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Walter Purdy (Treason)

Discussion in 'The Secret War: Resistance and Espionage During WW' started by Jim, Sep 9, 2007.

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  1. Jim

    Jim Active Member

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    Case of Roy Walter Purdy
    Roy Walter Purdy was born in Barking, Essex, in May 1918. He qualified as a naval engineer, and was an active member of the Ilford branch of the British Union of Fascists. During action off Navik, Norway, Purdy's ship HMS Van Dyck was sunk and he was taken prisoner.

    Purdy was taken to several different POW camps in Germany, before entering the naval POW camp at Marlag in 1943. Whilst at this camp he purchased William Joyce's book "Twilight over England" from the camp shop. This was notice by a German guard who offered to get the book autographed by Joyce. When Purdy said that he would like the book autographed, the guard made Purdy another offer. If Purdy agreed to make ten radio broadcasts from Berlin, he would be allowed to escape to a neutral country.

    Purdy was unsure whether to accept the offer, but after meeting William Joyce in Berlin, he decided to accept the offer. He began broadcasting in August 1943, using the pseudonym 'Pointer'. After he had given six anti-Semitic talks, Purdy was switched to newsreading broadcasts.

    In March 1944, Purdy was arrested by the Germans in Berlin, after he went absent without leave. He was sent to the famous officer's camp at Colditz. Once he arrived at this camp, Purdy was subjected to an extended interrogation by his British POW comrades. They had already heard what activities Purdy has been involved in.

    The Senior British Officer informed the German commandant that Purdy's safety could not be guaranteed. However, Purdy had already betrayed J.H.O. Brown, a British prisoner in Berlin who was gathering intelligence by the pretence of co-operating with the Germans. Luckily for Brown, the Germans did not believe Purdy's account.

    Purdy was eventually moved by the Germans, and used as a translator for the a SS propaganda regiment. After his unexplained absence in Berlin, Purdy was kept under close guard by the Germans.

    After the war ended in 1945, Walter Purdy was tried at the Central Criminal Court in London with High Treason. He was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.

    Like the case of Thomas Cooper, Purdy's death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. It was felt that Purdy was a follower in treason, not a leader and recruiter.

    Walter Purdy was released from jail in 1954. He had a child called Stephan by a woman called Margaret Weitemeir born near Ravensbruck on 5 April 1945. Purdy planned to return to her but this never happened. He married his childhood sweetheart called Muriel in 1957 but she soon died. He married another lady in about 1960 and had a son. Walter Purdy died in Southend during 1982.

    Source: With Kind Permission: Stephen Stratford
     
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  2. Buford

    Buford New Member

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    Sure, he "betrayed" his country, but honestly the man was more sinned against than a sinner. he had his back to the wall, and was forced to do something that whilst unsavoury did not actively endanger Crown or country. It seems rather sad he was treated so harshly.
     
  3. Buford

    Buford New Member

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    Airborne, there was those people that actually in the face of danger, personal torment and risk to life and limb who fought back. A traitor is still a traitor irregardless of circumstance or "severity" of the betrayal they commit.
     
  4. amberden

    amberden recruit

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    As a person who worked with this man at the factory in Essex I can assure you he was not a very nice man. He was, in his role as an inspector, always
    quick to drop people in it. He was in factory parlance as crafty as a sh**house rat. So I suppose the old adage that a leopard never changes his spots
    is true of him.
     
  5. ARWR

    ARWR Active Member

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    Where is the element of "forced"? He was made an offer and took it
     
  6. Kai-Petri

    Kai-Petri Kenraali

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    Nothing.
     
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  7. ARWR

    ARWR Active Member

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    There were a number of Britons who made broadcasts. None appear to have been forced, although some, like P G Wodehouse, were fooled into doing so. Many were fascist supporters before the war. Joyce was not the original Lord Haw Haw but took over from a Briton who tried to distance himself from the role (whether this represented a genuine change of heart or a dawning realisation of who was going to win the war is not known). This saved his neck.
     
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  8. Kai-Petri

    Kai-Petri Kenraali

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    Nothing.
     
    Last edited: Dec 25, 2020

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