This is the gripping history of the greatest SIS /MI6 intelligence networks behind enemy lines in World War One and World War Two. La Dame Blanche (‘The White Lady’) and Clarence Service brings this history to life through primary sources and oral testimonies. La Dame Blanche took its name from a legend that if the ghost of a white lady appears, she would herald the demise and downfall of the Hohenzollern royal dynasty, the ruling family of Brandenburg-Prussia (and later imperial Germany). The symbolism is clear – by its work, La Dame Blanche network of spies would facilitate the end of German rule in Belgium and see the downfall of the royal dynasty. In the Second World War the network was reawakened as the Clarence Service. Across Belgium, observation posts were set up to gather intelligence on the German army, defences, train movements and military installations. What intelligence did they secure and how did it impact, if at all, on these two major European conflicts? There are points of high drama and tension in the lives of the leaders and agents, as well as betrayal. Helen’s research uncovers the heroism of the women and men of these networks and the ingenious ways in which they gathered intelligence for London.
Helen Fry was raised in North Devon and went on to graduate from the University of Exeter with a degree and Ph.D. She has written over 25 books on the Second World War with particular reference to the 10,000 Germans and Austrians who fought for Britain, and intelligence, espionage and prisoners of war. Her highly acclaimed book The Walls Have Ears: The Greatest Intelligence Operation of WWII was in the top 8 Daily Mail’s Books of the Year in War, and has been optioned for film. It has been the subject of numerous documentaries and continues to receive media attention.&n...
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