My Hussar Stunt Part 1: The Cave of the English

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I had come to Crete to retrace the steps of the author and secret agent Patrick ‘Paddy’ Leigh Fermor during his mission to abduct the German commandant of the island during the Second World War. I had stumbled across this story during my very first trip to the island, while visiting the Historical Museum in Heraklion. 

There an information board recounts the efforts by Paddy and other agents of the Special Operations Executive to infiltrate the island, disguise themselves as German soldiers, seize the commandant (by the time the mission actually went ahead, one Major-General Heinrich Kreipe), whisk him away through the night bundled into the back of his own staff car, then a daring trek to freedom across a mountain range to a waiting submarine in a concealed bay, all while being hunted by the German garrison who wanted their general back. The agents involved referred to it as their adventure, the general as a “hussar stunt”.

It’s a true Boy’s Own adventure, and I was fascinated. Upon my return home, I immediately set to researching as much as possible about this mission and these men. A few trips to the National Archives, the Imperial War Museum and the National Library of Scotland later, along with consultations with other like minded individuals and I’d built up a pretty decent understanding of the mission and the personalities involved (even if I do say so myself), but one question remained. What was it actually like to do this? I knew the timeline of events from the formal reports of the mission, I knew the escape route from Paddy’s hand drawn maps and I knew the conditions the SOE agents and their Cretan allies lived in from the brief diaries and accounts they have left. But what was it like?

With 2024 being the 80th anniversary of the operation, I resolved to find out. Nowadays there is a distinct lack of German commandants in Crete and it would probably be frowned upon to kidnap one even if there were any, but I could still walk along the routes the mission took and see the things they saw, as much as modern development (and my annual leave) allowed. Early February marks the arrival of Paddy via parachute jump into the remote Katharo plateau in the eastern part of Crete, then taking shelter in a nearby cave hidden amongst a forest of cypress trees while arranging the rest of the mission. Having found the rough location of the cave (apparently still known as “the cave of the English” and appearing as a waypoint on published hiking trails) and the precise coordinates of the parachute landing zone from the RAF’s flight records, it would be (in theory at least) a relatively easy hike from one to the other within the same day. I booked my tickets and was away!  

Due to the lack of direct flights in February I sadly, tragically, unfortunately had to spend a day in Athens, before boarding a Minoan Lines ferry, the “Festos Palace”, to Crete, arriving in Heraklion harbour just after dawn broke and pierced the late winter clouds.

A quick trip to the Historical Museum to be reunited with the information boards that had sparked this whole expedition and the Archaeological Museum (almost deserted apart from a clutch of diehard tourists and the skeleton staff, an unusual sight when every other time I had been it was packed to the rafters with huge queues), then it was off, by bus, to Agios Nikolaos (Saint Nicholas), famous for its fresh water lake like a great blue eye at its centre, and the closest large town to where this part of the mission took place. 

I checked into my hotel, the Nine Muses (it would be a lie to say the name hadn’t played a significant factor in my choice of accommodation), a small but comfortable place with windows and balconies doors opening to a breathtaking panorama of what the Venetians had named the Mirabello, aptly, the “beautiful view” and the islet of Agioi Pantes. After a brief foray to a supermarket for last-minute supplies, I attempted to settle in for an early night. Sleep, however, proved almost impossible due to excitement and trepidation at the adventure to come. 

I woke early to make sure that I had plenty of time to make it to the station for the bus to Kritsa, a village on the bus route closest to both the cave and the parachute landing, yet still managed to almost make myself late by agonising over how many spare jumpers and emergency changes of socks to pack, change my mind and then repack (as it turned out, too many of one and not enough of the other). Bustling through the still sleeping town, I arrived just in time to purchase my ticket and catch my breath before the bus, a full sized coach and I the only passenger, emerged around the corner of the station depot. No turning back now!

The bus journey took only a few minutes (compared to the few hours of walking), and I was sudden in the centre of Kritsa,a picturesque little town, with many narrow streets built up on top of each other, with squares for shops and tavernas mixed in between, connected by winding tunnel-like passages. There were several churches, and as it was a Sunday, plenty of elderly parishioners on their way to the morning service. The largest church, Agios Giorgios (Saint George), was more like a small cathedral, its dome dominating the skyline of the north side of town. Outside was an icon of the saint and a small collection box. I am not in any way religious, but given the occasion and the nature of the task ahead, I popped in a few spare coins, hoping the saint was in a good mood and would keep an eye on me anyway. 

A set of concrete stairs on the very edge of the village led onto the long, meandering and convoluted tarmac road onwards and upwards to Katharo, and there was nothing more to do for now but push on and admire the view. Ahead the mountains, covered in snow, seemingly distant yet also looming over me. Behind, a spectacular view of Kritsa and the entire valley all the way down to the Mirabello, the Sea of Crete glittering in the clear sunlight.

It was a glorious day of clear blue sky and warmth despite being so early in the year and going proved slower than expected, mainly due to having to stop and take in the view, hardly believing that this is a real place, and also to avoid the hidden goats springing themselves out of the roadside undergrowth at exactly the right time to emerge directly into the path of the occasional car.

After about an hour of walking I had reached the first waypoint I had marked on my map, a dusty trail departing from the main road and a hand painted sign in the shape of an arrow pointing me towards the “Old Path to Katharo Plateau”.

A very dramatic, almost cinematic trail stretched out with snow-covered mountains on one side and a cypress forest clinging to the foothills directly in front of me, though far distant. Long and undulating, the trail passed quickly, with herds of curious goats and the clinking of their bells for company.

The trail gradually began to slope down into a valley, gnarled and ancient trees gradually getting thicker and thicker as the scrubby land gave way to the forest proper.

It then started to peter out at the valley floor, itself what appeared to be a large dried up river bed, with innumerable rocks, from small pebbles to vast boulders, frozen in their march towards the sea (the riverbed turned out to be that of the Kálos Potamós, which emerges further along the valley and flows back down through Kritsa and then onto the Mirabello).

With the trail coming to an end it was time to put my research to the test and find out if the hiking app that has the cave as a way point as part of a larger trek is accurate and I’m not going to be aimlessly wandering the woods.

 After a few minutes exploring the riverbed and valley floor to get my bearings, I continued along the last dying gasps of the trail, now going up the other side of the valley, little more than the ruts and potholes left behind by 4x4s that had passed through. Such a vehicle, a pickup, was a short way along, and I would soon be introduced to the owner. The trail finally gave up the ghost at a wide clearing strewn with rocks, goats and sheep grazing amongst them. 

Out of the corner of my eye, I suddenly noticed the presence of a human figure, rising from where they had been bending down tending to the goats. We spent a moment just staring at each other in surprise, not quite sure we were actually seeing what we were seeing, before I called out my cheeriest “Hello!” and waved. Quickly double checking the post it-note of useful Greek I had taped to the back of my phone (as though I haven’t rehearsed it a dozen times over already) I followed up with “Spilia ton Anglon? (Cave of the English?)”. The figure, a man dressed in mismatched camo, clearly a shepherd, approached closer to get a good look at me. He looked me up and down, sighed and in a rough voice said “come here” and gestured for me to follow. 

It would be a cliche to say he bounded across the rocks as nimbly as one of his goats. That is exactly what he did, as I struggled to simultaneously keep up and maintain my balance following his path. He paused in the centre of the clearing and pointed up, and up, and up at an alarming angle, towards the valley side and the mountain that loomed above it. Up close, he had a round, kind face, skin darkened by working under the Mediterranean sun, pure black hair buzzed extremely short, with several teeth on the right side of his mouth missing. 

He gesticulated back and forth between the valley side and a nearby rock, tracing patterns with his hands as he went. Both hands held fingers towards each other and curved – a roof? A hill? Then three fingers placed flat down. The logs/branches that I had seen photos of that indicate the mouth of the cave? He was clearly describing the cave! I was on the track! He could not speak enough English nor I enough Greek to properly talk, but I thanked him as best I could, then we turned back to our respective tasks. Continuing on through the goat field, the terrain amongst the trees becoming rougher and the slope steeper. The orange soil giving way more and more to bare grey rock and the hike more and more into a clamber, with the slope in some places so steep I had to grab on to every available rock and branch to haul myself up the side of the valley.

A misplaced step, a trip and a shower of pebbles cascading down, caused me to stop and wonder, as I supported my entire weight with one hand on a incredibly uncomfortable rock, if this may have been a bad idea, but the map app was showing I was within striking distance of the cave, and trying to get back down at this point would probably be more dangerous than pressing on. Plus, the view was becoming increasingly spectacular!

Towards the middle of the valleyside the slope levelled out a tad and reverted back to being a hike, albeit one at great height and an almost sheer drop to one side, with the formations of the rocks creating a new trail upwards, with the occasional rift to squeeze through or boulder to be awkwardly vaulted.

These crags, in turn, gave way to a large open plateau, flanked by trees that now have space and soil to grow in abundance. Pushing across, I became aware of patches of frost still clinging to the shadows and amongst the rocks.

Now back into the forest proper, according to the map I was now almost directly on top of the cave and, matching the shepherds directions, the ground to the left side of the plateau was forming a low mound, distinct even amongst the trees and rolling landscape all about. Like Gawain searching for the Green Chapel, I looked all about, trying to match what I could see with the photos I had found from others who had been there before. Then, suddenly, there it was, I had very nearly walked past it!

A jagged cleft in the earth, with three logs placed across to form a roof and darkness beyond it. This was the place! The place Paddy and his comrades had sheltered, from the elements and from the enemy.

Carefully lowering myself down the rocks that formed natural steps and crouching to avoid the low dividing rock that formed a corridor downwards, shon my torch to get a good look at the interior.

The interior of the cave was roughly circular, about 10 meters across. To the left-hand side, about half the cave floor was flat, forming a ledge where a few men could comfortably sit, huddled together, or a radio set and its equipment could be set up. To the right, a slope depending into a jumble of rocks and bones, all slick from the constant drip from above. All around, the walls and ceiling were thick with mineral formations and stalactites. All in all, the very image of a cave from some romantic adventure story.

Emerging back into the sunlight, it was time for some lunch and to take stock. This was a nice little jaunt in the lovely sunshine with a nice hotel to return to, via taxi if things got too bad. But to live like this, for months and years at a time, having to scramble across this sort of terrain to avoid a merciless enemy and no one coming to help you? Even the cave, while interesting, was cold and damp, and though friends, fire, wine and song could have made things more comfortable, it would still be a miserable place to spend a winter, as Paddy, the other SOE agents sent to Crete and the Cretans themselves had done.

The strength and toughness, physically and mentally, of all these people, to continue to fight for their freedom in such conditions must have been incredible.

Though I had spent hours reaching the cave, I could only a spend a short time there, as the day was only half done and I had to move on to my next target, the drop zone, and it was a long way back down as well. Bidding farewell to the cave and a small herd of inquisitive goats who had gathered to see what I was up, I checked my map and deciding that trying to climb (more like tumble) down the slope I had barely managed to scramble up, was not in my best interests, opted for a longer though gentler route back to the trail head, via the dried up river.

Once out of the bulk of the trees and the off the hill, I came across a long, rectangular clearing, picked out with snow? Could this be “the front drive” Paddy refers to when briefly describing the cave in a wartime letter?

The river bed was a much easier hike than the way up, mainly being an exercise in following the natural path cut into the valley, and lowering myself down from one layer of rocks to the next, trying to find  a spot where it was not too high and perilous to do so. 

I was soon back where I started, the valley floor where the river bed met the end of the trail from the main road. I did think to quickly dash back up the slope to see if I could find the shepherd and somehow tell him I had found the cave thanks to his help, but time was pressing on, it was by now mid afternoon and despite the lovely clear blue skies and sunshine all day, it was still early February and darkness and cold would be fast approaching. Back up along the trail, back to the hand painted sign and on my way, once again upwards to Katharo.

I still had a long way to go to reach Paddy’s landing zone, the road was steep and clouds were starting to gather…

Battle of Crete POW Memoir – Victor Edward Jones

I recently viewed a number of unpublished memoirs and private papers of British soldiers who had taken part in the battle of Crete at the Imperial War Museum reading room. One of these was the Private Papers of Victor Edward Jones (catalogued as documents. 12254), containing his memoirs and a number of other documents. Jones was a gunner in the Royal Artillery, serving in the 27th Searchlight Regiment. His memoirs describe his capture after being left behind during the evacuation from Sphakia, time in temporary camps in Crete, Athens and Salonika, and his day to day life as a Prisoner of War in Germany.

As well as photos of Victor, his friends (seeming referred to collectively as “The Syndicate”) and the troopships he sailed on, the file also contains several drawings, depicting the battle of Crete, life as a prisoner of war and drafts of the front page of POW camp newspapers.

Below is my transcription of the segment of his memoirs covering his experiences in Crete and the Greek mainland.

June 1st 1941

As the sun slowly rose, the patch of illuminated area grew, until the whole of Sparkia Valley was revealed, much as it had been for the previous three days. Groups and clusters of men moved from the centre of the valley where they had been sleeping, and sought refuge in the caves, or under the numerous olive trees, for the coming of daylight heralded a renewal of the German aircraft attacks. Only the long queue in front of the single water source remained. Volunteers were called for and dispatched to the beach to enquire if any rations had arrived during the preceding night, whilst isolated fellows grubbed amongst the ravaged gardens in the valley in a vain search for something edible, although only grass and very little of that now remained. 

The drone of an aircraft became apparent, and anxious eyes scanned the sky.  After a minute or two a German plane flew into sight, heading in the direction of the valley. There were cries of “Keep still” – “Don’t look up” – “Take cover”. The water queue wavered, scattered and silenced as if by magic, as the plane flew slowly overhead. 

Upon the hill behind, sharp bursts of machine-gun fire could be distinguished, punctuated by the heavy thud of a mortar. Slowly the sounds drew nearer until, with a shrill whine, a mortar shell whizzed over our heads, to explode with a resounding crash at the mouth of the valley. At the sound of this, the chattering that was murmuring up and down the valley ceased. After half a dozen or so shells, there was a lull in the firing. The ensuing silence lasted for about 10 minutes at the end of which an English officer made his way to a rock in the centre of the valley. Raising his voice he told us that the island had capitulated and that we were all prisoners. He advised us to take off our steel helmets and pile them and our arms in the centre of the valley. We removed the essential parts from our rifles and threw them away, and then placed our rifles and steel helmets on the ever increasing pile. Two German soldiers, armed with ‘Tommy guns’, appeared, and we were shepherded into an enclosure behind a church. 

At first it was very hard to realise that we were prisoners, and feelings were mixed. Several fellows busied themselves with  burning correspondence, papers, photographs etc, while others obtained permission to get water. A few Australians managed to procure some portions of dead donkey and set about stewing it. 

After an hour or so, we were told to make our way to the road that passed along the mountainside behind the valley. As we filed through the gate of the enclosure, we were given a cursory search, and told that we might get some food that evening, and the 5 day trek back to Kania began.

June 5th – 18th 1941 Skenes Camp

Skenes Camp was originally used by the British for Italian prisoners and when we arrived, there were still numerous traces of its former occupants. It was a piece of ground roughly 100 by 300 yards, enclosed by a single strand barb wire fence. Efforts to escape however, were deterred by two machine gun nests, situated on little hillocks, overlooking the camp. The ground, which was of a very rocky, stony nature, was dotted here and there with flea infested bivouacs and tents improvised of brushwood and canvas. On the left hand side of the gate (outside the wire) were the quarters of the German guards, whilst on the right were three tents that served as a hospital. The latrines were mere holds in the ground, unscreened, and in no way shut off from the rest of the camp. Flies, heat and bad sanitary arrangements soon caused numerous cases of diarrhoea and dysentery to break out, and these two disease spread, unchecked, at a terrifying rate. Rations were very meagre indeed, and after a couple of days, there was a sad lack of firing for cooking. Cigarettes quickly became exhausted and it was a common sight to see the lads plucking olive leaves to roll a cigarette in a piece of newspaper. We were able after a few days to purchase a few vegetables from the Greek villagers, but the prices were prohibitive, and the demand very large, soo only a fortunate few were able to take advantage of this. One or two chaps were caught going through the wire in order to get to the village and get food, and they were punished by being kept on water for 24 hours. A warning was given out that future offenders could, and would, be punished by death. Two chaps who were caught after the warning, were sentenced to be shot, but the Australian Padre intervened and pleaded for them, and they managed to obtain a remission of their sentence. 

It was amazing to see the rapid havoc that bad water and short rations brought about. Cheeks soon hollowed, and bones began to protrude. There were no hairdressing facilities available, and the occupants of the camp soon became a rather fearsome sight. Attacks of dizziness assailed the men when they stood up or walked about. The nights were very cold, and blankets were a rarity. Blistered heels and flea bites rapidly turned to septic sores, and in a very short space of time, the little hospital was filled to overflowing. But in the hospital too, conditions were little better, of medical equipment they had next to nothing, and the food was no different from the main camp. We were all very glad when the day came to leave.

June 20th – 22nd 1941 Athens

Our stay in Athens was only of very short duration, and lasted only a matter of a day or so. On the evening of our arrival, we had our first gifts from the Red Cross, one cigarette a man.

The camp was a disused Greek barracks, with stone walls and floors. Our room when we arrived was three quarters filled with straw, and although we removed and burnt this as soon as possible, the large number of bugs that remained behind made our nights rest a rather unpleasant one. 

Here we came into contact for the first time with the German Ersatz coffee. This was served without milk or sugar, and although rather unpalatable at first, we quickly grew accustomed to it. As a drink, it was a necessity as the water was very bad and we had no means of boiling any, but as a refreshing beverage, it was rather a failure. We also made the acquaintance here of what afterwards received the ignominious title of “Salonika Biscuits”. This was a very hard biscuit about three and a half inches square. It was baked I think from some kind of flour, which I believe to be soya bean flour, although to judge from its extreme toughness I would not be surprised if a certain amount of concrete was also used in the mixing process. When we left the camp, the day following our arrival, we were issued with rations consisting of three of these biscuits and a fairly large piece of cheese. These rations were to last us three days. 

June 25th – July 8th 1941 Salonika

The first Salonika camp was an old Greek barracks and consisted of some twenty one-storied single room buildings. Ours was the smallest of these, and held about thirst men, a sergeant (who composed music which he sang most of the day) and a sergeant major. The two latter were captured in Greece and were already well established when we arrived. Rumours soon became prevalent, and although their authenticity remained undoubted at the time, it is most amusing to recall some. Turkey was most consistently talked about, she entered and left the war at an average of once every twenty four hours. Also had we added up the Russians advance daily, at the end of the week they should have been in Paris. 

The food was very poor in quality, and exceedingly small in quantity, and the greater part of the day was spent in discussing meals past and future – mainly future/ It was attempted to start Physical Training classes as a diversion from the monotony of “lice catching”, but as it required all one’s energy to walk to the parade ground, this idea was quickly dropped. Incidentally the lice were a very unpleasant innovation into our life as a prisoner. They became first attached to us in the cattle trucks during the journey from Athens to Salonika, and grew very rapidly in number. We had nothing with which to combat them as our small stocks of soap had run out long before we even left Crete, and fresh supplies were unobtainable. However, life had its bright moments, we had almost hourly discussions as to how long the war would last, and even the most pessimistic could think of nothing over two months. Every evening some Greek girls assembled in a garden visible from the small window in the rear of our room, and sang. Their favourite song, and ours, was “South of the Border”, which they sang and harmonised to perfection. Every afternoon too, a girl of about seventeen would sit in this garden and read a book. 

The Sergeant Major in charge of our rom conceived the idea that her sole purpose there was to try and import some news to us, and so, believer her to be able to speak French, he would spend a large part of the afternoon holding onto the bars across the little window overlooking the garden and sing – or rather chant, “Mademoiselle, avez-vous de nouvelles?”. Needless to say he never received any reply, and the only response to his efforts were the few unappreciative shouts from the German guards patrolling the barbed wire. 

One night, the camp was searched as a quantity of bread had been stolen from the ration stores. The bread was discovered hidden in the branches of a tree by the parade ground, and as punishment we were kept on the parade ground for over six hours and put on half rations for two days. This punishment was more severe than it sounds, as the sun was exceedingly hot and we could not leave to get water, also our rations were already very small.

Another night, during a thunderstorm, two fellows attempted to escape and were caught. We heard they were shot, but never received any confirmation of this, although it was quite feasible to judge from the harsh treatment meted out by the Germans to the Greeks over trivial offences. 

After we had been at the camp about a week, we were allowed to dispatch our first piece of correspondence since capture, a printed card, notifying our Next of Kin that we were in good health!

On the morning of July 8th we were paraded with our meagre kit and marched about three miles through Salonika to another camp. Here, after standing for about an hour in torrential rain, we were split up into groups of a hundred each, and allowed to find shelter where we could in the buildings of the fresh camp. 

July 8th – August 12th 1941 Camp 11 – Salonkia

Life at the second camp in Salonika was a pretty miserable sort of affair, we were always hungry as the food supplied by the Germans was neither nourishing or filling. When the bread and biscuit ration came into the camp (about once every two or three days) there were always a number of chaps following behind the cart picking up scraps and crumbs that happened to fall out. The meat in the soups was very tough in nature and small in quantity, (the popular fallacy was that it was water buffalo, but it was rather significant that once, when one of the German’s horses died, we had meat three days running).

On one occasion, some old bones from the cookhouse were buried in the refuse heap, and the fact that the same evening they were removed in the hope that the cooks had overlooked something, is some illustration as to how hungry we actually were. A days menu will give some idea of the meagreness of the rations

Breakfast 6.30 2 biscuit, 1/8th loaf of bread, Ersatz coffee (devoid of milk or sugar)

Dinner 12.00 1 ladleful (pint) soup, manufactured from either beans, lentils or rice (incidentally, when the water was drained off, the sediment of bean etc was about 2” deep.)

Tea 4.30 1 ladleful soup (pint) (made with about half the cereal content as the dinner soup, but containing the broken pieces of biscuit left over from the morning issue)

The main amusements in the camp were cards, reading and the inevitable discussion of food. The war was also discussed, fought and won every day, and the so-called “authentic” news was extremely enlightening. The news was accredited to varying sources, ranging from the German guards to the civilian who told a chap who told my friend who told me. The most brazen example, I think, was the fellow who collected a crowd and produced a Greek newspaper from his pocket, proceeding to inform the world at large that Turkey had entered the war, the Russians were only a short distance from Salonika, and the whole German system was collapsing.

The Salonika Market

The “Salonika Market” was the name given to the Exchange Mart that formed daily on the parade ground. It commenced immediately after rations had been drawn in the morning, and apart from the breaks necessary for dinner, tea and check parades, continued until dusk. Almost anything could be bought or sold and the currency was either cigarettes or money. 

The main item on the market was the sale and exchange of biscuits and bread. The 2 biscuit ration in the morning generally started in the running at either two or three cigarettes, but by the evening, the amount of stock had decreased and the hunger increased in proportion so that prices had risen to five or six cigarettes. 

Boots, overcoats, haversacks, razors, belts etc. could all be bought for cigarettes. A few of the chaps went into the town on working parties and managed to buy eggs, biscuits and jam from the civilians, and these, when re-sold in the market, fetched stupendous prices. Most of the selling was done by Cypriots, who quickly cornered the market and forced prices up. It was quite a common sight to see a chap racing across the parade ground with a tin of jam under his arm, with the enraged Cypriot, whose property it was, in hot pursuit. Unfortunately for the pursued, he was sometimes caught, and in one or two cases a knifing episode followed. The main source of revenue among the majority of chaps came from the gambling schools, which were pretty numerous. Crown and Anchor, Sixes and Fives (or Exu Pendi as the Cypriots called it) and One Up, were the main types. The latter was the game that we called Heads and Tails, and was very popular with the Australians. The noise in the market was indescribable, but most prevalent was the Cypriots cry of “How Much George – You speak”.

Escapes

There were several small attempts to escape, but most of them were unsuccessful, but on one occasion a large scale attempt was made. Somebody discovered by accident that one of the manholes in the compound led into a sewer that went underground past the barbed wire entanglements and terminate in some shrubs a hundred yards or so from the main gate. A circle was quickly formed round the manhole, and a game of “one up” was started to cover movements. All through the afternoon and evening, fellows slipped away down the hole. At ten o’clock men were still going down the vent, when a chap was lodged in the narrow channel. He was overcome by the bad air and whilst being helped back, the movements were observed by a guard. A shot was fired, and another of them men who was at that moment emerging from the hole at the other end of the channel attempted to get back into the sewer. Unfortunately, he too was observed, and the guard fired some shots down the drain. There were a number of fellows still in the tunnel, and of these, two were filled and one seriously wounded. Some seventy men had already made their escape before the guards’ discovery, but it was for the main part only the Cypriots who got clear away. The English and Australians were too badly handicapped by their appearance, looks and lack of knowledge of the language, and for the most part, they were picked up in the town. Strangely the Germans did not impose any punishment upon us for this, although we had previously been punished several times for the most trivial offences. After this escape, however, the searchlights were kept burning all night and the guards were very jumpy indeed. To intimidate us, they would amuse themselves at night by firing the machine gun at the walls of the barracks. A few nights after the escaping took place, one of the chaps was going across to the lavatory situated in the middle of the rear parade ground, he was picked up in the search light, and panicking, started to run. The guard immediately shot at him and hit him in the stomach, he died the following day.

The average rate of deaths from disease etc. was three a day. Conditions in the hospital were terrible. There were by no means enough beds or blankets to go round, and the floors wer littered with patients, some of them suffering from pneumonia. Most prevalent among the diseases were septic sores, malaria and dysentry. The medical kit and equipment in the hospital was pitifully small, and the Germans were far from helpful – they even begrudged the patient the necessary hot water with which to bathe the wounds and sores. 

Once when I was visiting my friend who was seriously ill with septic sores, I saw three men die in the short space of half an hour. Their beds were quickly filled, and after the bodies had been take out to the improvised mortuary, the blankets from the beds were handed to someone else.

Life in Salonika was very depressing indeed, I think that during the nine weeks that were spent there, we touched the rock-bottom of endurance. Indeed, several chaps died there through just not having the will to live. 

What the Germans gained by treating us so badly, I do not know, although the rumour that we earned their dislike over Crete may have had a bearing on it. 

Ralph Stockbridge – Crete Memoir

A few weeks ago, I visited the National Library of Scotland to go through some of the documents in the Patrick Leigh Fermor archive. One of these is the memoir of Ralph Stockbridge (ACC. 13338/412), describing army life on Crete before the invasion, his interactions with civilians, an encounter with the famous archaeologist John Pendlebury, the battle of Crete and his desire to return and help liberate the “brave and wonderful” Cretan people.

Following the battle Stockbridge joined the Inter Services Liaison Department (a front organisation for MI6), trained as a radio operator and returned to Crete to set up an intelligence gathering network. Though not a member of the Special Operations Executive he worked closely alongside and became good friends with many of the SOE agents who were infiltrated onto Crete.

The following text is a direct transcription of his unpublished memoir including the capitalisation of surnames.

Ralph Stockbridge
Crete
December 1940 – May 1941

Ralph Stockbridge

I came to Crete by accident. France was my first love, and I had joined the Field Security” Corps early in 1940 because someone had told me that, as I spoke fluent French, this was the best way of getting to France quickly. But, just as France was falling, I had found myself in one of the first Field Security Sections sent to the Middle East. Fate again intervened, this time in the shape of appendicitis, to prevent me joining the Section in Northern Greece and being involved in the subsequent retreat. Instead, I found myself in the Section sent to Crete at the end of December 1940.

My first impressions were unfavourable. We were under canvas in an olive-grove beside the main Chania Suda road, and it rained incessantly, our encampment became a morass, and we were wet and miserable Of the few weeks spent in Chania I remember curiously little, and the town has never had for me the attraction of Rethymnon and Heraklion. Three things from this period stick in my memory, however my instant liking of the Greek people, my first encounter with the Greek language; and the death of Metaxas. Our Field Security duties brought us into contact with Greek officials, in the harbour and elsewhere, and one met and drank coffee with Greek soldiers on their way to, or on leave from, Albania.  Their friendliness and courtesy made a lasting impression on me. I have a photograph of some of them taken by the quayside at Chania, the names of four of them were loannis PALIDES, Michael KOUTROULES, LAMBAKES, and Spyros ORPHANOS, the latter with an address in Athens (108 Patission). The first words of Greek which I heard completely mystified me. They were of a peasant woman shouting at her small boy behind our tents, and she appeared to be saying “Come here at once, Adonis”. As the child was not particularly beautiful I thought this otherwise charming survival of a name from classical times somewhat inappropriate, and it took me some time to work out that his mother was really calling him Antoni (Tony in English) and even longer to learn that the accent is on the first syllable of the name Adonis in Greek.

The modern harbour of Chania

The sudden death of the Prime Minister, General Metaxas, whose heroic rejection of the Italian ultimatum on 28 October 1940 brought Greece into the Second World War as Britain’s only ally at that time, caused consternation in Chania. I have never, before or since that date, seen people crying openly in the streets, and this was the more remarkable in of all places, Chania, the birthplace of Venizelos whose followers professed then, as their successors still do, hatred for the right wing in general and dictators in particular.

Early in March, two members of our Section, myself and David Bowe, he a well- informed and witty Fleet Street journalist before the war, now with the rank of Sergeant to my Lance-Corporal, were sent off on our motor-bikes to represent the Section in Heraklion. We passed through Rethymnon on March 8th and I contrived to be photographed in the company of the local Gendarmerie commander and a group of bystanders, one of whom was named Polydoros NIKOLOUDES. We rode on, through beautiful scenery, to Heraklion. I nearly coming to grief, and a premature end, on one of the dangerous comers near Yeni Kave (Drosia as it is known today) whose head-man, Mitsos KONTOGIANNES, was to play such a prominent part in resistance activities during the occupation.

Thus began one of the happiest periods of my life. Bowe and I had the free run of Heraklion. Our section commander was a hundred miles away in Chania, and what our duties were, in this farcical unit to which we belonged I, at least, never clearly understood. I interpreted mine as the identification of pro-Germans in the town. There were probably not more than a score of these and all of them, I suspect, harmless people with business or family connections with Germany. Their names and details I passed on to Chania, to what purpose I cannot imagine Germany had not yet invaded Greece, the British Army certainly had no authority to take any action against civilians, however pro- German, while the Greek security section of the local Gendarmerie presumably knew a great deal more about the problem than we did and were geared to take any necessary action.

Meanwhile we enjoyed Heraklion. My first friend there was George Migades, the leading tailor in the town, who invited me into his shop for a cup of coffee as I was passing by one day. In his fifties, and immensely pro-British, Migades was a mine of information about Heraklion. He was also extremely voluble: his words came pouring out in a torrent I have never heard equalled except, possibly, by Isaiah Berlin. The efforts I made during the following weeks to understand what he was saying were certainly responsible for the fact that, without any lessons, I was fluent in Greek by the time the battle began, though I knew no modern Greek by the time I arrived in Crete five months earlier. This is less strange than it may seem, I had taken my degree in Classics at Cambridge before the war, and modern Greek is only a very much simplified version of the language spoken in Greece two thousand years ago

Migades introduced me to his wife and their four delightful children, two girls and two boys aged between 22 and 16, Modi and Rena, Yanni and Siphi (short for Joseph). All survived the war, the two girls making successful marriages, Rena to Micky Akoumianakes who was to become the most important contact in Heraklion during the occupation of successive British officers conducting resistance and intelligence activities; Yanni is today one of Greece’s best-know artists and stage designers, while Siphi retired as a senior pilot of Olympic Airways. The Migades family house was in the old part of the city which lies behind and to the east of the main street leading from Morosini Square down to the Harbour, an area of narrow streets and old houses with inner courtyards immortalized by Kazantzakes in his great novel Kapetan Mikhales (Freedom or Death in its English translation), and a tale of insurrection against the Turks during the 19th Century.

During this period I met, many of them through Migades, a cross-section of Heraklion society. There was Eleutherios ALEXIOU, scholar and schoolmaster, with a good library, with whom I discussed French literature, talking always French, which was at that time the foreign language most readily spoken by educated people in Greece. There was the honorary British Vice-Consul, M.N. ELIADES, an elderly man who had written in English a history of Crete (CRETE PAST AND PRESENT, published by Heath Cranton Ltd, London, in 1933). After Crete fell, Eliades was arrested and spent the next four years in internment in Germany, where he was, by all accounts, well-treated, and survived the war. Edith and Harry NEWLANDS were particular friends of mine, she from Newport in Essex, he originally from Lithuania and of mixed German-Lithuanian parentage (his real name was NEULANDS-JAUNTZE). They had met and married in Athens before the war where he ran a dancing school. They were kind and gentle people.  He spoke German, of course, and during the occupation was obliged, much against his will, to act as a translator and interpreter in Heraklion, for which he was regarded with some mistrust as a result by local people. Both survived the war and lived in Crete, dying there at an advanced age, he in his nineties.

There were many other friends too. Coffee-housing was then, as now, a favourite pastime, and Regginakis’ establishment in the main square, facing Morosini’s beautiful Venetian fountain, our favourite rendezvous. Here we would sit for hours discussing the war and politics and anything else which occurred to us. One day. I recall, an elderly and bibulous English resident, named Foster, who was the representative in Heraklion of the Eastern Telegraph Company, stuffed with oranges the mouth of the fountain lions in a sudden fit of enthusiasm. In the square itself was always to be seen Andreas, the village, or rather town, idiot, whose harmless antics were a constant source of amusement. Andreas, I am told, was the only person in Heraklion allowed by the Germans to ‘cheek them with impunity during the occupation, he was of course often put up to it by the locals, who told him what to say.

The Morosini Fountain, even today the centre of Heraklion

This pleasant life came to an abrupt end on May 20, 1941, a cloudless and warm day. Although for some weeks, since the Germans had occupied mainland Greece, we had been expecting an early invasion, it was still something of a surprise when it happened. Proceedings began during the afternoon with some heavy bombing of the airfield area (two to three miles East of the town), but also of the harbour. Then, around 5pm, we saw the troop carriers and the first parachutists. I was in the western part of the city and so saw only those who descended some distance beyond the western entrance to the city. known as the Chania Gate. But a total of some 2000 German troops were landed on this first day, of whom at least half were wiped out by the end of it. They had, it seems, expected to capture the town and the airfield at once and without difficulty, but their intelligence must have been very poor since Brigadier Chapple’s British force consisted of 4000 men and there were also quite a large number of Greek troops plus many armed civilians, from elderly to very young men, who fought most valiantly and effectively. The Germans failed to take the airfield that day, and never did take it until after the evacuation, they did occupy the Greek barracks immediately to the South of the airfield, and they forced their way through the town to the harbour. But from both these areas they were driven out in the next day or two.

Just prior to the battle, I had met John Pendlebury, then in uniform as a Captain. Pendlebury, although still a young man, aged 36, had been Curator and resident archaeologist at Knossos. He knew Crete far better than any other Englishman and during this period, when there were no roads to nine out of ten villages, nor any other modern amenities, he had walked all over the island’s 200-mile length and knew hundreds if not thousands of people. It was not surprising therefore that he had been asked by the War Office (though I did not know this at the time) to organise and lead resistance to the Germans in the event of Crete being captured. In addition to his unrivalled knowledge of the terrain of the Cretans, he spoke Greek and was young and fit enough to face the physical hardships likely to be involved. He was indeed an impressive man to meet, tall, handsome, athletic-looking (he had an Athletic Blue at Cambridge and twice won the High Jump against Oxford) and with an air of considerable authority. The distinction was added to by his having a glass eye (the result of a boyhood accident) and sporting a swordstick instead of a swagger-cane. Pendlebury had in fact made detailed plans for resistance, based initially on the villages round Mount Ida (Psilorites) and this explains why, on May 21, he decided to get out of Heraklion in order to activate his resistance organisation, possibly, while the battle was still in progress and its outcome undecided. What has never been explained, and I for one have never been able to understand, is why so intelligent a man chose to leave the town by the West, or Chania Gate, and by car. All of us had seen the parachutists landing in the area beyond the Gate the day before, and it could be safely assumed that they now controlled the main road Pendlebury and his driver ran straight into a pocket of parachutists, he was seriously wounded in the ensuing skirmish, and taken to a nearby house where his wounds were dressed by a German Army doctor, and he was left overnight. The following morning more Germans returned, and Pendlebury was taken outside and shot. The assumption is that he had been identified by the Germans as potentially their most dangerous opponent in Crete and that they decided to eliminate him there and then. To shoot a wounded and defenceless enemy in cold blood was of course a war-crime, but one which could not subsequently be pinned on any individual German. It is said that, some weeks after the event, Pendlebury’s body was exhumed in order that the Germans could satisfy themselves beyond any doubt, by examination of his glass eye, that it really was Pendlebury whom they had killed. His loss was a serious one to the Allies as it put back resistance and intelligence operations in Crete until autumn when the first British personnel, of whom I had the honour to be one, were infiltrated. His reputation however lived on in the villages, and future resistance personnel always found it a valuable introduction to villagers they did not know to say they were friends of John Pendlebury. But why did he not make his way out of Heraklion on foot and to the South of the city? It must have been safer.

Replica of the uniform worn by Commonwealth troops during the battle, from a display in Chania marking the 81st anniversary of the battle.

My personal recollections of the battle are a kaleidoscope of confusion. Our Field Security unit had been reinforced, if that is the word, by the arrival just beforehand of some NCOS and the Section Commander, Captain BURR, from Chania. We were billeted now in a half-built house opposite the Prefecture (Nomarcheion). There was no lighting and no hand-guards to the concrete staircase, and Captain Burr shortly fell from the first floor landing and broke his thigh. He was taken to hospital but could not be moved when the evacuation took place and so became a prisoner of war. The unit, composed of linguists (anything except Greek, and so useless) was hopelessly non-combatant, being armed only with Smith & Wesson 38 revolvers. We were only a hindrance to the military proper, but did odd guard jobs, acted as messengers and anything else we were asked to do. It is really only isolated incidents I remember from these seven or eight days of the battle in Heraklion: a German aircraft coming in from the sea on which a Bofors gun scored a direct hit-it became a ball of flame as it came down into the water, finding transport for a community of French nuns so that they could attempt to get out of the beleaguered town (I never discovered whether they did), the bombing of the town, diving very fast and head-first into a ditch as a Messerschmidt machine-gunned the street where I was standing, seeing some German prisoners held near Brigade HQ in a cave somewhere near the airfield- they were very arrogant and confident about the outcome of the battle; hearing my name called out down at the harbour during an air raid, and discovering it was not me but someone else who was being addressed he turned out, from my hurried enquiry, to be from Royston, the town nearest to the village of Melbourn where my family have lived since church records were kept, but I have never discovered who he was and whether he survived the war. During this time I at least had not the slightest idea of how the battle was going. In fact, it was going well as far as Heraklion was concerned, but its fate was being decided elsewhere. The capture of Maleme airfield at Chania, and complete air control, meant that the Germans could now land as many troops as required in Crete and that the battle was to all intents and purposes over. So an evacuation was ordered, the Chania garrison began the slow and arduous retreat to the South coast at Sphakia, and the Navy prepared to lift off Brigadier Chapple’s 4000 men from Heraklion. There was no possibility of rescuing the 2000 mostly Australian troops in Rethymnon most of whom in the event had to surrender though some took refuge in the villages, and were fed and sheltered at enormous personal risk by the inhabitants, often for months and in some cases years. Of these most were eventually secretly evacuated by submarine or small boat once British officers had returned to Crete to organise such operations and co-ordinate resistance

At midnight on May 28th a Royal Navy force of two cruisers and six destroyers reached Heraklion. For three hours the destroyers ferried troops to the cruisers which lay outside harbour and themselves took on board the remainder. We were marched down to the harbour in batches and I shall never forget the silence and desolation of the shattered town I knew so well. I took a vow at this moment to return to Crete as soon as possible and to help liberate its brave and wonderful people.

The harbour at Heraklion, with surviving Venetian fortress and arsenal.

We sailed about 3.30am. For six hours, from first light until noon, by which time we were out of range of the aircraft, we were dive-bombed continuously. The noise of the screaming planes and of the anti-aircraft guns was deafening. Both cruisers were hit, Orion losing her Captain and nearly a hundred men killed among her crew and troops aboard. Of the six destroyers, Imperial had her steering-gear hopelessly crippled, her crew and passengers were taken aboard other ships and she was sunk. Hereward was badly damaged and had to be run aground on the East coast of Crete, her crew and passengers became prisoners of war. On board Jackal, where I was, we were packed like sardines, but suffered only near misses and minor damage. Towards nightfall we reached Alexandria, where good ladies with tea and sandwiches greeted us on the quayside. Then it was off to Cairo, and the bug-infested Kasr-el-Nil Barracks.

Back in Egypt, my first act was to approach my Commanding Officer Lt Col WORDSWORTH and beg him to get me transferred to whatever unit was responsible for secret operations in Crete, I am eternally grateful to him for abetting such a request. especially from a junior NCO quite unknown to him. I was introduced in the right quarters, given three months training in the operation of a transmitting and receiving wireless set and in encoding messages, and was back in Crete at the beginning of October 1941, where I was to spend a further two and a half years with the Resistance.

While in Egypt I sat down one day and wrote the following poem (not included) [Link to my transcription here]. It is to be read as an allegory of the bonds which unite our two island races, each with a famous history. I always thought of Crete as the last bastion of those allegedly fair-haired invaders from the North who had peopled Greece in pre-classical times, in particular the Dorians. It was noticeable in Crete at that time how many people had fair hair and blue eves, and noteworthy that nearly all of these turned out to originate from those mountain fastnesses to the South and South East of the White Mountains, the area of Sphakia, into which, for hundreds of years, successive occupiers, Venetians, Turks and now Germans never penetrated except to make brief forays. And so the race remained pure, without intermarriage with foreigners. There were even unmistakable traces of the old Greek language of classical times, eg the word “pempo” (I send) was regularly used instead of the modern Greek ‘stelno’.

Note:

Ralph Stockbridge was made an Officer, awarded the Military Cross in 1942 and a Bar in 1944, in which year he also received the Honorary Citizenship of Rethymnon on its liberation from the Germans.

Ralph Stockbridge – Crete Poem

Part of the Patrick Leigh Fermor archive in the National Library contains correspondence (File reference Acc. 13338/412) with and a few papers of Leigh Fermor’s friend and colleague Ralph Stockbridge. He wrote this poem shortly after being evacuated from Crete, having fought in the battle as a Lance Corporal in the British Army.

Lines Written in Egypt in June 1941 after the Battle of Crete
By Ralph Stockbridge

We will go out, hand in hand, from the torn sad streets
Into the cool night;
Hand in hand, we will go up, through the dark olive-grove,
Past the vine-trellis, to the bare hillside.
The moon will light our footsteps; we shall see,
Faintly, the snow-gleam on the mountain-side,
Pale gold bars on the gently heaving sea.

This same moon, we shall muse, hallowed the old
Forgotten priest-kings’ palaces
When Minos ruled, on ever Europe claimed
This beauty for a natural heritage.
When, in the mountain cavern, Zeus was born,
It shone, perchance; under its dim light
Bold Theseus hoisted the dark sail
Set forth to brave the dreaded minotaur,
And break with grief an aged fathers heart.

So we shall muse –
Of Paul borne hither by an unruly sea;
Of the painter called The Greek; did he
In days of childhood draw from Crete
That mystic inspiration?
Of others too: of noble chieftains famed throughout the land
In years gone by, waging unceasing fight
Gainst Roman, Turk, Venetian,
Of much oppression, and heroic deeds;
Of this last suffering and sacrifice-

Then, silent, we shall turn, our hearts grown full,
And on each others shoulders place our hands,
And in the other’s eyes look long, read there
The pledge of friendship till the end of days

Walking the Ground in Crete Day 2: Chania to Vryses

Spent too long in the new museum, so cheated a bit and took the bus to Vryses. Thankful that the route goes around the White Mountains, not directly over them. Even still, Tomorrow is all up hill…

The prehistoric gallery of the new Archaeological Museum, Chania
The Lefka Ori/White Mountains
View of the river in Vryses

Walking the Ground in Crete Day 1: Souda to Chania

Took the overnight ferry from Athens to Souda Bay. Stopped in at Souda Bay War Cemetery. Beautifully maintained and tranquil. Then into Chania itself. Maritime Museum has video of veterans, including ANZACs who were left behind and taken in by Cretan families.

Souda Bay War Cemetery
Enterance to the Venetian harbour, Chania
Footage of Allied soldiers playing cards, in the Maritime museum
Interviews with veterans of the battle