France is famous for artwork, food, seaside rivieras, skiing, and the architecture and monuments of Paris. France is on almost everyone’s list of places to visit. Most people think it’d be cool to see the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, or spend time in Normandy or on the Mediterranean French Riviera. Not everyone thinks snails are something they should try, but crêpes are on everyone’s list. France also has an interesting reputation as being a country of cowards and wimps. There are lots of jokes about French surrender in battle. Some of this comes from a collaborationist government during World War II. Despite the Nazi collaborators, there were many in France who joined the resistance and fought against Germany in open armed rebellion as well as in all kinds of underground activity.
Avenue of Spies: A True Story of Terror, Espionage, and One American Family’s Heroic Resistance in Nazi-occupied Paris by Alex Kershaw (ISBN: 978-0-8041-4004-1) is one story of underground activity during the Nazi occupation of France. It is about an American, Dr. Sumner Jackson, his Swiss-born wife, Toquette, and their son, Phillip, who lived on the same street as many of the leaders of the occupying Germans, but aided the French resistance and paid the ultimate price for that patriotic effort. Jackson was a surgeon at an American hospital in France and used both his residence and the hospital as venues for fighting the Germans. Toquette and Phillip were also happy to be involved. Phillip couldn’t do much as a teenager, but understood what his parents were involved in. The house was used as a place to pass documents and information, the hospital was used to make Allied soldiers disappear once they had been adequately treated. Many were able to escape to neutral Spain and then back to England. The Nazis were next door and across the street and in houses all along the street, but the Jackson family was able to aid the resistance for quite some time before eventually being rounded up with other patriotic Frenchmen and sent to concentration camps in Germany. The entire family survived the camps. Toquette was extricated from one by the Swedes (reminded me a tiny bit of Raoul Wallenberg) and the Red Cross. Sumner and Phillip survived their camp experience, in large part thanks to Dr. Jackson’s abilities as a doctor and being able to barter those services for easier assignments for his son. However, they were being transported away from Germany on a transport ship that was bombed by the English. The ship was destroyed. Phillip was able to swim away and was rescued by German fishermen before they realized that he wasn’t German. His father, though, who had a chance to not board the ship when the Germans, at the behest of the Red Cross, asked for all French speakers to step out of line, but decided to board anyway out of a sense of duty to the sick and injured men he was aiding as a doctor, did not survive the bombing. Phillip’s last war-time activity was as a member of the British Army, translating, searching for, and testifying against German war criminals. He was eventually re-united with his mother in France.
I found the book to be pretty good. Like many history books that focus on one very specific event or one person, it seemed like there were parts of the book that were added simply to fill a page requirement. Overall, though, the story was interesting, and the historical details about those involved, both French and German, were worth reading and learning about. I am always impressed by those who were willing to take risks to do what was right during World War II. Especially toward the end of the war, as Germany lost territory, men, and influence, any anti-German conduct was immediately punishable by death. The Jackson family’s readiness to take on those risks essentially without asking any questions speaks volumes about their moral fiber and presents an example worth emulating.
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This work, including all text, photographs, and other original work, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License and is copyrighted © MMXXI John Pruess. |
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