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Susan Sweney

Susan Dorothea Mary Therese Hilton (née Sweney, 2 February 1915 – 30 October 1983) was a British radio broadcaster for the Nazi regime in Germany during the Second World War.

Susan Sweney
Susan Sweney in 1936[1]
Born
Susan Dorothea Mary Therese Sweney

(1915-02-02)2 February 1915
Trichinopoly, British India
Died30 October 1983(1983-10-30) (aged 68)
Surrey, England
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Journalist and broadcaster
Known forPropaganda broadcasts from Nazi Germany

Born in India to a family with Irish connections, she was active in the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s before attracting the interest of the police in London after which she set off to join her husband in Burma. Her ship was sunk in the Indian Ocean by a German raider and she was sent with other survivors to France. That ship too was attacked and sunk, this time by a British submarine off the coast of France, and she was again rescued, causing her to describe herself as "many times drowned".[2]

She began to work as a journalist in Paris before moving to Berlin to make propaganda broadcasts in support of the Nazi regime. She had an intense and probably lesbian relationship there with a colleague, but also suffered from loneliness and depression. She gambled and drank as much as she could, leading to on-air mistakes for which she was dismissed. In Vienna in 1943/44 she worked for the Schutzstaffel (SS) watching Americans and Germans suspected of spying for the Allies. She came under suspicion by the Gestapo and was arrested but released and sent to Liebenau internment camp, probably at her own request. She was returned to Britain by MI5 where she was tried at the Old Bailey for assisting the enemy and jailed for 18 months. On release she worked as an international courier and later for a farm and pet shop business.

Early life edit

Susan Sweney was born in Trichinopoly (now Tiruchirappalli), British India, on 2 February 1915 to British parents with Irish connections. Her father was Cyril Edward Sweney, a superintendent of railway police in Madras.[3] Her mother was Dorothy Sweney, née Tower-Barter,[4] who was born in Madras.[5] She had a brother, Edward, who was born in India and became a poultry farmer in Meath, Ireland.[3] She was educated partly in England where her brother said that she had received "rough treatment" that had disillusioned her about the British class system and may have influenced her political views.[3]

In 1936, Sweney married the Scottish mining engineer George Martin Hilton. The couple had a son who died young.[3] George Hilton later became a captain in the Royal Engineers[6] and worked with the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War.[7] His father was Lt. Col. George Hilton.[8]

Fascism edit

In 1936, Susan Sweney joined the British Union of Fascists (BUF)[3] as she "believed in the Union's ideals".[6] She described herself as an active member and in October 1936 was charged at Bow Street Court with disorderly behaviour at 10 Downing Street.[9] According to her husband, she attended the Nazi party conference at Munich in 1938[7] but she left the BUF that year over the party's policy towards Jews, not because the anti-Semitism troubled her, but, as she put it: "if the Jews were as powerful as alleged, then attacking them would only bring counter-attack".[6] She moved to Dublin where she was monitored by the Irish police Special Branch.[3]

By January 1940, she was back in London, and had rejoined the BUF. At the suggestion of Charlie Watts, BUF district leader Westminster St. George's branch, she took up the editorship of the fascist newspaper Voice of the People which she performed from January to May 1940 when the police Special Branch raided her flat and seized all her materials.[3][6] She had already planned to give up the job for a quieter life as her young son had died which had affected her health[8] and she had booked her passage to join her husband in Burma.[3][6]

Twice shipwrecked edit

 
The destruction of the British ship Kemmendine by the German raider Atlantis, July 1940.[10]
 
Norwegian ship Tirranna[11]

Sweney departed for Burma on the Kemmendine on 28 May 1940[3] but the vessel was captured and then sunk by the German raider Atlantis in the Indian Ocean on 13 July 1940 with the crew and passengers evacuated to the Atlantis.[12] Sweney acquired a reputation on the Atlantis for drinking and bad language, accusing the crew of being brutes, murderers, and many other things. They in turn nicknamed her "the devil's roast", the "D.R." and the "Plain Lady".[3][13] The first officer, Ulrich Mohr, recalled in his memoirs that her particular complaint was that the ship's bartender had left his post and locked-up as soon as the ship came under fire, but that she could be calmed through the use of the ship's looted Scotch whisky.[3][13] After she left the Atlantis, Mohr found correspondence on another captured ship that Sweney's husband George was suspected in Burma of spying for the Japanese.[13]

She and the other survivors from the Kemmendine were transferred to the Norwegian Tirranna, another ship captured by the Atlantis, and sailed for France as a prize ship with a cargo of looted goods.[12] According to Sweney, it was on the Tirranna that she became known to the Germans as Irish rather than British after she befriended the often intoxicated Thomas Cormac MacGowan, the 54-year-old Irish ship's doctor on the Kemmendine.[3][8] On 22 September, however, the Tirranna was torpedoed off the coast of France by the British submarine Tuna and sank with 87 lives lost. The survivors were taken to a German naval facility in Royan, from where Sweney and MacGowan travelled to Paris in December 1940.[3]

Paris edit

 
Sweney's temporary Irish identity document of 19 December 1940

In Paris, Sweney acquired a temporary Irish identity document and passport from the embassy there in December 1940, something issued to many who claimed Irish nationality in occupied Paris.[14][15] Her British passport had been taken from her by the Germans before she arrived in France.[15][16] She broadcast a descriptive account of her adventures for which the Germans paid her 500 Reichsmarks.[3] This was intercepted by BBC Monitoring in April and May 1941 who summarised it as emphasising how well the passengers were treated by the German crew and how many lives were lost, particularly women and children, when the Tirranna was sunk by the British.[17] Her broadcast was published in Hamburg in 1942 as "An Irish woman's experience of England and the war at sea", taking at face value Sweney's claim to be Irish rather than British.[3]

Based at the Hotel d'Amerique in the rue Rochechouart, Paris, she began to work as a journalist and according to a contemporary, established very good relations with high-ranking German officers in the city. She later claimed to British intelligence to have helped the Irish priest father Kenneth Monaghan of the Chapelle Saint-Joseph to smuggle British merchant seamen out of Paris.[18] Monaghan had been a British Army officer during the First World War and was a chaplain to the British Expeditionary Force in 1940 with connections to MI6.[19][20] Sweney's story was supported by testimony gathered after the war from Miss Winifred Fitzpatrick, an Irish woman in Paris who knew Monaghan.[9]

In June 1941, she was visited at her hotel by Abwehr agent Oscar C. Pfaus and the head of the Nazi propaganda organisation Deutscher Fichte-Bund, Theodore Kessemeir, to ask her to undertake undercover work on behalf of Germany.[18] She was given money and identity papers under an alias and travelled to Berlin where the proposal of undercover work was again discussed. She understood it to involve travel to Ireland, the United States or Portuguese East Africa.[15][16] She refused on the grounds that the work was too "dirty", but was given other work such as telephone intercepts and then visiting military installations as research for a propaganda book about German armed strength.[18]

Berlin edit

From September 1941,[4] Sweney worked for Büro Concordia, an arm of the German foreign ministry that ran a string of "black" radio stations targeted at discontented minorities outside Germany. The stations aimed to give the impression that they were the work of internal dissidents broadcasting from within the target country rather than propaganda from abroad.[21][22] She made broadcasts to Scotland as Ann Tower on Büro's Radio Caledonia. The name Ann was invented but Tower came from her mother, and she acquired a German passport in that name. She also prepared religious material for Büro's Christian Peace Movement station.[4]

From January 1942, she worked at Irland-Redaktion, a semi-independent station on which she used her maiden name of Susan Sweney.[23][4] Her work there consisted of writing talks for others, presenting her own talks three times a week which she admitted were "sheer propaganda" aimed at keeping Ireland neutral, and writing plays and reciting poetry that was broadcast to America.[16] Her colleague there, Francis Stuart, described her as "a nice sort" but constantly seeking alcohol, an opinion shared by fellow colleague John O'Reilly.[4][24]

In March 1942, she sent a letter to her brother Edward in Meath which she signed "your many times drowned sister, Susan".[2] Edward never received it and the letter was read by the Gestapo, British intelligence, and the Irish G2, inadvertently tipping them off about her activities and leading G2 to open a file on her. Her brother was visited by a British representative, the poet John Betjeman, who was then doing war work in Dublin.[2]

 
Cuxhavener Strasse and Klopstockstrasse, Berlin, where Sweney had an apartment with Sonja Kowanko

In May 1942, she wrote to Biddy O'Kelly, an Irish friend in Dublin, describing her work and asking how her broadcasts were received in Ireland, and whether she would she be able to show her face there after the war? She also asked for news of her husband whose fate she did not know,[2] although he told his superiors in the British Army in 1944 that he had not been on friendly terms with his wife for some years.[7] She spoke of enjoying smoking a pipe and socialising with Sophie Kowanko, a colleague on Irland-Redaktion who was known as Sonja.[2] In June, she wrote again, saying:

Never have I felt so utterly homesick and shut away as I do now. Biddy, nothing can ever make up to me for these years of unbelieveable, soul-destroying loneliness. I try to shake these morbid thoughts off me. I go to the races and gamble as hard as I can. I work hard so as to forget.[2]

She formed a close relationship with Kowanko who was born in 1916 and raised in Paris, the daughter of Russian émigrés. Educated in England and Italy and fluent in several languages, Kowanko was employed at Irland-Redaktion as a typist, but in practice had a larger role that included a weekly broadcast to Irish women under the name Linda Walters. The two women shared a flat in Berlin's Klopstockstrasse, and drank and played billiards together. Francis Stuart and his colleagues thought they were probably in a lesbian relationship. When Kowanko incurred the displeasure of the Gestapo and was transferred to factory work, Sweney lobbied to get Kowanko released and succeeded in getting her appointed to a six-month contract at the Nazi-owned Interradio at the end of 1942.[25]

While many of Sweney's broadcasts were innocuous,[16] and a diplomat from the Irish embassy in Paris found her as forthright off-air in her criticisms of the Germans as she was of the British,[2] her need to earn money to buy alcohol helped her Nazi masters to control her.[4] A young woman in a foreign country with few friends and unable to leave, she was obliged to present whatever material she was given, which sometimes included anti-Semitic content such as her broadcast for Irland-Redaktion of 19 July 1942, picked up by the Irish Army, which used wild extrapolations from statistics to present a picture of an exploding Jewish population in the United States. Such material was not common in her broadcasting, however, as the management of the station resisted the constant stream of anti-Semitic material from the central propaganda pool, feeling that it was too crude for the audience. Instead, Irland-Redaktion concentrated on anti-war and anti-British material that emphasised the importance of Irish neutrality.[2]

In July 1942, for instance, she broadcast:

Two years ago, I was myself taken in by Admiralty Churchill's lies, when he said that the British Navy had swept the seas of Nazi ships. Two years ago to-day, I suffered for my stupidity in the Indian Ocean. Let everybody learn from personal experience that Churchill is a liar. The immediate future is indeed black for Britain and her Allies, but it has been black all along – Only Churchill never admitted it.[26]

She was sacked from Irland-Redaktion in autumn 1942 after making on-air mistakes, probably as a result of intoxication,[27] but resurfaced in January 1943[16] at Interradio because "Sonja and I wanted to be together".[25] She worked there until June 1943 writing scripts for others but not broadcasting.[16] Kowanko returned to her family in Paris in mid-1943, where she lived until her death in 1993, and Sweney sent her money when she could.[25][28]

Despite her drinking and wild nature, as a fluent English speaker and experienced radio presenter, Sweney was in demand by the Nazi propaganda machine.[29] From January to October 1943, she worked for the German Foreign Office preparing talks titled Voice of the People. In 1943 and 1944 she also wrote anti-communist articles for Anti-Komintern.[16] In mid-1943, she was asked to take a tour of the Reich's main cities to prepare an article for foreign consumption documenting the life of the Catholic Church, focusing particularly on churches damaged by Allied bombing to counter the Allied line that the church was being destroyed by the Nazi regime. However, she had begun to be followed by the Gestapo who, for reasons that are unknown, suspected her of being an Allied spy.[29]

Vienna edit

 
Ungargasse, Vienna, where Sweney stayed with Mrs Krimann.

In July 1943, Sweney was allowed to move to Vienna where the sculptor Lisa von Pott arranged for her to stay with Mrs Luze Krimann at her apartment at 71 Ungargasse. Krimann was a keen Nazi, at least until her Luftwaffe pilot husband Herbert Felix Krimann was grounded for being politically unreliable and then deserted in February 1945.[30][31] She recalled that Sweney spent most of her time at the flat either typing for a magazine called Current Thoughts or asleep. She also made short broadcasts for Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft's Voice of the People series. She was permanently short of money and had "enormous" bills for cigarettes and alcohol. Krimann told British intelligence that Sweney claimed to have turned against the war but that she had no choice but to continue writing anti-British propaganda and that she knew that if Germany lost, she would have to account for her actions.[29][30][31]

In October 1943, Sweney's work for the Foreign Office ceased, leaving her, as she put it, "stranded".[16] She soon found employment however with what British intelligence called the "Von Pott Group", a group organised by Lisa von Pott to spy on anyone in Vienna suspected of helping the Allies.[29] She was recruited by von Pott who asked her if she wanted to work against the communists and after Sweney said she was, introduced her to Dr Robert Wagner, an S.S. or S.D. officer who met Sweney weekly at 71 Ungargasse. She admitted spying on Doris Brehm, Count Leo Zeppelin, Dr Alphons Klingsland and his two sisters, and all the Americans in Vienna,[30][32] but claimed to have tried to warn them that they were at risk and to have only done the work in the hope that it would enable her to escape to Yugoslavia.[29] Her claims were refuted by statements collected by the British after liberation from witnesses who believed that she had denounced them to the SS or the Gestapo:

  • Herbert P. Erdmann wrote to the British military authorities in June 1945 accusing Sweney of "high treason and espionage against England", saying that she had denounced him to the German secret police [the Gestapo] in June 1944 as an agent for the English.[33]
  • Alphons Klingsland, a leading Viennese lawyer, reported that in December 1943, Sweney visited him twice in his office and tried to engage his services. He refused as he felt she was suspicious. A report stated, "she tried as hard as she could to involve him in legal and other measures on her behalf, which were such as might easily have compromised him in the eyes of the Gestapo." Klingsland also said that he could construe nothing Sweney said as a warning.[34] He was later denounced to the Gestapo by an unknown person.[32]
  • Felix Krimann, the deserter from the Luftwaffe, also claimed, to his wife, to have been denounced to the Gestapo by von Pott and Sweney, Sweney never having liked him.[31]

Among von Pott's circle was Countess Amethé von Zeppelin, a British woman who had married Count Leo Zeppelin and was regarded by the British security services to have been anti-British since before the outbreak of the Second World War and to have made a propaganda or anti-British radio broadcast from Vienna on 21 September 1939 shortly after the outbreak of the war. Among Sweney's possessions was later found a visiting card from the countess containing a cryptic message in German that was translated as: "The bearer of this card also brings the bird with her. Herr FINDERS will have spoken to you about them already and will have left the cage and birdseed with you. Please give it (the bird) seed and water till to-morrow morning".[30]

In 1944, Sweney visited the Turkish consulate in Vienna to try to obtain a visa to leave the Third Reich but when the Gestapo discovered her intentions they arrested her in July. Her friend, Margaret Schaffhauser, described her as being in the "condemned cell" in Vienna but that after she was reprieved, "a great calmness came over her there. She was no longer on the run".[29]

Internment edit

 
Propaganda photograph showing internees at Liebenau camp with Red Cross care packages, c.1940.
 
Sweney's application for a Swiss passport. Liebenau, 1945.[35]

In August 1944, Sweney was sent to Liebenau internment camp for women and children in southern Germany,[29] a former asylum whose patients had been killed by lethal injection on the orders of Adolf Hitler to make space for internees. In June 1945, she wrote to a pre-war friend of her experiences:

I have tried to get out and to send messages. Nothing worked so I fought my own little lone fight. Jim, these Germans are the most terrible people I have ever seen ... They are crooks. I got wise to them in France. I think that in my own way I have succeeded in causing them a lot of trouble as I sabotaged wherever I went. The result is that I was put in prison and my nerves are absolutely broken. I cannot travel in another ship and even an aeroplane scares me ... get us [Sweney and a friend from Liebenau] home to England or to a place where we can relax and feel no more fear. I have felt so intensely every moment of this war. Daily fear – hourly fear. Until I leave Germany I shall feel it pressing on my mind. I don't think you will recognise me when you see me.[36]

Sweney was No. 29 on the British Renegades Warning List,[16] a list developed by the British security services before the Normandy landings to enable Allied troops to identify people in occupied Europe who might try to subvert the invasion effort.[37] After Liebenau was liberated she was held there for eight months while she was interrogated by MI5 while most of the other prisoners were released.[29]

Nationality edit

Before returning her to Britain, MI5 had to consider Sweney's nationality as she could not be said to have collaborated with the enemy if she was a citizen of a neutral country broadcasting to neutral countries.[16][38]

In her statement, Sweney said that she thought that her father had been born in Ireland but she wasn't sure.[6] She received a British passport in 1936 on the grounds that her husband was British but she lost it before her arrival in France.[16] She was released from detention, unlike the other passengers from the Tirranna, and travelled to Paris where she obtained a temporary Irish identity document and passport, but the Germans replaced that with a Fremdenpass (foreigner's or alien's passport) when she arrived in Berlin. She tried to obtain new Irish papers but the Irish diplomats in Berlin told her that she had no claim to citizenship.[15][16] In 1945, while she was interned, she applied for a Swiss passport but it is not known if it was issued.[35]

Arrest and trial edit

 
Sweney's British government file showing entries into the 1980s[35]

Sweney was returned to Britain in December 1945 in the company of MI5 officer Iris Marsden who later recollected that Sweney's arm was in plaster and thought that she had been roughed-up by French soldiers.[39] According to Marsden, Sweney was "devious" and the evidence against her "damning". She knew what she had done and was terrified of the consequences. She told Marsden that the internment camp had been "the safest place to be in the circumstances",[39] confirming Mrs Krimann's statement that she had asked to be interned.[31] Marsden told David O'Donoghue that Sweney had made sexual advances to her.[40]

Sweney was arrested on arrival at Victoria Station in London and subsequently appeared at Bow Street Magistrates' Court charged with assisting the enemy by working for the German radio propaganda service.[39] Her trial was on 18 February 1946 at the Central Criminal Court (the Old Bailey), when she faced ten charges of assisting the enemy. She pleaded guilty to eight and two that she denied were dropped. These were that she had joined the SS, and that she had conspired with others to broadcast propaganda. She received an 18-month jail sentence without hard labour.[14][41]

The trial took less than a day, meaning that much of the background information about Sweney's life in Germany, such as that she had originally refused spying work and had been arrested by the Gestapo, was not mentioned.[14] Her brother, Edward, later told David O'Donoghue that he felt the guilty plea and quick proceedings had deprived her of a fair trial and that his sister was only pursuing peace and was "innocent of any blameworthy act".[42] Of her character, he said she was an "exhibitionist", "very immature and driven by fame", and "a person who needed a good deal of guidance. She was easily led, highly volatile, a very impressionable person, generous but hot-tempered".[42]

Sweney herself later believed that the suspicions of the Gestapo, her short trial, the narrowing of the charges purely to broadcasting, and the soft treatment she received in Holloway prison (her "own room" and a "maid" to look after her) were indicative that she was being used to cover up other British espionage activity that had not come to light, possibly a British female agent who had been on the Kemmendine and left when it called at Gibraltar. According to her friend Margaret Schaffhauser, it was the only way she could explain the sequence of events.[43]

Later life edit

Sweney told Margaret Schaffhauser that when she left prison, she was met at the gate by two MI5 agents who she always referred to as "my friends" and who went out of their way to help her, suppressing a planned book and telling her to contact them immediately if anyone said or wrote anything derogatory about her. According to Sweney, they sent her Christmas cards every year until they retired.[43]

She subsequently worked as a courier to Australia and South America and later for a farm and pet shop business in England. She died in Surrey, England, on 30 October 1983.[38][44] In 1998, after David O'Donoghue's research for his PhD dissertation, Hitler's Irish Voices, Edward Sweney asked the British Home Secretary Jack Straw to reopen his sister's case to rectify what he saw as a miscarriage of justice.[40] A file of official papers about Sweney was released by the British National Archives in 2001.[35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ O'Donoghue, David A. (2014) Hitler's Irish Voices: The story of German radio's wartime Irish service. Dromore: Somerville Press. p. 128. ISBN 9780992736408
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h O'Donoghue, 2014, pp. 98–101.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o O'Donoghue, 2014, pp. 211–212.
  4. ^ a b c d e f O'Donoghue, 2014, p. 214.
  5. ^ Dorothy Tower Barter India Births and Baptisms, 1786–1947. Family Search. Retrieved 5 February 2020. (subscription required)
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Statement of Susan Hilton", Libenau Internment Camp, 30 June 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  7. ^ a b c Memo from R.H. Hollis, 19 April 1944, in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  8. ^ a b c Statement of Susan Hilton, Libenau Internment Camp, 30 May 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  9. ^ a b Letter from G. E. Wakefield, 3 January 1940, in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  10. ^ Kemmendine SS (+1940), wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  11. ^ Tirranna, State Library of Victoria. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  12. ^ a b Duffy, James P. (2005). Hitler's Secret Pirate Fleet: The Deadliest Ships of World War II. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 16. ISBN 0-8032-6652-9.
  13. ^ a b c Mohr, Ulrich, & Arthur V. Sellwood. (2008). Ship 16: The Story of a German Surface Raider. Stroud: Amberley Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-84868-115-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ a b c O'Donoghue, 2014, pp. 218–219.
  15. ^ a b c d Murphy, Sean. (2003) Letting the Side Down: British traitors of the Second World War. Stroud: Sutton. pp 77–79. ISBN 0750929367
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "M.I.5. Report Re Susan Hilton", 14 November 1945, in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  17. ^ "B.B.C. Monitor Reports (Summarised)..." in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  18. ^ a b c O'Donoghue, 2014, p. 213.
  19. ^ Passionists. Irish Paris. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  20. ^ "Pfaus, Oskar Karl" in Jefferson Adams. (2009). Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. p. 347. ISBN 978-0-8108-6320-0.
  21. ^ Liburd, Liam (21 February 2017). "Haw-Haw and Radio War: Fake News in the 1940s". History Matters. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  22. ^ Berg, Jerome S. (2007). On the Short Waves, 1923–1945: Broadcast Listening in the Pioneer Days of Radio. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-7864-3029-1.
  23. ^ Holmes, Colin (2016). Searching for Lord Haw-Haw: The Political Lives of William Joyce. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-138-88884-5.
  24. ^ "John Francis O'Reilly: the "flighty boy"". History Ireland. 19 February 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  25. ^ a b c O'Donoghue, David A. (1995) Hitler's Irish Voices. The story of German radio's propaganda service, 1939–1945. PhD thesis, Dublin City University. via DORAS. pp. 100–101.
  26. ^ "Examples of Monitor Reports of Broadcast Talks by Susan Sweney" in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  27. ^ Hull, Mark M. & Vera Moynes (2017). Masquerade: Treason, the Holocaust, and an Irish Impostor. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-8061-5634-7.
  28. ^ O'Donoghue, 2014, p. 158.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h O'Donoghue, 2014, pp. 215–216.
  30. ^ a b c d "re the "VON POTT" group", 22 January 1946, in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  31. ^ a b c d "Report of Interview with Frau Krimann by Captain Spooner on 11th October 1945" in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  32. ^ a b "re Susan HILTON" in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  33. ^ Copy of letter from Herbert Erdmann, 9 June 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  34. ^ Statement from Dr. Klingsland in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  35. ^ a b c d Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON: a pre-war member of the British Union of Fascists,... National Archives. (subscription required)
  36. ^ Letter to Walsh, Liebenau, 4 June 1945, in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON, KV 2/423, National Archives. (subscription required)
  37. ^ West, Nigel. (2018). Churchill's Spy Files: MI5's Top-Secret Wartime Reports. Stroud: The History Press. p. 459. ISBN 978-0-7509-8738-7.
  38. ^ a b O'Donoghue, 2014, p. 221.
  39. ^ a b c O'Donoghue, 2014, p. 217.
  40. ^ a b "Brother battles to clear Nazi collaborator's name", Audrey Magee, The Times, 19 May 1998, p. 14.
  41. ^ Defendant: HILTON, Dorothea May Theresa. Charge: Doing an act likely to assist the... National Archives, CRIM 1/1745. Retrieved 7 February 2020. (subscription required)
  42. ^ a b O'Donoghue, 1995, p. 126.
  43. ^ a b O'Donoghue, 2014, pp. 219–221.
  44. ^ Susan Dorothea M T Hilton England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837–2007. Family Search. Retrieved 2 February 2020. (subscription required)

Further reading edit

  • Doherty, Martin (2006). "Black Propaganda by Radio: the German Concordia broadcasts to Britain 1940–1941". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. 14 (2): 167–197. doi:10.1080/01439689400260141.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Susan Sweney at Wikimedia Commons

susan, sweney, susan, dorothea, mary, therese, hilton, née, sweney, february, 1915, october, 1983, british, radio, broadcaster, nazi, regime, germany, during, second, world, 1936, bornsusan, dorothea, mary, therese, sweney, 1915, february, 1915trichinopoly, br. Susan Dorothea Mary Therese Hilton nee Sweney 2 February 1915 30 October 1983 was a British radio broadcaster for the Nazi regime in Germany during the Second World War Susan SweneySusan Sweney in 1936 1 BornSusan Dorothea Mary Therese Sweney 1915 02 02 2 February 1915Trichinopoly British IndiaDied30 October 1983 1983 10 30 aged 68 Surrey EnglandNationalityBritishOccupation s Journalist and broadcasterKnown forPropaganda broadcasts from Nazi Germany Born in India to a family with Irish connections she was active in the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s before attracting the interest of the police in London after which she set off to join her husband in Burma Her ship was sunk in the Indian Ocean by a German raider and she was sent with other survivors to France That ship too was attacked and sunk this time by a British submarine off the coast of France and she was again rescued causing her to describe herself as many times drowned 2 She began to work as a journalist in Paris before moving to Berlin to make propaganda broadcasts in support of the Nazi regime She had an intense and probably lesbian relationship there with a colleague but also suffered from loneliness and depression She gambled and drank as much as she could leading to on air mistakes for which she was dismissed In Vienna in 1943 44 she worked for the Schutzstaffel SS watching Americans and Germans suspected of spying for the Allies She came under suspicion by the Gestapo and was arrested but released and sent to Liebenau internment camp probably at her own request She was returned to Britain by MI5 where she was tried at the Old Bailey for assisting the enemy and jailed for 18 months On release she worked as an international courier and later for a farm and pet shop business Contents 1 Early life 2 Fascism 3 Twice shipwrecked 4 Paris 5 Berlin 6 Vienna 7 Internment 8 Nationality 9 Arrest and trial 10 Later life 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life editSusan Sweney was born in Trichinopoly now Tiruchirappalli British India on 2 February 1915 to British parents with Irish connections Her father was Cyril Edward Sweney a superintendent of railway police in Madras 3 Her mother was Dorothy Sweney nee Tower Barter 4 who was born in Madras 5 She had a brother Edward who was born in India and became a poultry farmer in Meath Ireland 3 She was educated partly in England where her brother said that she had received rough treatment that had disillusioned her about the British class system and may have influenced her political views 3 In 1936 Sweney married the Scottish mining engineer George Martin Hilton The couple had a son who died young 3 George Hilton later became a captain in the Royal Engineers 6 and worked with the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War 7 His father was Lt Col George Hilton 8 Fascism editIn 1936 Susan Sweney joined the British Union of Fascists BUF 3 as she believed in the Union s ideals 6 She described herself as an active member and in October 1936 was charged at Bow Street Court with disorderly behaviour at 10 Downing Street 9 According to her husband she attended the Nazi party conference at Munich in 1938 7 but she left the BUF that year over the party s policy towards Jews not because the anti Semitism troubled her but as she put it if the Jews were as powerful as alleged then attacking them would only bring counter attack 6 She moved to Dublin where she was monitored by the Irish police Special Branch 3 By January 1940 she was back in London and had rejoined the BUF At the suggestion of Charlie Watts BUF district leader Westminster St George s branch she took up the editorship of the fascist newspaper Voice of the People which she performed from January to May 1940 when the police Special Branch raided her flat and seized all her materials 3 6 She had already planned to give up the job for a quieter life as her young son had died which had affected her health 8 and she had booked her passage to join her husband in Burma 3 6 Twice shipwrecked edit nbsp The destruction of the British ship Kemmendine by the German raider Atlantis July 1940 10 nbsp Norwegian ship Tirranna 11 Sweney departed for Burma on the Kemmendine on 28 May 1940 3 but the vessel was captured and then sunk by the German raider Atlantis in the Indian Ocean on 13 July 1940 with the crew and passengers evacuated to the Atlantis 12 Sweney acquired a reputation on the Atlantis for drinking and bad language accusing the crew of being brutes murderers and many other things They in turn nicknamed her the devil s roast the D R and the Plain Lady 3 13 The first officer Ulrich Mohr recalled in his memoirs that her particular complaint was that the ship s bartender had left his post and locked up as soon as the ship came under fire but that she could be calmed through the use of the ship s looted Scotch whisky 3 13 After she left the Atlantis Mohr found correspondence on another captured ship that Sweney s husband George was suspected in Burma of spying for the Japanese 13 She and the other survivors from the Kemmendine were transferred to the Norwegian Tirranna another ship captured by the Atlantis and sailed for France as a prize ship with a cargo of looted goods 12 According to Sweney it was on the Tirranna that she became known to the Germans as Irish rather than British after she befriended the often intoxicated Thomas Cormac MacGowan the 54 year old Irish ship s doctor on the Kemmendine 3 8 On 22 September however the Tirranna was torpedoed off the coast of France by the British submarine Tuna and sank with 87 lives lost The survivors were taken to a German naval facility in Royan from where Sweney and MacGowan travelled to Paris in December 1940 3 Paris edit nbsp Sweney s temporary Irish identity document of 19 December 1940 In Paris Sweney acquired a temporary Irish identity document and passport from the embassy there in December 1940 something issued to many who claimed Irish nationality in occupied Paris 14 15 Her British passport had been taken from her by the Germans before she arrived in France 15 16 She broadcast a descriptive account of her adventures for which the Germans paid her 500 Reichsmarks 3 This was intercepted by BBC Monitoring in April and May 1941 who summarised it as emphasising how well the passengers were treated by the German crew and how many lives were lost particularly women and children when the Tirranna was sunk by the British 17 Her broadcast was published in Hamburg in 1942 as An Irish woman s experience of England and the war at sea taking at face value Sweney s claim to be Irish rather than British 3 Based at the Hotel d Amerique in the rue Rochechouart Paris she began to work as a journalist and according to a contemporary established very good relations with high ranking German officers in the city She later claimed to British intelligence to have helped the Irish priest father Kenneth Monaghan of the Chapelle Saint Joseph to smuggle British merchant seamen out of Paris 18 Monaghan had been a British Army officer during the First World War and was a chaplain to the British Expeditionary Force in 1940 with connections to MI6 19 20 Sweney s story was supported by testimony gathered after the war from Miss Winifred Fitzpatrick an Irish woman in Paris who knew Monaghan 9 In June 1941 she was visited at her hotel by Abwehr agent Oscar C Pfaus and the head of the Nazi propaganda organisation Deutscher Fichte Bund Theodore Kessemeir to ask her to undertake undercover work on behalf of Germany 18 She was given money and identity papers under an alias and travelled to Berlin where the proposal of undercover work was again discussed She understood it to involve travel to Ireland the United States or Portuguese East Africa 15 16 She refused on the grounds that the work was too dirty but was given other work such as telephone intercepts and then visiting military installations as research for a propaganda book about German armed strength 18 Berlin editFrom September 1941 4 Sweney worked for Buro Concordia an arm of the German foreign ministry that ran a string of black radio stations targeted at discontented minorities outside Germany The stations aimed to give the impression that they were the work of internal dissidents broadcasting from within the target country rather than propaganda from abroad 21 22 She made broadcasts to Scotland as Ann Tower on Buro s Radio Caledonia The name Ann was invented but Tower came from her mother and she acquired a German passport in that name She also prepared religious material for Buro s Christian Peace Movement station 4 From January 1942 she worked at Irland Redaktion a semi independent station on which she used her maiden name of Susan Sweney 23 4 Her work there consisted of writing talks for others presenting her own talks three times a week which she admitted were sheer propaganda aimed at keeping Ireland neutral and writing plays and reciting poetry that was broadcast to America 16 Her colleague there Francis Stuart described her as a nice sort but constantly seeking alcohol an opinion shared by fellow colleague John O Reilly 4 24 In March 1942 she sent a letter to her brother Edward in Meath which she signed your many times drowned sister Susan 2 Edward never received it and the letter was read by the Gestapo British intelligence and the Irish G2 inadvertently tipping them off about her activities and leading G2 to open a file on her Her brother was visited by a British representative the poet John Betjeman who was then doing war work in Dublin 2 nbsp Cuxhavener Strasse and Klopstockstrasse Berlin where Sweney had an apartment with Sonja Kowanko In May 1942 she wrote to Biddy O Kelly an Irish friend in Dublin describing her work and asking how her broadcasts were received in Ireland and whether she would she be able to show her face there after the war She also asked for news of her husband whose fate she did not know 2 although he told his superiors in the British Army in 1944 that he had not been on friendly terms with his wife for some years 7 She spoke of enjoying smoking a pipe and socialising with Sophie Kowanko a colleague on Irland Redaktion who was known as Sonja 2 In June she wrote again saying Never have I felt so utterly homesick and shut away as I do now Biddy nothing can ever make up to me for these years of unbelieveable soul destroying loneliness I try to shake these morbid thoughts off me I go to the races and gamble as hard as I can I work hard so as to forget 2 She formed a close relationship with Kowanko who was born in 1916 and raised in Paris the daughter of Russian emigres Educated in England and Italy and fluent in several languages Kowanko was employed at Irland Redaktion as a typist but in practice had a larger role that included a weekly broadcast to Irish women under the name Linda Walters The two women shared a flat in Berlin s Klopstockstrasse and drank and played billiards together Francis Stuart and his colleagues thought they were probably in a lesbian relationship When Kowanko incurred the displeasure of the Gestapo and was transferred to factory work Sweney lobbied to get Kowanko released and succeeded in getting her appointed to a six month contract at the Nazi owned Interradio at the end of 1942 25 While many of Sweney s broadcasts were innocuous 16 and a diplomat from the Irish embassy in Paris found her as forthright off air in her criticisms of the Germans as she was of the British 2 her need to earn money to buy alcohol helped her Nazi masters to control her 4 A young woman in a foreign country with few friends and unable to leave she was obliged to present whatever material she was given which sometimes included anti Semitic content such as her broadcast for Irland Redaktion of 19 July 1942 picked up by the Irish Army which used wild extrapolations from statistics to present a picture of an exploding Jewish population in the United States Such material was not common in her broadcasting however as the management of the station resisted the constant stream of anti Semitic material from the central propaganda pool feeling that it was too crude for the audience Instead Irland Redaktion concentrated on anti war and anti British material that emphasised the importance of Irish neutrality 2 In July 1942 for instance she broadcast Two years ago I was myself taken in by Admiralty Churchill s lies when he said that the British Navy had swept the seas of Nazi ships Two years ago to day I suffered for my stupidity in the Indian Ocean Let everybody learn from personal experience that Churchill is a liar The immediate future is indeed black for Britain and her Allies but it has been black all along Only Churchill never admitted it 26 She was sacked from Irland Redaktion in autumn 1942 after making on air mistakes probably as a result of intoxication 27 but resurfaced in January 1943 16 at Interradio because Sonja and I wanted to be together 25 She worked there until June 1943 writing scripts for others but not broadcasting 16 Kowanko returned to her family in Paris in mid 1943 where she lived until her death in 1993 and Sweney sent her money when she could 25 28 Despite her drinking and wild nature as a fluent English speaker and experienced radio presenter Sweney was in demand by the Nazi propaganda machine 29 From January to October 1943 she worked for the German Foreign Office preparing talks titled Voice of the People In 1943 and 1944 she also wrote anti communist articles for Anti Komintern 16 In mid 1943 she was asked to take a tour of the Reich s main cities to prepare an article for foreign consumption documenting the life of the Catholic Church focusing particularly on churches damaged by Allied bombing to counter the Allied line that the church was being destroyed by the Nazi regime However she had begun to be followed by the Gestapo who for reasons that are unknown suspected her of being an Allied spy 29 Vienna edit nbsp Ungargasse Vienna where Sweney stayed with Mrs Krimann In July 1943 Sweney was allowed to move to Vienna where the sculptor Lisa von Pott arranged for her to stay with Mrs Luze Krimann at her apartment at 71 Ungargasse Krimann was a keen Nazi at least until her Luftwaffe pilot husband Herbert Felix Krimann was grounded for being politically unreliable and then deserted in February 1945 30 31 She recalled that Sweney spent most of her time at the flat either typing for a magazine called Current Thoughts or asleep She also made short broadcasts for Reichs Rundfunk Gesellschaft s Voice of the People series She was permanently short of money and had enormous bills for cigarettes and alcohol Krimann told British intelligence that Sweney claimed to have turned against the war but that she had no choice but to continue writing anti British propaganda and that she knew that if Germany lost she would have to account for her actions 29 30 31 In October 1943 Sweney s work for the Foreign Office ceased leaving her as she put it stranded 16 She soon found employment however with what British intelligence called the Von Pott Group a group organised by Lisa von Pott to spy on anyone in Vienna suspected of helping the Allies 29 She was recruited by von Pott who asked her if she wanted to work against the communists and after Sweney said she was introduced her to Dr Robert Wagner an S S or S D officer who met Sweney weekly at 71 Ungargasse She admitted spying on Doris Brehm Count Leo Zeppelin Dr Alphons Klingsland and his two sisters and all the Americans in Vienna 30 32 but claimed to have tried to warn them that they were at risk and to have only done the work in the hope that it would enable her to escape to Yugoslavia 29 Her claims were refuted by statements collected by the British after liberation from witnesses who believed that she had denounced them to the SS or the Gestapo Herbert P Erdmann wrote to the British military authorities in June 1945 accusing Sweney of high treason and espionage against England saying that she had denounced him to the German secret police the Gestapo in June 1944 as an agent for the English 33 Alphons Klingsland a leading Viennese lawyer reported that in December 1943 Sweney visited him twice in his office and tried to engage his services He refused as he felt she was suspicious A report stated she tried as hard as she could to involve him in legal and other measures on her behalf which were such as might easily have compromised him in the eyes of the Gestapo Klingsland also said that he could construe nothing Sweney said as a warning 34 He was later denounced to the Gestapo by an unknown person 32 Felix Krimann the deserter from the Luftwaffe also claimed to his wife to have been denounced to the Gestapo by von Pott and Sweney Sweney never having liked him 31 Among von Pott s circle was Countess Amethe von Zeppelin a British woman who had married Count Leo Zeppelin and was regarded by the British security services to have been anti British since before the outbreak of the Second World War and to have made a propaganda or anti British radio broadcast from Vienna on 21 September 1939 shortly after the outbreak of the war Among Sweney s possessions was later found a visiting card from the countess containing a cryptic message in German that was translated as The bearer of this card also brings the bird with her Herr FINDERS will have spoken to you about them already and will have left the cage and birdseed with you Please give it the bird seed and water till to morrow morning 30 In 1944 Sweney visited the Turkish consulate in Vienna to try to obtain a visa to leave the Third Reich but when the Gestapo discovered her intentions they arrested her in July Her friend Margaret Schaffhauser described her as being in the condemned cell in Vienna but that after she was reprieved a great calmness came over her there She was no longer on the run 29 Internment edit nbsp Propaganda photograph showing internees at Liebenau camp with Red Cross care packages c 1940 nbsp Sweney s application for a Swiss passport Liebenau 1945 35 In August 1944 Sweney was sent to Liebenau internment camp for women and children in southern Germany 29 a former asylum whose patients had been killed by lethal injection on the orders of Adolf Hitler to make space for internees In June 1945 she wrote to a pre war friend of her experiences I have tried to get out and to send messages Nothing worked so I fought my own little lone fight Jim these Germans are the most terrible people I have ever seen They are crooks I got wise to them in France I think that in my own way I have succeeded in causing them a lot of trouble as I sabotaged wherever I went The result is that I was put in prison and my nerves are absolutely broken I cannot travel in another ship and even an aeroplane scares me get us Sweney and a friend from Liebenau home to England or to a place where we can relax and feel no more fear I have felt so intensely every moment of this war Daily fear hourly fear Until I leave Germany I shall feel it pressing on my mind I don t think you will recognise me when you see me 36 Sweney was No 29 on the British Renegades Warning List 16 a list developed by the British security services before the Normandy landings to enable Allied troops to identify people in occupied Europe who might try to subvert the invasion effort 37 After Liebenau was liberated she was held there for eight months while she was interrogated by MI5 while most of the other prisoners were released 29 Nationality editBefore returning her to Britain MI5 had to consider Sweney s nationality as she could not be said to have collaborated with the enemy if she was a citizen of a neutral country broadcasting to neutral countries 16 38 In her statement Sweney said that she thought that her father had been born in Ireland but she wasn t sure 6 She received a British passport in 1936 on the grounds that her husband was British but she lost it before her arrival in France 16 She was released from detention unlike the other passengers from the Tirranna and travelled to Paris where she obtained a temporary Irish identity document and passport but the Germans replaced that with a Fremdenpass foreigner s or alien s passport when she arrived in Berlin She tried to obtain new Irish papers but the Irish diplomats in Berlin told her that she had no claim to citizenship 15 16 In 1945 while she was interned she applied for a Swiss passport but it is not known if it was issued 35 Arrest and trial edit nbsp Sweney s British government file showing entries into the 1980s 35 Sweney was returned to Britain in December 1945 in the company of MI5 officer Iris Marsden who later recollected that Sweney s arm was in plaster and thought that she had been roughed up by French soldiers 39 According to Marsden Sweney was devious and the evidence against her damning She knew what she had done and was terrified of the consequences She told Marsden that the internment camp had been the safest place to be in the circumstances 39 confirming Mrs Krimann s statement that she had asked to be interned 31 Marsden told David O Donoghue that Sweney had made sexual advances to her 40 Sweney was arrested on arrival at Victoria Station in London and subsequently appeared at Bow Street Magistrates Court charged with assisting the enemy by working for the German radio propaganda service 39 Her trial was on 18 February 1946 at the Central Criminal Court the Old Bailey when she faced ten charges of assisting the enemy She pleaded guilty to eight and two that she denied were dropped These were that she had joined the SS and that she had conspired with others to broadcast propaganda She received an 18 month jail sentence without hard labour 14 41 The trial took less than a day meaning that much of the background information about Sweney s life in Germany such as that she had originally refused spying work and had been arrested by the Gestapo was not mentioned 14 Her brother Edward later told David O Donoghue that he felt the guilty plea and quick proceedings had deprived her of a fair trial and that his sister was only pursuing peace and was innocent of any blameworthy act 42 Of her character he said she was an exhibitionist very immature and driven by fame and a person who needed a good deal of guidance She was easily led highly volatile a very impressionable person generous but hot tempered 42 Sweney herself later believed that the suspicions of the Gestapo her short trial the narrowing of the charges purely to broadcasting and the soft treatment she received in Holloway prison her own room and a maid to look after her were indicative that she was being used to cover up other British espionage activity that had not come to light possibly a British female agent who had been on the Kemmendine and left when it called at Gibraltar According to her friend Margaret Schaffhauser it was the only way she could explain the sequence of events 43 Later life editSweney told Margaret Schaffhauser that when she left prison she was met at the gate by two MI5 agents who she always referred to as my friends and who went out of their way to help her suppressing a planned book and telling her to contact them immediately if anyone said or wrote anything derogatory about her According to Sweney they sent her Christmas cards every year until they retired 43 She subsequently worked as a courier to Australia and South America and later for a farm and pet shop business in England She died in Surrey England on 30 October 1983 38 44 In 1998 after David O Donoghue s research for his PhD dissertation Hitler s Irish Voices Edward Sweney asked the British Home Secretary Jack Straw to reopen his sister s case to rectify what he saw as a miscarriage of justice 40 A file of official papers about Sweney was released by the British National Archives in 2001 35 See also editList of English language broadcasters for Nazi GermanyReferences edit O Donoghue David A 2014 Hitler s Irish Voices The story of German radio s wartime Irish service Dromore Somerville Press p 128 ISBN 9780992736408 a b c d e f g h O Donoghue 2014 pp 98 101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o O Donoghue 2014 pp 211 212 a b c d e f O Donoghue 2014 p 214 Dorothy Tower Barter India Births and Baptisms 1786 1947 Family Search Retrieved 5 February 2020 subscription required a b c d e f Statement of Susan Hilton Libenau Internment Camp 30 June 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b c Memo from R H Hollis 19 April 1944 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b c Statement of Susan Hilton Libenau Internment Camp 30 May 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b Letter from G E Wakefield 3 January 1940 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required Kemmendine SS 1940 wrecksite eu Retrieved 11 February 2020 Tirranna State Library of Victoria Retrieved 19 February 2020 a b Duffy James P 2005 Hitler s Secret Pirate Fleet The Deadliest Ships of World War II Lincoln University of Nebraska Press p 16 ISBN 0 8032 6652 9 a b c Mohr Ulrich amp Arthur V Sellwood 2008 Ship 16 The Story of a German Surface Raider Stroud Amberley Publishing p 92 ISBN 978 1 84868 115 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c O Donoghue 2014 pp 218 219 a b c d Murphy Sean 2003 Letting the Side Down British traitors of the Second World War Stroud Sutton pp 77 79 ISBN 0750929367 a b c d e f g h i j k l M I 5 Report Re Susan Hilton 14 November 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required B B C Monitor Reports Summarised in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b c O Donoghue 2014 p 213 Passionists Irish Paris Retrieved 22 January 2020 Pfaus Oskar Karl in Jefferson Adams 2009 Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence Lanham Scarecrow Press p 347 ISBN 978 0 8108 6320 0 Liburd Liam 21 February 2017 Haw Haw and Radio War Fake News in the 1940s History Matters Retrieved 4 February 2020 Berg Jerome S 2007 On the Short Waves 1923 1945 Broadcast Listening in the Pioneer Days of Radio Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 219 ISBN 978 0 7864 3029 1 Holmes Colin 2016 Searching for Lord Haw Haw The Political Lives of William Joyce Abingdon Routledge p 231 ISBN 978 1 138 88884 5 John Francis O Reilly the flighty boy History Ireland 19 February 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2020 a b c O Donoghue David A 1995 Hitler s Irish Voices The story of German radio s propaganda service 1939 1945 PhD thesis Dublin City University via DORAS pp 100 101 Examples of Monitor Reports of Broadcast Talks by Susan Sweney in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required Hull Mark M amp Vera Moynes 2017 Masquerade Treason the Holocaust and an Irish Impostor Norman University of Oklahoma Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 8061 5634 7 O Donoghue 2014 p 158 a b c d e f g h O Donoghue 2014 pp 215 216 a b c d re the VON POTT group 22 January 1946 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b c d Report of Interview with Frau Krimann by Captain Spooner on 11th October 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b re Susan HILTON in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required Copy of letter from Herbert Erdmann 9 June 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required Statement from Dr Klingsland in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required a b c d Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON a pre war member of the British Union of Fascists National Archives subscription required Letter to Walsh Liebenau 4 June 1945 in Susan Dorothea Mary Therese HILTON KV 2 423 National Archives subscription required West Nigel 2018 Churchill s Spy Files MI5 s Top Secret Wartime Reports Stroud The History Press p 459 ISBN 978 0 7509 8738 7 a b O Donoghue 2014 p 221 a b c O Donoghue 2014 p 217 a b Brother battles to clear Nazi collaborator s name Audrey Magee The Times 19 May 1998 p 14 Defendant HILTON Dorothea May Theresa Charge Doing an act likely to assist the National Archives CRIM 1 1745 Retrieved 7 February 2020 subscription required a b O Donoghue 1995 p 126 a b O Donoghue 2014 pp 219 221 Susan Dorothea M T Hilton England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837 2007 Family Search Retrieved 2 February 2020 subscription required Further reading editDoherty Martin 2006 Black Propaganda by Radio the German Concordia broadcasts to Britain 1940 1941 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 14 2 167 197 doi 10 1080 01439689400260141 External links edit nbsp Media related to Susan Sweney at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Susan Sweney amp oldid 1188698982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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