James Edgar
Special Operations Executive agent awarded the Legion d’honneur
Vet and Special Operations Executive agent. Born: 21 May, 1920, in Pietersburg, South Africa. Died: 17 March, 2021, in Perth, Australia, aged 100
James Edgar was one of the audacious undercover agents whose infamous raid on a Nazi-occupied Channel Island led to Hitler’s notorious Commando Order, decreeing that all captured Commandos be summarily executed.
Operating as part of the Small Scale Raiding Force (SSRF) 62 Commando, Edgar took part in two Channel Island missions, including Operation Basalt to Sark in October 1942.
That night the unit infiltrated the tiny island off the coast of Normandy, arriving by specially-silencedmotortorpedoboat.
They killed a guard and captured five Germans, binding their hands. But the prisoners resisted and raised the alarm. The order was given to shoot any who tried to flee. Three ended up dead. A couple of weeks later an incensed Hitler, who believed shackled prisoners had been shot after surrendering, issued his Commando Order, a death sentence for any operative taken captive during a raid.
Thedeclarationdidnothingto deter the elite band of soldiers whose clandestine missions, often with resistance forces, continued to frustrate and infuriatethenaziwarmachine. And Edgar went on to parachute into enemy-occupied France, aiding the Maquis and beingmentionedindispatches for his courage and devotion to duty as a wireless operator, at a timewhenlifeexpectancyinthe role was only three weeks.
He was born in Pietersburg, South Africa, where his father was an army vet in the second Boer war. The family moved back to Scotland in 1927, living in Banchory before moving to Burgess Hill, Sussex, where his father established a veterinary practice. Edgar, who had a flair forfrenchandgerman,attendedschoolinlewesandmatriculated with both the Oxford and Cambridge Higher School Certificate but was unsure what to do. He considered the RAF but failed the medical, had a spell in the hotel business and did a Pitmans shorthand and typing course. Then in July 1940 he enlisted in the army, agreed to volunteer for a secret unit and, after three months in the Gordon Highlanders, was transferredtotheintelligencecorps.
He had been recruited to the Special Operations Executive, sometimes known as Churchill’s Secret Army, an underground force of agents trained to wage guerilla war in enemyoccupied Europe and Asia.
Ordered by Churchill to “set Europe ablaze”, they worked covertly, harassing and impeding Axis troops through sabotage and subversion.
Edgar served in Field Security training potential agents for the SOE’S French Section. He also escorted Norwegian volunteers, following their SOE training, to the Shetland Bus – a clandestine operation transporting Norwegian resistance membersbackhomeviaagents disguisedasfishingvesselcrew.
Then,seekingmoreaction,he trainedaspartofthessrf,leading to the Channel Island raids.
Regardless of Hitler’s execution order, the SOE continued wreaking havoc and in July 1944 Edgar, defiantly sporting his green Commando beret, parachuted into France to help the Maquis resistance. Issued with the codename Cretois, he was part of the Tilleul circuit teamandleftasecretamerican airbase in Northamptonshire in a B-24 Liberator bomber for an unknown destination. He had only jumped three times, once from a hot-air balloon – “quite frightening”. En route he learnedthedropzonewasnear Limoges. Silk maps tucked into his epaulettes, he refused the customary cyanide tablet.
His mission was to help arrange drops of arms, explosives and other supplies and for two months he remained in constant communication with London in hazardous and difficult conditions. He was later awarded the Croix de Guerre and Mentioned in Dispatches for bravery in undertaking such a dangerous task in enemy-occupied territory.
Early in 1945 he parachuted into Burma, serving with SOE’S Force 136 against the Japanese, recalling: “Very quickly villagers arrived at the forest clearing with bullock carts. I was jolting around in one, admiring the night sky through the trees when the driver, wearing abatteredtrilbyhat,turnedand in English asked ‘What to you think of Burma?’…
“At dawn one day some Karenscameintothecampand threw down two coconuts. On closer inspection they turned out to be Japanese heads.”
By the time the Japanese surrendered that August, Edgar wasinceylon,hospitalisedwith dysentery. He remained in the Far East, carrying out peacekeeping duties in Sumatra, for a year and sailed home on the Empress of Scotland.
Demobbed in 1946, he trained as a vet in Edinburgh and worked in Morpeth before establishing a large animal practice in Kemnay, Aberdeenshireandraisingbarleybeefcattle. He married his wife Valerie in1954and,aftertheheartbreak of their son, Christopher, surviving only a few days, went on to have two daughters.
Following a major foot-andmouth outbreak in the 1960s, Edgar took a job at an experimental farm in Stoke Mandeville where he specialised in poultry diseases. Three years laterhebecamethefirstpoultry pathologist at the Department ofagriculture,perth,australia.
Stillfluentinfrench,inretirement he returned to many French locations familiar from the war. There he was held in great affection and made a Citoyen d'honneur of Sussac where he had operated as an SOE agent. In 2019 he was awarded France’s highest honour, the Legion d’honneur, 75 years after helping to liberate Limoges. But while others regarded him as a hero, he always insisted he was just a small cog in a big wheel, only doing what he had to do for the war effort.
He is survived by his wife Valerie,daughtersvivienneand Lorraine and extended family.