Norah Briscoe
Norah Constance Lavinia Briscoe (1899 Wirral, Cheshire – 1995 Waveney, Suffolk) was a British collaborator who attempted to supply classified information to Nazi Germany during World War II. In 1941, she was convicted of an offence under the Defence Regulations and sentenced to 5 years’ penal servitude.
Biography
Norah Briscoe, née Davies, was born into a middle-class family and was brought up in Liverpool. After her mother gave birth to triplets she was sent to live with two elderly aunts. She felt rejected and a convent schooling increased her sense of rejection.
She married Reginald Briscoe, a civil servant in 1925 at Birkenhead and they were living in Kingston on Thames when he died of acute appendicitis in 1932.
She began a career as a freelance journalist and writer and in 1934 she travelled to Germany to write articles. There she became enthused by National Socialism, so much so that in 1936 she placed her only child, Paul born in 1930, with a German friend, Seppl Sauter. Paul was to be brought up in the Sauter family in Miltenberg, Lower Franconia, where he received a German education and joined the Hitler Youth. In 1939, with war in Europe looming, Briscoe made no attempt to bring her son home and when Britain declared war on 3 September 1939, Paul was stranded in Germany.[1]
Briscoe joined the British Union of Fascists and was a BUF Team Leader in Bournemouth.[2] She was also a member of the Right Club, a pro-German society founded by the right-wing extremist, Captain Archibald Maule Ramsay, the MP for Peebles and Southern Midlothian.[3]
Wartime activity
In early 1941, Norah Briscoe was living as the lodger of Gertrude Hiscox in Chiswick, London. Like Briscoe, Hiscox was a former member of the BUF, an active pro-German sympathiser and a fellow member of the Right Club.
Briscoe worked as a temporary shorthand typist at the Ministry of Supply from 21 January 1941. This Ministry was an important wartime department set up in 1939 to co-ordinate the supply of equipment to the British armed forces.
In March 1941, Hiscox invited a fellow-member of the Right Club to tea at her home but unknown to her he was an MI5 agent monitoring the activities of its membership. In conversation, Briscoe disclosed to the agent that she was working in a sensitive area of the Ministry, that she was keeping carbon copies of documents she thought would be useful to Germany and that she wanted to pass them on. These documents related to the sites of war factories, shortages of strategic materials and the establishment of submarine bases in Northern Ireland.[4]
Arrest
A meeting was set up by the agent and when the classified documents were handed over at the flat of a supposed German agent, 'Harald Kurtz', Briscoe and Hiscox were arrested.[5] They subsequently appeared at Bow Street magistrate's court on 17 March 1941 and were remanded to Holloway Prison.
Trial
On 16 June 1941, Briscoe and Hiscox were tried in camera at the Old Bailey where they both pleaded guilty to a charge under Defence Regulation 2A of intentionally communicating information which was likely to assist the enemy. The trial lasted less than an hour. Briscoe was sentenced to 5 years' penal servitude, as was Hiscox.[6][7][8]
On release, Briscoe was immediately made the subject of a detention order under Defence Regulation 18B.[9]
Subsequent life
After the war, Norah Briscoe was reunited with her son in the summer of 1945. She lived with him for the last 30 years of her life until her death in 1996.[10]
See also
References
- ↑ "The tame Englishman". The Spectator. 21 June 2007. Retrieved 2013-01-04
- ↑ "The Defence Regulation 18B British Union Detainees List". Friends of Oswald Mosley. 2008. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ Julie V Gottlieb (2003). Feminine Fascism: Women in Britain's Fascist Movement, 1923-45. I. B. Tauris. p. 257. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ Nigel West (2007). Guy Liddell Diaries, Volume 1: 1939-1942. Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 134, 135. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ Richard Thurlow (1998). "Fascism in Britain: A History, 1918-1945". I.B.Tauris. p. 175. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ J A Amato (2002). Rethinking Home: A Case for Writing Local History. University of California Press. pp. 170, 171. ISBN 9780520232938. Retrieved 2013-01-04
- ↑ "TWO WOMEN SENTENCED". The Age. June 18, 1941. Retrieved 2013-01-04
- ↑ "Gertrude HISCOX/Norah BRISCOE: British. (KV 2/898)". The National Archives. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ "WAR: Defence Regulations 18B Detainees: BRISCOE, Norah Constance Lavinia (HO 45/25741)". The National Archives. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ↑ "A shocking childhood: Hitler's little helper". Daily Mail. 21 April 2007. Retrieved 2013-01-04
- Paul Briscoe (2007). My Friend the Enemy: My Childhood in Nazi Germany. Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-231-6.