Yvonne Cormeau, born
Beatrice Yvonne
Biesterfeld (18 December 1909,
Shanghai, China – 25 December 1997) was a heroine
of the
Special Operations
Executive during the Second World War who was the second female
radio operator to be sent to France and who talked her way out of
arrest by pretending her wireless was an X-ray machine.
Early life
Beatrice Yvonne Biesterfeld was born the daughter of a Belgian
consular official and Scottish mother.
She was educated in
both Belgium and Scotland
.
She was living in London when in 1937 she married Charles Edouard
Emile Cormeau, a chartered accountant who was a second generation
French immigrant born in England. Her husband enlisted in the
The Rifles and in November 1940 he was
wounded in France and was sent back to the UK. Shortly afterwards
he was killed when their London home was bombed. Amazingly Yvonne's
life was saved by a bath which fell over her head and protected
her.
War Service & Special Operations Executive
Newly widowed, Yvonne decided to "take her husband's place in the
Armed Forces" and she joined the
WAAF as an administrator in
November 1941 (Service No 2027172).
Whilst serving at RAF Swinderby
she answered an appeal on the noticeboard for
linguists, and was recruited by SOE and trained as an F Section
wireless operator on February 15, 1943. She was promoted to
the rank of
Flight Officer. Her
daughter, Yvette, was only two years old at the time and was placed
in a convent of Ursine nuns in Oxfordshire where she remained until
she was five. She volunteered to "do something and save France from
the Nazis".
She did her SOE training with
Yolande
Beekman,
Cecily Lefort and
Noor Inayat Khan.
On the night of August
22, 1943 she left Tempsford
airbase and was parachuted into St Antoine du Queyret, north-east of
Bordeaux
. She
was given a powder compact by Colonel
Maurice Buckmaster before leaving for
France.
Her role was to work as courier and wireless operator on the
Wheelwright Circuit in
Gascony. Cormeau worked on the circuit with
George Starr, "Hiliare", who she had known
before the War when living in Brussels. Whilst carring out her
secret operations in Occupied France she used the codenames
"Annette", "Fairy" and "Sarafari".
Cormeau sent over 400 transmissions back to London, which was a
record for the F Section. She made arrangements for arms and
supplies to be dropped for the local Maquis. She also assisted in
the cutting of the power and telephone lines, resulting in the
isolation of the Wehrmacht Group G garrison near Toulouse.
She was almost arrested by the Germans after being betrayed by an
agent codenamed Rodolph. However, she continued to operate, despite
being confronted by "wanted" posters in her neighbourhood which
gave an accurate sketch of her appearance. Her success was possibly
owed to the fact that she used car batteries rather than mains
power, making it more difficult for the German D/F vans to find
her.
Famously, Cormeau was stopped at a German road block whilst with
Starr and the pair were questioned while a gun was held in their
backs. Eventually the Germans accepted her story and ID that she
was a district nurse, and she succeeded in passing her wireless
equipment off as an X-ray machine.
She worked for 13 months and evaded arrest despite some narrow
escapes.
A year after the end of the war, she was
demobilised with the WAAF rank of
Flight Officer.
She then worked as a
translator and in the SOE section at the Foreign Office
. She became a linchpin of F Section veterans
and arranged their annual
Bastille Day
dinner.
Honours & Decorations
After the war she was appointed
MBE, and
decorated with the
Légion
d'honneur,
Croix de Guerre and
Médaille
combattant volontaire de la Résistance.
Her dress,
complete with bullet hole, and a bloodstained briefcase, are
exhibited along with her WAAF officer's uniform at the Imperial War
Museum
in London. More information can be found in
the book
Moondrop to Gascony (1946) by
Anne-Marie Walters, who worked as the
circuit's courier.
Post War
After the war, Cormeau and her daughter,
Yvette Pitt, were reunited and lived in London.
Cormeau was one of the earliest members of the
Special Forces Club in London and she
also was a committee member. She became a British citizen and
promoted
Anglo-French relations.
After her
80th birthday she married again to James Edgar Farrow, with whom she lived
in Derbyshire
. He died before her, but she was survived by
her daughter.
References
- Squadron
Leader Beryl E. Escott, Mission Improbable: A
salute to the RAF women of SOE in wartime France, London,
Patrick Stevens Limited, 1991. ISBN 1-85260-289-9
- Liane Jones, A Quiet Courage:
Women Agents in the French Resistance, London, Transworld
Publishers Ltd, 1990. ISBN 0-593-01663-7
- Marucs Binney, The Women Who
Lived for Danger: The Women Agents of SOE in the Second World
War, London, Hodder and Stoughton, 2002. ISBN
0-340-81840-9