Any of you who have spent time with me will know that my brain goes off on tangents – all of which make total sense to me – that can confuse mere mortals. A recent cluster of facts that I linked together was to do with the Supermarine Spitfire and whether actor Leslie Howard was in actual fact a British spy.
I see you with that bemused look on your face…let me fill in the blanks.
The First of the Few was a film starring both Leslie Howard and David Niven, (actually produced and directed by Howard, he was a man of many talents) all about the development of the iconic aircraft by its designer, RJ Mitchell.
Released in 1942, what makes it more bittersweet is that the actor playing the eponymous lead role actually died the following year on the 1st June. That was not unusual, the country was in the middle of World War Two and many people were being killed in air raids and the such. It was the conspiracy and intrigue that surrounded what happened to Howard which still has people talking to this day.
He was on board a DC-3, BOAC flight 777 when it was attacked by a squadron of JU-88 maritime fighters, bringing it down over the Bay of Biscay with the loss of all life on board (including both Howard and Anglo German Jew, Wilfred Israel who was a fundamental person in the setting up of the Kindertransport project).
Seems pretty clear cut? It was war, one side attacked the other? But why shoot down an unarmed commercial airliner that posed no risk.
After the war, Luftwaffe reports did state that those eight Junkers had ventured a long way out of their normal patrol zone, and had not been ordered to shoot – having taken it upon themselves when they thought they detected an enemy military aircraft. Further research done by author Christopher Goss backed up that they had not known who or what they were firing upon, but that the pilots were angry at their superiors for not advising them that there was a scheduled flight between Lisbon and Britain.
Was that omission of information intentional? One of the theories is that Nazi minister of propaganda, Joseph Goebbels believed that his nemesis – Howard had produced many good anti -Nazi propaganda films, and even ridiculed Goebbels in one of them – was incredibly dangerous and needed to be stopped. People also cite his earlier military career during the First World War, did he survive until being invalided out with shellshock due to the fact he was working as a spy in Germany? Was he masquerading as an actor and director, promoting British film on an intelligence gathering mission as nobody would suspect the star of movies such as Gone with the Wind, or The Scarlet Pimpernel as being a world class secret agent.
Another theory, which is almost as popular as the one of the spy formerly known as Leslie Steiner, was that it had been leaked to the Germans that Churchill was on board this flight, he had visited North Africa a few months previously to meet with Eisenhower. The concept of the Prime Minister using commercial airlines was not that outlandish as he had done previously, plus (supposedly) German agents had seen a man they believed to be the portly cigar smoking leader climbing aboard BOAC flight 777 (it was actually case of mistaken identity, the person in question was Howards
accountant and close friend Alfred Chennalls). Even the man himself accepted this was the reason for the attack on the DC-3, saying in his memoir
"The brutality of the Germans was only matched by the stupidity of their agents. It is difficult to understand how anyone could imagine that with all the resources of Great Britain at my disposal I should have booked a passage in an unarmed and unescorted plane from Lisbon and flown home in broad daylight." (Churchill, page 695-696) . In fact, he actually departed on the 4th June flying via Gibraltar on a converted Consolidated B-24.
So, you have some of the facts, did the upper echelon of the Luftwaffe deliberately not tell their maritime air patrols that a commercial passenger plane would be in their airspace? Was it Churchill they were targeting or was Goebbels carrying out a personal vendetta against a well spoken Englishman who had made him look a bit stupid? Or was Leslie Howard, actor, producer and director actually a world class spy who had to be stopped.
You decide.