Claude de Baissac
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Claude Denis de Boucherville Baissac, known as Claude de Baissac or by his codename David, (28 February 1907, Curepipe - 22 December 1974) was a French-Mauritian agent in Special Operations Executive (SOE). He organised the important Resistance network SCIENTIST, in south-west France from August 1942 to March 1943 and in Britanny from February 1944 onwards. His elder sister Lise was also an SOE agent.
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[edit] Life
His first mission came on 30 July 1942, when he and his radio operator Peulevé were parachuted in from a Halifax near Nimes to set up and head the SCIENTIST network. However, they were dropped from too low an altitude and landed badly - de Baissac broke his ankle and Peulevé was so badly hurt he had to return to England. In the following months, de Baissac developed the SCIENTIST network in the Bordeaux region, receiving reinforcements in the form of Roger Landes (Stanislas, his new radio operator, dropped on 2 November) and Mary Herbert (Marie-Louise, his liaison officer, landed by boat on 8 November). Certain resistance group concentrated their efforts for a joint attack on the submarine pens in the port and other operations in the Landes countryside.
De Baissac worked closely with Francis Suttill and his Prosper-PHYSICIAN network in Paris, before briefly returning to London on the night of 17/18 March 1943 in a Lysander[1] to announce that the network had 11,000 men at its disposal. In May 1943, Suttill warned de Baissac that he thought Henri Déricourt, a member of SCIENTIST, was working for the Germans just before de Baissac was parachuted back in at the full moon with new instructions. The parachute drops of men and supplied intensified, but on 23 June the Gestapo captured Suttill and hundreds of other agents and Resistance workers from Prosper-PHYSICIAN and other networks and attached groups. The SCIENTIST network was caught up in PHYSICIAN's fall and on the night of 16/17 August Claude, his sister Lise and Nicholas Bodington returned to England by Lysander, with Roger Landes (Aristide) replacing Claude at the head of SCIENTIST until November 1943.
In February 1944 de Baissac was parachuted in to Mayenne with an all-Mauritian team made up of his sister Lise, captain Jean-Marie Renaud-Danticolle (René) and the radio operator Maurice Louis Larcher (Vladimir). His new mission was to amalgamate, arm and energise the Resistance groups in the region stretching from Caen to Laval. When D-Day came, de Baissac joined George Starr and his WHEELWRIGHT network in the south-west.
After the war he and Herbert married.
[edit] Medals
- UK : DSO
- France : Knight of the Légion d'honneur ; Croix de guerre 1939-1945
[edit] Sources and external links
- Photographs of Claude de Baissac on the Special Forces Roll of Honour site
- Spartacus Educational
- Michael Richard Daniell Foot, SOE in France. An account of the Work of the British Special Operations Executive in France, 1940-1944, London, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1966, 1968 ; Whitehall History Publishing, in association with Frank Cass, 2004.
- Guy Penaud, Histoire secrète de la Résistance dans le Sud-Ouest, Éditions Sud-Ouest, 1993
[edit] Notes
- ^ Hugh Verity, We landed by moonlight. As the book does not give a precise date for his return to France, de Baissac must have been parachuted in.

