Click
Here for a pictoral
history of The Jedburghs. |
The "Jedburgh Group" is dedicated to honouring
the name and perpetuating the memory of the Jedburghs.
In World War II, the Jedburghs were a Special Forces
unit of 300 volunteers recruited from the armed forces
of Britain, America and France with small contingents
from Belgium and Holland. Their task was to parachute
in uniform into enemy occupied territory in small, mixed
nationality teams, to arm and train Resistance fighters
and to coordinate their activities with the overall
strategy of the Allied D-Day armies advance out of Normandy
(Overlord) and the landings in the South of France (Dragoon).
Milton Hall, near Peterborough, England, was their
home base. There in 1944, they underwent months of exhaustive
training, covering all aspects of modern guerrilla warfare,
ambushes, demolition, unarmed combat, silent killing,
small arms, parachuting and the techniques of reception
committee work for receiving additional supplies by
air while operating behind enemy lines.
The operational teams themselves, which were formed
through a mixture of 'official' nominations and individual
choice, usually were composed of either two British
or two American Jedburghs, plus one other from the intended
country of operation. There were variations on the theme,
but whatever the final composition, one member of every
team was always a radio operator, proficient in high
speed Morse code and ciphers, the peculiarities of short-wave
radios such as the 'B2' and the 'Jed-Set', and the intricacies
of running repairs under primitive conditions.
Between June and September 1944, 276 Jedburgh personnel
jumped into France, Belgium, and the Netherlands from
bases in Great Britain and North Africa. During June
and July they joined the resistance in attacks on German
communications within Normandy. Several teams deployed
to Brittany, where they worked with British Special
Air Service to organize more than 20,000 partisans.
When U.S. troops entered the province in August, these
guerrillas guided units, protected their flanks, gathered
intelligence, and provided a screen against German patrols.
To the east, as Allied armies raced across France in
August and early September, French partisans with Jedburgh
assistance ambushed retreating German columns, preserved
major installations from demolition, rescued downed
Allied pilots, and protected the right flank of Third
Army's rapid advance. Jedburgh officers also gathered
valuable intelligence, including plans for German defenses
at Lorient and La Rochelle, and information on the V4,
a new German secret weapon that used the blast from
compressed air against infantry.
In southern France the Jedburgh-aided partisans supported
the Allied landings on the Riviera coast and Seventh
Army's subsequent drive to the Rhone Valley, liberating
hosts of jubilant French towns in advance of the Allied
forces.
Between D-Day and VE-Day, Jedburgh teams carried out
101 operations in Europe, 93 with the maquis in France
in support of the Allied landings and 8 in the Netherlands
of which 6 were in connection with Operation 'Market
Garden' (Arnhem). Later the "Jeds", as they
liked to call themselves, did many similar operations
with other Allied Special Forces such as Force 136 (SOE)
and the American OSS in Norway, Italy, Burma, Malaya,
Borneo, Indonesia, China and Indo-China.
Jedburgh dead, as can be seen from the memorial tablet
in the Sprite Chapel of the Peterborough Cathedral,
numbered 37. Most were killed in action, but some died
of wounds and others of illnesses contracted on operations
in the jungles of South East Asia. Seven were executed
after capture; one, a French officer by being beheaded
and another by being bayoneted to death.
The Jedburghs made great contributions to the war effort
and were successful in many ways. Their commitment,
sacrifice and successes laid the groundwork, which indicated
the possibilities of the use of such Special Forces
in the future.
Click Here for a pictoral
history of The Jedburghs.
This summary is based on "The Jedburghs: A Short
History" by Arthur Brown.
Refer to http://freespace.virgin.net/arthur.brown2/index.htm
for more from this author.
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