Tag Archives: Maquisards

Vivr Libre du Mouris

From mid-January to late March 1944, some 460 French maquis guerrillas of the Battalion des Glières occupied the Glières plateau, making it a besieged Free “French” territory where they hoisted the tricolor flag every day.

The motley assortment included not only paroled French soldiers and sailors but also 56 exiled Spanish Republicans who had escaped to the area in 1939 when Franco took over.

The remote alpine pasture only held about 20 year-round inhabitants but it made a great parachute drop zone to receive weapons intended for the maquis of Haute-Savoie, and the first RAF weapons drop, of 54 containers, was made on the night of 13/14 February. Guns and explosives were then spirited out through the nearby trails and paths to other parts of the region. 

RAF parachute container drop to Resistance French 1944

Under the command first of LT Théodosius Morel (formerly of the Blue Devils of the 27e bataillon de chasseurs alpins) known as Tom Morel, then Capt. Maurice Anjot, the pocket held out against increasingly strong Wehrmacht attacks until 26 March 1944 when Anjot ordered those who could to break out and melt back into the countryside.

Maquis members of the Allobroges section during its breakout on Esserts on March 27, 1944 Plateau des Glières

In all, at least 129 maquisards died there, were killed in combat, executed on capture, or– along with the 20 inhabitants– were deported to concentration camps.

They are remembered in the National Necropolis of Glières, and a memorial stands on the plateau where the battalion mustered.

Lost the battle, but not the war…

The battle along the Glières plateau was perhaps the biggest set-piece battle by the Resistance in the lead-up to the twin Overlord and Dragoon Landings in the summer of 1944 that would spark the overt liberation of the Republic. The Allies had gone far to build up the shadow army for “the day.”

Allied Military Missions in Occupied France, 1944

As noted by Plan Sussex:

From 1941 to 1945, SOE organized about 3,733 parachute landings and 81 pick-up operations (Lysander, Hudson, or Dakota) into France:

About 470 SOE agents, including 39 women, were sent out into France. Among Section F, 104 of whom were killed in action or executed (13 women), 30 escaped and 12 were released. They were “closely harnessed to the military effort” and “played a very considerable part in our complete and final victory.”

About 100 Jedburgh teams were dropped into France, Belgium, and Holland between June and December 1944.

Jed Nationalies dispatched into France :

  • British: 91 Jed
  • French: 108 Jed
  • USA: 77 Jed
  • Canadian: 2 Jed

The Jedburgh Teams had in Europe:

  • 14 members were killed in action.
  • 5 members died from injuries and were shot when prisoners or by accident.
  • 3 members were killed due to bad dropping or parachute failure.
  • 11 members were severely injured during the fighting.
  • 4 members were injured due to bad dropping.
  • 4 prisoners who escaped.

The Carpetbagger operation dropped some 10 million pounds of equipment to the French Resistance including 104,536 STEN submachine guns, 409,224 grenades, and 307,023 kg of explosives.

French Bernard maquisards 1944 with PIAT and STEN. Note the blend of civilian clothes with Adrian helmets

Parlez-vous Sten?

Beginning as early as May 11, 1940, resistance groups of Frenchmen and women trapped behind German lines took it upon themselves to continue the fight to throw the “Boche” out.

Terming themselves the “Maquisards” (People that live in the “maquis” in the woods and mountains) these guerrillas fought with whatever they had at hand and went underground whenever things got too hot, often abandoning their weapons if they could not cache them for future use. This meant that very soon, the small supply of French military and sporting weapons that had been in the hands of the resistance were running short. This left them either having to capture guns from the occupiers (which happened), or get them from outside friends.

That’s where airdrops of STEN guns and other arms from the Allies came in handy. Taking only about a half dozen man-hours to build, the STEN cost about $10 to make (about $130 a pop in today’s money– cheaper than a Hi Point pistol!), it was cheap enough to literally give away.

Most wartime STEN guns were built by female British factory workers

Most wartime STEN guns were built by female British factory workers

sten-disassemble1

This meant they could be made in great volume and some 5 million Stens were cranked out officially during World War Two (as well as an estimated million more in underground shops).

British Special Operations Executive (SOE) units and Jedburgh teams with the U.S. OSS Special Operations (SO) branch fanned out across Europe, making contact with those who could use a delivery or ten of high explosives and STEN guns with the idea of setting Hitler’s Europe on fire.

The French received more deliveries than any other group, making the cheap submachine gun an iconic weapon of the beret-clad insurgent.

Resistance Learning about the Sten

Resistance Learning about the Sten

Resistant of the Finistère region armed with a British Sten, 1944

Resistant of the Finistère region armed with a British Sten, 1944 Click to big up

Parisian partisan with his STEN helping liberate the City of Light in 1944

Parisian partisan with his STEN helping liberate the City of Light in 1944.

homemade stenguns

homemade stenguns

A French resistance maquis armed with a STEN gun shelters behind a truck while taking on German snipers in the town of Dreux

A French resistance maquis armed with a STEN gun shelters behind a truck while taking on German snipers in the town of Dreux

It wasnt just the French resistance that was armed with the STEN. Here, Dule Bey Allemani, an Albanian resistance chief, poses with his STEN gun provided by Allied SOE agents in July 1944

It wasn’t just the French resistance that was armed with the STEN. Here, Dule Bey Allemani, an Albanian resistance chief, poses with his STEN gun provided by Allied SOE agents in July 1944

Danish resistance fighters note the mix of arms to include a BREN, a number of  Danish Army Nagant revolvers, and a couple of very Darth Vaderish  Royal Danish army helmets

Danish resistance fighters in 1945 –Note the mix of arms to include a BREN, a STEN, a number of Danish Army M1880/85 revolvers, and a couple of very Darth Vaderish Royal Danish army helmets

Termed the FFI (Forces Françaises de l’Intérieur) later in the war, by 1944 they counted some 400,000 under arms, with nearly a quarter of the members of some units equipped solely with ‘the plumber’s nightmare.’

This of course, helped them acquire some much larger and better made gear as well.

French fighter of the resistance holding his STG 44. I wouldn't trade a STEN for anything but...

French resistance fighter holding his captured German STG 44. I wouldn’t trade a STEN for anything but…