Jacques Vaillant de Guélis

Jacques Theodore Paul Marie Vaillant de Guélis
Born (1907-04-06)6 April 1907
Cardiff, Wales
Died 7 August 1945(1945-08-07) (aged 38)
Lichfield, England
Buried at Cathays Cemetery, Cardiff, Wales[1]
Allegiance  United Kingdom
Years of service 1939–1945
Rank Major
Unit General List[1]
Special Operations Executive
F Section
Battles/wars Second World War
Awards MBE
Military Cross
Croix de Guerre

Major Jacques Theodore Paul Marie Vaillant de Guélis MBE MC (6 April 1907 - 7 August 1945) was a Wales-born French Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent during the Second World War. De Guélis was initially in the British Expeditionary Force in France in 1940 and later joined SOE and parachuted into France to organise resistance networks. He was badly injured in a motor accident in August 1945 and later died of his injuries in hospital. He is buried in his home town of Cardiff.[2]

Biography

De Guélis was born in Cardiff, Wales on April 6, 1907. His French father, Raoul, was a coal exporter, his mother was Marie. He was educated in Cardiff and then studied at Magdalen College, Oxford. He held dual nationality but completed his required French national service in the 1930s and then returned to Britain to work in advertising in London and Paris. In 1938, he married Beryl Richardson. The family regularly travelled for holidays at the French family property, in Sancerre, in Cher.

Second World War

Interpreter

Following the declaration of war in September 1939, de Guélis returned to France to join his unit in Orléans. In early October, 1939 he was then posted as a liaison officer to the British 234 Field Company of Royal Engineers. De Guélis was an interpreter on the staff of Lord Gort, commander of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in France. He was later evacuated from Dunkirk in early June but later returned to France via Cherbourg on June 12 to assist other forces to escape.

Following the surrender of France on June 22, 1940, de Guélis fled south to Marseilles. He then travelled to neutral Spain via the Pyrenees. Held in an internment camp by Spanish authorities at Miranda del Ebro, his release was organised by the British embassy. De Guélis then travelled by boat to Glasgow arriving in March 1941.

Staff Section F

Back in London on April 14, 1941 de Guélis, commissioned in the British Army General List (service number 184312),[1] was recruited by Lewis Gielgud to be part of the French section (F Section) (headed by Maurice Buckmaster) of the Special Operations Executive (SOE)). His prior experience of the German occupation of France allowed him to pass on his experiences onto wireless operators and saboteurs being sent to France. Initially, he was regarded as too valuable to SOE to send on missions, but an exception was made in his case.

Mission to Vichy France - August 1941

Three months after the arrival of the first SOE agents in France, De Guélis was parachuted into unoccupied Vichy France (along with Gilbert Turck, his radio operator) on the night of 6/7 August 1941, landing near Châteauroux, with a number of objectives:

De Guélis was picked up in France by a Lysander of 138 Squadron; the first time this Special Duties Flight had been done. His arrival at the rendezvous had been severely delayed by an inspection of identity papers by the local police. He arrived back at RAF Tangmere.

For the successful completion of this mission de Guélis was recommended for the MBE by Minister of Economic Warfare, Hugh Dalton.

Section AMF Algiers

In November 1942, de Guélis was sent to head up the French section of SOE in Algeria. In September 1943 he was sent to conduct operations against the Germans on the island of Corsica. The Germans withdrew from the island in early October and de Guélis then returned to London in late October, 1943.

Low Countries & France

On 19 December 1943 De Guélis was assigned to cover the Low Countries, France and Allied French Directorate as assistant to Lieutenant Colonel JRH Hutchinson planning for the invasion of France in the summer of 1944. In April 1944, he attended radio courses on Eureka-Rebecca devices.

Mission LINDEN

On July 7, 1944 de Guélis was sent to south-western France, to work with resistance forces in the Corrèze area.

Front (left to right): Colonel Charles (Commandant X, FTPF), Commandant Thomas (Interallied Mission), Marcel Lacouture (local radio operator), Major (M D) McKenzie (Interallied Mission). Back (left to right): Captain R Maloubier (SOE), 2nd Lieutenant Lannoux (WT operator to Major Thomas), 2nd Lieutenant Jean Claude Guiet (US Army attached to SOE), Major Jacques de Guelis (SOE), Squadron Leader Andre Simon, 2nd Lieutenant Jacques Dufour (SOE).

Post war

After the liberation of France, he was assigned to the Special Allied Airborne Reconnaissance Force (SAARF) to help coordinate the resistance and to provide feedback information, mainly on the conditions of prisoners of war and concentration camps. He was sent across Europe to search for information. Whilst in Germany, his car was involved in an accident between Flossenburg and the Weiden on May 16, 1945. He was transferred to a hospital in Lichfield, England, but died on August 7, 1945.

De Guélis was cremated and his ashes were interred in Cathays Cemetery in Cardiff, Wales.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Commonwealth War Graves - World War 2". The Friends of Cathays Cemetery. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  2. Greg Lewis. "Unknown WW2 secret agent buried in Cardiff cemetery". BBC News. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
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