ANDREE PEEL, Jewish resistance fighter WW II
She worked against the German occupation of France as a member of the French Resistance during the Second World War. She was known as agent rose
After the German invasion she joined the resistance and was involved in distributing secret newspapers but was later appointed head of an under-section of the resistance. She and her team used torches to guide allied planes to improvised landing strips and helped airmen who had landed in France to escape onto submarines and gunboats, saving the lives of more than one hundred soldiers and airmen, and aided more than 20,000 people.
She was arrested in Paris in 1944 and sent to the Ravensbrück concentration camp; she was later transferred to the concentration camp at Buchenwald before her eventual release. During this time she also survived meningitis.She was being lined up to be shot by firing squad at Buchenwald when the US Army arrived to liberate the prisoners.
After the war, she met her future husband, an English academic named John Peel (who at the time was still a student), while working in a restaurant in Paris and they settled in Long Ashton, near Bristol, several years later. The couple had no children. While living in Long Ashton, Andrée received many visits from admirers and also managed to relieve the pain of visitors who had injuries.
Mrs. Peel received many decorations from the French government for her resistance work, and she was awarded the Order of Liberation by France, the Medal of Freedom by the United States and the King’s Commendation for Brave Conduct by Britain. During the war she received a personal letter of appreciation from Prime Minister Winston Churchill. She was presented medal of freedom by president Eisenhower.She received the Légion d'honneur from her brother, four-star General Maurice Virot, in 2004.On 3 February 2005 she received a note from the Queen as she had just turned 100 years old. In 2010 she turned 105 and fractured her hip two weeks later after a bad fall and had to undergo surgeryShe died peacefully at the Lampton House nursing home on 5 March 2010.
She worked against the German occupation of France as a member of the French Resistance during the Second World War. She was known as agent rose
After the German invasion she joined the resistance and was involved in distributing secret newspapers but was later appointed head of an under-section of the resistance. She and her team used torches to guide allied planes to improvised landing strips and helped airmen who had landed in France to escape onto submarines and gunboats, saving the lives of more than one hundred soldiers and airmen, and aided more than 20,000 people.
She was arrested in Paris in 1944 and sent to the Ravensbrück concentration camp; she was later transferred to the concentration camp at Buchenwald before her eventual release. During this time she also survived meningitis.She was being lined up to be shot by firing squad at Buchenwald when the US Army arrived to liberate the prisoners.
After the war, she met her future husband, an English academic named John Peel (who at the time was still a student), while working in a restaurant in Paris and they settled in Long Ashton, near Bristol, several years later. The couple had no children. While living in Long Ashton, Andrée received many visits from admirers and also managed to relieve the pain of visitors who had injuries.
Mrs. Peel received many decorations from the French government for her resistance work, and she was awarded the Order of Liberation by France, the Medal of Freedom by the United States and the King’s Commendation for Brave Conduct by Britain. During the war she received a personal letter of appreciation from Prime Minister Winston Churchill. She was presented medal of freedom by president Eisenhower.She received the Légion d'honneur from her brother, four-star General Maurice Virot, in 2004.On 3 February 2005 she received a note from the Queen as she had just turned 100 years old. In 2010 she turned 105 and fractured her hip two weeks later after a bad fall and had to undergo surgeryShe died peacefully at the Lampton House nursing home on 5 March 2010.
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