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Since retiring in 1987 after a career in engineering with British
Aerospace, Derek Richardson has - when family responsibilities permitted
- pursued a variety of interests such as French philately, playing
bridge, making music and reading about aspects of World War II military
history. During his philatelic activity he came across a batch of
correspondence sent by British soldiers and airmen in Vichy France
in 1942. But surely this could not be right? Vichy France had dropped
out of the war in 1940, so how can anyone be a prisoner of war in
a country that is not at war?
His curiosity aroused, he began a search which threw up several
books dealing with escapes, written by or about men who had returned
from enemy-occupied territory during those years. So there was,
but very little was available in the way of official information.
This all changed in the mid-1990s, though, when the Ministry of
Defence permitted the release of the War Office reports of escapers
interviewed upon their return to Great Britain - reports that had,
under the "50-year rule", been kept out of sight on the
shelves in the National Archives at Kew.
At this point, a military history investigation that had begun
with no thought to eventual publication started to look like a story
that would be well worth telling. This was the story of "Detachment
W".
Contact Derek Richardson
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