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List of SOE F Section networks and agents

This article lists the clandestine networks, also known as circuits, (réseaux in French) established in France by F Section of the British Special Operations Executive during World War II. The SOE agents assigned to each network are also listed. SOE agents, with a few exceptions, were trained in the United Kingdom before being infiltrated into France. Some agents served in more than one network and are listed more than once.

The clandestine networks and agents were "dedicated to encourage and aid resistance" to the German occupation of the country. Activities included gathering intelligence, organizing and supplying indigenous resistance groups, and sabotaging transportation, communications, and industrial facilities. A typical SOE network had three agents: 1. Circuit organiser: leader, planner, and recruiter of new members. 2. Wireless Radio Operator: send and receive wireless messages to and from SOE headquarters in London, encode and decode messages, maintain wireless sets. 3. Courier or messenger: travel between organiser, wireless operator, and resistance groups to deliver and receive messages, and, on occasion, deliver explosives and other equipment. Large networks sometimes had more than one courier and wireless operator.

Each network was given a name and each agent belonging to the network had one or more code names and aliases which he used in France. For example, George Reginald Starr was the organiser of SOE's Wheelwright network and known as "Hilaire" to French contacts in the Resistance and to other SOE personnel.

Sixty SOE F Section networks are listed below as operating in France during World War II. Forty-three circuits were no longer existent at the time that France was fully liberated from German control of which 31 had been destroyed by the Germans.

Approximately 470 SOE agents served in France during World War II. The Valençay SOE Memorial in Valençay, France lists the names of 91 men and 13 women who were killed, executed, or died in prison while serving as SOE agents.

The field agents and networks were supported by F Section headquarters in London. The staff of F Section consisted of 24 people in 1944. Its key members were leader Maurice Buckmaster, assistant Vera Atkins, and deputy Nicholas Bodington. Jacques de Guélis was briefing officer, was signals officer, Robert Bourne-Patterson was planning officer, Selwyn Jepson was the recruiting officer, and Leo Marks was in charge of coding and cyphers. To maintain operational secrecy, the SOE was not publicly acknowledged and functioned throughout most of the war under the cover name Inter-Services Research Bureau (ISRB). F Section headquarters were on Baker Street but meetings with agents took place at apartments in Orchard Court. Administration, training, transportation, technology, etc. were handled by other SOE sections. SOE employment totaled about 13,000.

London Headquarters and the Special Training Schools

The administrative heart of F Section was centered at 64 Baker Street in London, although the rapid expansion of the organization necessitated the requisition of several nearby buildings to house various country sections. To maintain strict operational secrecy, the SOE was never publicly acknowledged during the conflict and functioned throughout most of the war under the bureaucratic cover name of the Inter-Services Research Bureau (ISRB). While high-level planning and coordination occurred within these London offices, sensitive pre-mission briefings and final meetings with agents were typically conducted in private apartments at Orchard Court to avoid the visibility associated with official military headquarters.

The preparation of agents for infiltration into occupied France was carried out through an extensive network of Special Training Schools (STS), which were primarily established in requisitioned country estates across the United Kingdom. This led to the popular contemporary quip that SOE stood for the "Stately 'Omes of England." These stations provided specialized and rigorous instruction tailored to the agent's specific role in the field. For instance, Station XVII at Brickendonbury Manor in Hertfordshire focused on the technicalities of sabotage and industrial subversion, while the rugged and isolated terrain of STS 21 at Arisaig House in Inverness-shire provided the ideal setting for intensive commando-style training in silent killing and the use of explosives.

Beyond paramilitary skills, the training infrastructure included dedicated facilities for wireless telegraphy and Morse code, parachute jumping, and specialized "finishing schools." In these final stages, agents perfected their French cover identities and underwent simulated Gestapo interrogations to ensure they could withstand the immense psychological and physical pressures of operating behind enemy lines. This comprehensive system ensured that by the time an agent was parachuted into France, they were equipped with both the technical expertise and the clandestine tradecraft necessary to sustain the resistance networks.

Networks and personnel

Most names of networks and dates for the operations of individual networks are from M. R. D. Foot's SOE in France (2004), pages 466-467. A few come from Maurice Buckmaster's They Fought Alone (2014), pages 282-299. Dates of network operations are inclusive; some networks had lengthy periods of inactivity within the dates cited. Individual agents may have served in more than one network or during only part of the time the network was operational.

Acrobat (September 1942 to May 1944)

  • John Renshaw Starr (1908-1996), organiser, code names "Emile" and "Bob," captured, survived
  • Diana Rowden (1915–1944), courier, code name "Paulette," executed
  • (1907–1944), wireless operator, code name "Gabriel", executed

Author/Digger (September 1943 to August 1944)

  • Jacques Poirier (1922–2006) organiser, survived
  • (1919–1944), wireless operator, captured, executed

Autogiro/Autogyro (March 1941 to August 1942)

  • Pierre de Vomécourt (1906-1986), organiser, code names "Etienne", "Lucas", and "Sylvain"
  • Georges Bégué (1911–1993), wireless operator; the first SOE agent to be sent to France, arriving by parachute the night of 5/6 May 1941.
  • André Bloch (1914–1942), wireless operator
  • Marcel Clech (1905–1944), wireless operator. code name "Bastien"
  • Henri Sevenet (1914-1944), courier.

Bricklayer (November 1942 to February 1944)

Butler (August 1942 to August 1944)

  • Jean Bouguennec (1912–1944), organiser, code name "Max"
  • Marcel Fox, courier, code name "Ernest"

Carte (September 1941 to May 1943)

Chancellor (June to September 1944)

Chestnut (May 1942 to August 1943)

Cinema/Photo (January 1943 to February 1944)

  • Emile Garry (1909–1944), organiser
  • Noor Inayat Khan (1914–1944), wireless operator, code name "Madeleine"

Clergyman (October 1943 to August 1944)

  • Robert Benoist (1904–1944), organiser, code name "Lionel" (See also: Chestnut)
  • Jean-Pierre Wimille (1908–1949) See also: Chestnut
  • Denise Bloch (1916–1945), courier, wireless operator, code name 'Ambroise"

Corsican (October 1941 to July 1943)

Detective (July 1942 to August 1944)

Digger see Author)

Diplomat (October 1943-August 1944)

  • Adher Pierre Arthur Watt, organiser, code name "Geoffroi", survived.

Ditcher (October 1943-September 1944)

Donkeyman (July 1942 to August 1944)

Facade/Tilleul (August 1941 to August 1944)

Farmer (November 1942 to September 1944)

Farrier (December 1942 to May 1944)

Fireman (March 1944 to September 1944)

Footman (January to September 1944)

  • — organiser
  • Cyril Arthur Watney -- code name "Eustache," wireless operator, survived

Freelance (April 1944 to September 1944)

  • Nancy Wake, courier, code name Helene, survived.

Greenheart (July 1942 to August 1943)

Headmaster (September 1942 to August 1944)

  • Sydney Hudson, organiser, code name Audine
  • Francisque Eugene Bec (1905-1944), instructor
  • Sonya Butt, courier, code name "Blanche"
  • (1919-1945), courier, organiser, code name "Dominique"

Heckler/Saint (September 1941 to August 1944)

Historian (April 1944 to August 1944)

  • , organizer, code name "Etienne", executed.
  • Lilian Rolfe, courier, code name "Nadine", executed.

Inventor (September 1942 to December 1943)

  • Vera Leigh, courier, code name "Simone", executed.
  • Marcel Clech (1905-1944), wireless operator, code name "Bastien"

Jockey (March 1943 to September 1944)

Juggler (July 1942 to August 1944)

  • (1909-1945), organiser, code name "Robin," executed.
  • (1903-1868) wireless operator, code name "Jacques"
  • Sonia Olschanezky, courier, code name "Tania", executed.

Labourer (April to June 1944)

  • (1906–1944), courier, code name "Baudouin"
  • Odette Wilen, code name "Sophie", wireless operator, survived

Marksman (July 1942 to September 1944)

Minister (March to September 1944)

  • Dennis John Barrett (1916-1944), wireless operator, code name "Honore"
  • Yvonne Fontaine, courier, code name "Mimi"

Monk (June 1943 to March 1944)

Monkeypuzzle (July 1942 to August 1943)

  • Marcel Clech (1905-1944), wireless operator, code name "Bastien"

Musician (November 1942 to August 1944)

Parson (June 1943 to February 1944)

  • George Clement (1917-1944), wireless operator, code name "Edouard"
  • (1896-1944), code name "Ignace"

Permit (July to September 1944)

  • Gerard Dedieu – organiser
  • Ginette Jullian, wireless operator, code name "Adele"

Prosper/Physician (June 1942 to August 1943

SOE's most important network in 1942-1943. Agents continued to be sent to the Prosper network for some time after it was infiltrated and many members captured.