Yearly Archive: 2016

“Sybil Hathaway … was a far braver and better person than the pseudohistorian who wrote this book”

Following up on a very positive review of Operation Basalt in the Wall Street Journal last month, ten days ago the WSJ decided to publish this letter:

I write in reference Martin Rubin’s review of “Operation Basalt” by Eric Lee (Books, Aug. 13). Sybil Hathaway, my great aunt, was a far braver and better person than the pseudohistorian who wrote this book. As her letters to family indicate, her dogs were what got her through the minefield to a shack where her radio was hidden. No one on Sark would ever call this lady, who struggled daily with her occupiers to reduce their stealing of islander food or secured them German medical service, a Quisling. She treated the Germans with the respect necessary to maintain her position and her influence for the benefit of all on Sark. Her working relationship with the enemy might leave room for fools’ comments, but the respect of every person on Sark, including the German commanders, was won by hard service and firm leadership for the sake of others.

Hathaway Brewster

Cushing, Maine

 

Wall Street Journal: Operation Basalt book is “riveting”

This review appeared in yesterday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.  From the review:

It was a minor incident in a long war. In a raid on the night of Oct. 3, 1942, about a dozen British commandos landed on the tiny Channel Island of Sark, capturing one German soldier and shooting others when they tried to raise an alarm or escape. Operation Basalt, as the raid was called, yielded some military intelligence, but its main purpose was to remind local residents, abandoned by British forces two years before, that they were not forgotten in London.

But well after the raid, Operation Basalt resonated with importance, not just for the islanders living under German occupation but for British commandos elsewhere who, less fortunate than their counterparts on Sark, found themselves in German hands. Eric Lee’s riveting account, “Operation Basalt,” conveys the details of the operation as well as its disturbing repercussions.

Read the whole review here.

Oh, Canada!

Canada_flag_halifax_9_-04Our first review on the Amazon.ca site:

“I’m usually not a fan of ‘micro-histories’ or local history nor of military history in general, but I had a lovely time with this one. On the local history side it helped that it the events set out in this book are connected to larger, broader developments in WW 2. What happened one night on a tiny island off the coast of France involving less than 20 people did have wider implications and those implications do say something about the Nazi regime and about the German military. Also helping me past my usual prejudices are that Basalt is very well written, an easy but not dumbed-down read. If I have a negative comment to make it’s a pretty positive one: I wish this small book were a fair bit larger and told the story of the occupation of Sark through to the end of the war and perhaps after. There are some tantalizing hints of interesting stories of the island during the later years of the war of of its population’s construction of its wartime history once the war was over. Probably no different than the myth-making seen in France and elsewhere, but more comprehensible and personal given the much smaller scale of Sark.I guess that makes me a convert to ‘micro-histories’. Highly recommended.

Remarks by Graham Robinson on Sark, 21 May 2016

Tim Robinson.

Tim Robinson, one of the commandos who participated in Operation Basalt.

Many thanks to Eric for inviting me to speak this evening at the launch of his excellent book, Operation Basalt.

It’s a great pleasure for me to be here because, as Eric has said, my dad, Tim Robinson, was one of the Commandos involved in the raid.

However, what I would like to say is a bit about dad and who he was rather than talk about the operation itself.

What attracted dad to the Commandos in the first place? A number of things I’m sure but not least a youthful spirit of adventure – remember he was just about 21 when war broke out. Whilst perhaps it feels more than inappropriate to speak about adventure and excitement in the same breath as talking about a bloody and violent war, I’m sure that this will have been one of the factors that drew him to the Commandos and subsequently 2 SAS.

Dad was very much his own man with a lot of confidence in himself – he was athletic, loved football and was extremely competitive. The suggestion that he should volunteer for special operations would, I know, have been irresistible to him.

He hated the spit and polish of the regular soldier and all the bull that went with it. What he saw in the Commandos was an opportunity to get away from all that and to stand on his own two feet – to be in control of his own destiny as much as possible. When I asked him why he left the Berkshire Yeomanry to join something as dangerous as the Commandos he replied that he thought that if he stayed with the Yeomanry they would end up getting him killed – whereas in the Commandos he would have more say in how he did what he was ordered to do. Mind you, as he laughingly added, the Berkshire Yeomanry spent the whole of the war in Northern Ireland and saw no action at all! (more…)

Cpl. James Edgar, the last surviving commando from Operation Basalt, speaks

James Edgar.

Cpl James Edgar, the last surviving commando from Operation Basalt.

On 21 May 2016, the book launch for Operation Basalt: The British Raid on Sark and Hitler’s Commando Order had a surprise guest: the last surviving member of the team of British commandos who participated in the raid.

Cpl. James Edgar, who turned 96 on the same day, sent us this extraordinary video greeting:

Click here to view the video

The role of Cpl. James Edgar in Operation Basalt

I have learned new details about Operation Basalt and will be incorporating these changes in future editions of the book, including the forthcoming paperback version.

The most important of these concerns the role of Cpl. James Edgar on the raid. Mr Edgar, who currently lives in Australia and is the last surviving commando from Operation Basalt, states categorically that he was the commando ordered by Major Appleyard to return to the cliff-top and signal to Motor Torpedo Boat 344 to wait for the delayed return of the men. As a result, he was not present during the firefight at the Dixcart Hotel.

In the current hardback version of the book, Mr Edgar’s account (as told to Tom Keene) is cited, but this is followed by contradictory accounts from two other historians which have no merit. These will be deleted in all future editions of the book.