paris. The two operations were commanded by Col. M. Buckmaster for 3e bureau and Thackthwaite for 6e bureau. The objective of the operation was to visit the numerous maquis groups. Beyond that, it became a hot political potato with issues of pensions, compensation payments for widows, awards and medals for fighters, the re-establishment of normal post war life in France etc. The reports of RF Section have not survived.[25]

Awards

In addition to the OBE awarded in 1945, Thackthwaite was awarded the Medal of Freedom with Bronze palm by the USA in 1947 [26]as well as the Croix de Guerre and Legion d'Honneur by France in recognition of work done for the French Resistance.

After the War

Thackthwaite was demobbed 25 October 1946 and returned to his parents home in Beaminster, Dorset. From the early 1950s, he taught Latin and French privately as well as at the local Beaminster and Netherbury Grammar School.[27] In 1962/3 he moved to the Cardozo family home in St Cyr near Tours, France.

From the early 1970s, Thackthwaite lived in the small village of Bourg du Bost between Ribérac and Aubeterre in the north-west of the Dordogne department. While there he taught French to young English children whose parents had bought property in the area. By 1982, his health was failing and he returned to the UK, taking up residence at the Royal Star and Garter Retirement home in west London on 29 June. He passed away there on 8 November 1982.

References

  1. Betts, P.Y. (2012). People who say Goodbye (e-book ed.). Souvenir Press. ISBN 978-0285640917. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  2. Corpus Christi College Biographical Register
  3. Thackthwaite, Henry H.A. "1939 Nat Registration Act". Ancestry.com. Ancestry.com. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  4. Thackthwaite, Henry. "British Army Lists". National Library of Scotland. NLS. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  5. Thackthwaite, Henry (3 May 1940). "The London Gazette". Supplement. 34841: 2621. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  6. Marks, Leo (1998). Between silk and cyanide : the story of SOE's code war. London: Harper Collins. p. 167-8. ISBN 0002559447.
  7. RF Section. "RF is for Real Friends". Alliance Française de Londres Ltd. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  8. Sweet-Escott, Bickham A.C. "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford DNB. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  9. Sweet-Escott, Bickham (1965). Baker Street Irregular. London: Methuen & Co. p. 179-186.
  10. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 207. ISBN 0415408008.
  11. National Archives. "SOE (RF) History". National Archives. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  12. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 354. ISBN 0415408008.
  13. Tillet, Pierre. "History of WWII In/ Exfiltrations" (PDF). pp. 96 & 102. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  14. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 315. ISBN 0415408008.
  15. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 347. ISBN 0415408008.
  16. Tillet, Pierre. "History of WWII In/ Exfiltrations" (PDF). p. 151. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  17. Tillet, Pierre. "History of WWII In/ Exfiltrations" (PDF). p. 120. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  18. Thackthwaite, Henry (22 March 1945). "The London Gazette". Supplement (36994): 1541. Retrieved 23 September 2020. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D7396354
  20. Marshall, Bruce (2001). The white rabbit. Cassell. p. 266. ISBN 030435697-2.
  21. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France. Ch XII. ISBN 0415408008.
  22. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France. p. 32. ISBN 0415408008.
  23. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 372. ISBN 0415408008.
  24. Bourne-Paterson, Robert (31 October 2016). SOE in France 1941-1945 : an official account of the Special Operations Executive's 'British' circuits in France. Barnsley, S. Yorkshire. pp. xvi–xvii, para 26. ISBN 978147388203-4.
  25. Foot, M. R. D. (April 2006). SOE in France (1st ed.). p. 45. ISBN 0415408008.
  26. Thackthwaite, Henry. "London Gazette". Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  27. 'History of Beaminster and Netherbury Grammar School' compiled by Derek Woodland, Thackthwaite section written by Dr. Gregory Stevens Cox
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.