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Virginia Hall: A Modest Heroine

The Good Shepherd, a new movie with Angelina Jolie, and Matt Damon, directed by Robert DeNiro (!), will open Friday, a story of the beginnings of the American intelligence services, the OSS and the CIA. I can hardly wait.

Earlier this week, there were some small news articles about Virginia Hall, who served her country risking her life time and time again, fighting the Nazis in the allied clandestine services, facing the possibility of torture and death if she were caught. Hall didn’t let anything hold her back. She believed that what she was doing was worth doing, and when WWII ended, she continued working quietly for the greater good. I would have loved to meet this woman. What a pistol!

Here is what Wikipedia has to say about her:

Virginia Hall MBE DSC (April 6, 1906 – July 14, 1982) was an American spy during World War II. She was also known by many aliases: “Marie Monin,” “Germaine,” “Diane,” and “Camille.”[1]

She was born in Baltimore, Maryland and attended the best schools and colleges, but wanted to finish her studies in Europe. With help from her parents, she traveled the Continent and studied in France, Germany, and Austria, finally landing an appointment as a Consular Service clerk at the American Embassy in Warsaw, Poland in 1931. Hall hoped to join the Foreign Service, but the loss of her lower leg was a terrible setback. Around 1932 she accidentally shot herself in the left leg when hunting in Turkey, it was later amputed from the knee down, which caused her a limp.[2]

The injury foreclosed whatever chance she might have had for a diplomatic career, and she resigned from the Department of State in 1939.

The coming of war that year found Hall in Paris. She joined the Ambulance Service before the fall of France and ended up in Vichy-controlled territory when the fighting stopped in the summer of 1940. Hall made her way to London and volunteered for Britain’s newly formed Special Operations Executive, which sent her back to Vichy in August 1941. She spent the next 15 months there, helping to coordinate the activities of the French Underground in Vichy and the occupied zone of France. When the Germans suddenly seized all of France in November 1942, Hall barely escaped to Spain.[3]

Journeying back to London (after working for SOE for a time in Madrid), in July 1943 she was quietly made a Member of the Order of the British Empire. The British had wanted to recognize her contribution with a higher honor but were afraid it might compromise her identity as she was then still active as an operative.

Virginia Hall joined the U.S. Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Special Operations Branch in March 1944 and asked to return to occupied France. She hardly needed training in clandestine work behind enemy lines, and OSS promptly granted her request and landed her from a British MTB in Brittany (her artificial leg kept her from parachuting in).

Code named “Diane,” she eluded the Gestapo and contacted the French Resistance in central France. She mapped drop zones for supplies and commandos from England, found safe houses, and linked up with a Jedburgh team after the Allied Forces landed at Normandy. Hall helped train three battalions of Resistance forces to wage guerrilla warfare against the Germans and kept up a stream of valuable reporting until Allied troops overtook her small band in September.

For her efforts in France, General William Joseph Donovan in September 1945 personally awarded Virginia Hall a Distinguished Service Cross — the only one awarded to a civilian woman in World War II. (emphasis mine)

180px-virginia_hall.jpg

In 1950, she married OSS agent Paul Goillot. In 1951, she joined the Central Intelligence Agency working as an intelligence analyst on French parliamentary affairs. She retired in 1966 to a farm in Barnesville, Maryland.
Virginia Hall Goillot died at the Shady Grove Adventist Hospital in Rockville, MD in 1982.

Her story was told in “The Wolves at the Door : The True Story of America’s Greatest Female Spy” by Judith L. Pearson (2005) The Lyons Press, ISBN 1-59228-762-X

She was honoured in 2006 again, at the French and British embassies for her courageous work.[4]

December 14, 2006 - Posted by | Books, ExPat Life, France, Germany, News, Political Issues, Social Issues, Uncategorized, Women's Issues

6 Comments »

  1. I should be more careful what I say around you from now on!

    Purgatory's avatar Comment by Purgatory | December 14, 2006 | Reply

  2. Purg. Be Afraid. Be very afraid. (jk)

    Heee heee heee. This woman was made of strong stuff, stronger than me. But I can admire from afar.

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | December 14, 2006 | Reply

  3. I HAVE ADMIRED VIRGINIA HALL EVER SINCE I READ MRS. PEARSON’S NOVEL “THE WOLVES ARE AT THE DOOR” A WOMAN OF SHEER COURAGE WHO SERVED HER COUNTRY FRANCE AND ENGLAND IN WWII IN INTELLIGENCE AND ESPIONAGE IN SPITE OF A WOODEN LEG WHICH DIDN’T KEEP HER DOWN.

    DOTTIE's avatar Comment by DOTTIE | January 15, 2007 | Reply

  4. Welcome Dottie! I share your admiration for Virginia Hall. I think she even had a code name for her wooden leg – she NEVER let it slow her down, nor being a woman.

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | January 15, 2007 | Reply

  5. THERE IS A WORLD WAR 11 MOVIE ABOUT VIRGINIA HALL, DOES ANYONE KNOW THE NAME OF THE MOVIE, I BELIEVE IT IS A BLACK AND WHITE.
    IT MIGHT BE ON NETFLIX

    CORNOLDI DANIEL's avatar Comment by CORNOLDI DANIEL | March 2, 2013 | Reply

  6. I looked around; I don’t see any record of an earlier film on Virginia Hall, Cornoldi. Sorry!

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | March 2, 2013 | Reply


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