After
the first important air raids by the RAF in 1942, Captain Etienne
Dromas resolved to help airmen who parachuted in France. To
this end he organized surveillance in each community to act
during the course of these air raids. In 1943 he had
districts of Chauny, La Mere St-Gobain, Coucy le Chateau and St-Simon
organized with "helpers" placed in the regions of
Guise, Cambrai, St-Quentin, Laon, Compiegne, Criel and others.
By the end of 1942 recovery of airmen had begun and by September
1944, eighty-six allied airmen were saved from capture by
the enemy. Of the nineteen wounded airmen saved, ten
were wounded seriously enough to require surgical operations. The Germans recaptured three airmen.
Etienne
Dromas was born on December 17, 1911 in Viry-Noureuil (Aisne), France.
He married Renee Hibant, a schoolteacher. Together with
their two children they resided in Urgy-le-Gay near Chauny.
Etienne was a draftsman employed by the French National Railway
at Tergnier a few miles from Chauny. He was a reserve officer in the French Army and was called to duty in 1939 serving with the
20th Company until wounded in battle in 1940 resulting
in the amputation of a leg. He then became a member
of the resistance in 1942 as Captain in the French Forces
of the Interior (FFI). He was appointed Commander of Groupment
B serving with the 2nd Military Region in the Department
of Aisne (district of Laon). During the war he was known
as "LeNoir".
One
of his Lieutenants, Alfred Logeon, was the radio operator for the
Resistance, sending and receiving messages from London. This operation
was performed in his automobile garage at rue du Brouage in Chauny.
On August 8, 1944, one of his messages to London was responsible
for the destruction of a German ammunition train that was transporting
munitions, including V1 and V2 bombs, to the front lines.
Alfred Logeon's garage, which was also his home, played a prominent roll
in hiding allied airmen. On the street behind the
garage a Garrison of German soldiers were housed in the St.
Charles Catholic College. This garage has now been designated
as a historic monument in the Chauny Resistance operations during
World War II.
The
downed allied airmen who avoided capture after landing in occupied
Europe were brought to this garage by members of the "Dromas"
organization to be sheltered in local homes in the area.
Alfred Logeon had three daughters, Paulette, Ginette and Monique. Ginette, about 18 years old in 1944, helped find local patriots willing to take the risk of housing the airmen, knowing if caught by the Gestapo
they would be shot and their homes burned. Ginette had a major role in decoding
messages coming from London. Her mother was considered the "
Brain" of many missions as she could keep essential instructions in her
exceptional memory, rather than writing the instruction, which could be
found by enemies. Her elder sister, Paulette, married with five children
then also helped in hiding Resistant people and message equipment.
Monique was too young at the time to be involved with the secret missions.
Ginette's boy friend, Bob Pique, another Dromas Lieutenant, had in
addition to other responsibilities the job of transporting downed airmen
from various villages in the province of Aisne to this garage. Upon
arriving a Patriot would be waiting to guide the evader to his home in
Chauny.
of Alfred Logeon's daughters, Ginette
helped find local patriots willing to take the risk of housing
the airmen, knowing if caught by the Gestapo they would be shot and their homes burned.
All
types of French Patriots were members of this organization such
as Catholic Priests, Mayors, farmers and other professions.
Most of the civilian population was willing to help in some
way even though they knew the risks were high. Bob had
many friends in the Department of Aisne who were more than willing
to provide him and his airmen a rest stop with food and drink
during their motorcycle trip to Chauny, the hub of this escape
line.
The Etienne Dromas Organization supplied other Escape Lines
with downed airmen when they were able to transport them to
freedom by escaping across the English Channel to England
or by walking over the Pyrenees Mountains in to Spain.
In May 1944,
the Gestapo became aware of some of these "Escape Lines" and
it became necessary for the Resistance to stop their operations.
However, the allied airmen continued to fall creating a "back-log
of Evaders" to move to safety. The Gestapo
never became aware of what was happening under their noses
in the Chauny region.
Then D-Day happened and the airmen had to wait patiently
with the French Patriots for the allied troops to reach and
liberate them on September 2, 1944. Sheltering 86 airmen
by the Dromas Organization in this region during the war was very
remarkable and the proud City of Chauny celebrates this event each
year.
The Dromas
Organization decided to move the fifty allied airmen and fifteen
Russians along with a band of Maquis (FFI) to the farm community
of Ugny-le-Gay and Commenchon as a precaution when they learned
of the D-Day landings about 125 miles away. Dromas was
of the opinion that the Gestapo would be afraid of an uprising
and start searching the homes for young men and send them to
Germany. If this happened their operations might be
discovered. This was a temporary move and after
5 or 6 days the evaders were moved back to their former shelters
in and around Chauny where possible.
A
few days later at a large farm in the Ugny-le-Gay and Commenchon
farm area, a German patrol attacked Dromas and 15 Frenchmen,
killing all the French patriots and setting fire to the farm
buildings. One of the German soldiers stepped on Dromas
head thinking he was dead. He later recovered to be the only
survivor.
(This article is based on the Etienne Dromas files in the US National Archives which were obtained and translated from French to English by Michael Moores
LeBlanc, a Canadian historian.)