Most of us would have read some time, accounts of state secrets being spilled via the method of “pillow talk”, with both male and female spies using this particular brand of espionage to obtain valuable data.
But what if you needed to do it on a much larger scale? And with multiple targets? How would you go about accomplishing it, you would play to vanity and ego.
Introducing Trent Park near Enfield in North London, whilst this beautiful country home had been the home of many including Sir Phillip Sassoon, when he died in 1939 the building was requisitioned by the Government for use in the Second World War, and established as a kind of Prisoner of War camp, but this was a camp with a difference.
Catering solely to Axis officers, and with nearly two thirds of those being General or above, they were given every luxury imaginable – apart from freedom – to encourage them to relax and to chat.
For what purpose however? Well, there were hidden microphones everywhere, and fluent German speakers who had escaped to the UK due to threats on their lives in their home country would listen to the conversations twenty four seven. Originally those there in 1940 were downed German Luftwaffe pilots which gave the intelligence units invaluable information about the air force strength, it’s perceived weaknesses and much more.
When the residents began to be higher ranking officials, the secrets they were divulging became more and more astounding, for example, the powers that be were able to piece together the various parts to determine where the V2 rocket factory was (that we now know of Peenemunde) and order a huge bombing strike on it in the August of 1943. Although that did not stop it completely, it did delay the research by around two months by destroying the prototype.
Something that would have amused those British Intelligence Personnel highly would have been reading transcripts of these German officers being incredibly derogatory towards their “enemies” skills by frequently commenting on their stupidity and the fact that they were not even clever enough to bug the place…oh the irony.
They also had the opportunity to attend garden parties, hosted by the amiable Colonel Thomas Kendrick. Something I have experienced myself when with someone who is comfortable speaking other languages is that they switch into that when they do not want you to understand what they are saying. Whilst this may seem an easy way to talk in secret with each other, it is perhaps best to work out if the seemingly ignorant British officer smiling and passing drinks round is not only a senior officer with MI6, but also a fluent German speaker himself.
When you read some of the accounts that were documented, it makes you realise how not all German military were pro-Nazi, in fact some were very much against it and found it abhorrent. Take Generalleutenant Georg Neuffer, a former Luftwaffe pilot who had risen in the ranks but was captured in 1943 in North Africa. He had sympathies with the Russians (not many dared voice these), and said “What will they say when they find our graves in Poland? The OGPU can’t have done anything worse than that” we can now estimate that somewhere in the region of 57% of Russian POWs died in German hands compared to under 4% of British or American (I am not including any of the non-German POW sites here)
All in all, the work carried out at Trent Park was seen to be of similar importance to that at the more famous Bletchley, and keep an eye on the website www.trentparkhouse.org.uk for details as to when the museum will be opening.