Jacqueline Nearne

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Jacqueline Nearne
Nickname(s) Josette
Born (1916-05-27)27 May 1916
Brighton, England, UK
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
London, England, UK
Service/branch Special Operations Executive, FANY
Years of service 1942–1944 (FANY/SOE)
Unit Stationer
Awards MBE
Relations Eileen Nearne (sister), Francis and Frederick Nearne (brothers)
Other work United Nations

Jacqueline Nearne MBE (27 May 1916 in Brighton, England – 15 August 1982 in London, England) was a secret agent for the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) in Nazi-occupied France during World War II.

Biography

She was the elder daughter of an English father and a French mother. She moved with her family to France in 1923. At the age of 18, she moved to Nice to work as a commercial travelling representative for an office equipment company. When France fell, she made her way to England via Portugal and Gibraltar.[1]

On her arrival in England, she applied to the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) but was turned down as she had no experience of driving in the dark and on the left hand side of the road. In 1942, she was recruited into the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (the FANYs) alongside her younger sister Eileen. Her brother Francis also served in the SOE.

Nearne's fluency in French quickly brought her to the attention of F Section, a branch of the SOE. She trained as a courier in mid-1942. She was also taught Morse code transmissions using a suitcase radio, which would help her in her work with the French Resistance. She was the first woman, along with Odette Sansom, to train at Training School 51 Ringway Parachute School.[citation needed]

On 25 January 1943, she was parachuted into France to work for the vast Stationer circuit in central France. Despite the risks of being exposed or betrayed she travelled by train. She maintained contact with the neighbouring 'Headmaster' network and other SOE networks in the Paris area. She carried spare parts for radios inside a cosmetics bag. After fifteen months in the field, she finally returned to Britain in April 1944 by means of Westland Lysander.[citation needed]

She was awarded the MBE in 1945.

Post–WWII

After the War she looked after her sister, Eileen Nearne, in London.[1] She then moved to New York to work in the Protocol Department of the United Nations. In the 1950s, Brian Stonehouse painted a portrait of her which now hangs in the Special Forces Club in London.[citation needed]

In 1946 she played "Cat", a character based on herself, in the RAF's Film Unit production of Now It Can Be Told, which was later released to theatres in a shorter version as School for Danger, a drama-documentary about the wartime training and deployment of SOE operatives. Appearing with Jacqueline was her SOE colleague, Captain Harry Rée. School for Danger was released in 1948.

Death

Nearne, who never married, died in 1982, aged 66, from undisclosed causes.

References

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External links