Essayer OR - Gratuit

WHEN WAR CAME, THE 'WHITE LADY' SPY NETWORK HELPED WIN... TWICE!

Scottish Daily Express

|

November 01, 2025

They were ordinary Belgians whose bravery in the face of untold danger helped the Allies liberate their country from the Germans in two world wars. Yet they remain virtually unknown. Now their story, every bit as thrilling as fiction, has finally been told in a gripping new account

BACK in London, British intelligence desperately needed to see behind the German lines to understand enemy troop movements, weaponry and any preparations for an offensive and then pass this to British army headquarters (GHQ) in France.

The eyes and ears on the ground were ordinary Belgian men and women — prepared to risk their lives as agents, couriers, run safehouses and letterboxes.

They worked for a network that came to be known as the White Lady, or La Dame Blanche.

It was under the leadership of Lambrecht’s cousin, Walthère Dewé, who had taken up the mantle after Lambrecht’s execution. The clandestine network was named after an ancient German legend that, if a ghost of a white lady appeared, she would herald the downfall of Imperial Germany.

By choosing this name, the network's leaders believed that its clandestine work would bring an end to the German occupation of Belgium and the downfall of the German royal family.

In the end it proved true because Germany was defeated and the Kaiser’s reign did not survive the war.

By 1916 the White Lady had become a formal network of the British secret service, MI6, whose head was Mansfield Cumming — the man who first signed his letters ‘C’ in green ink. This is something the head of the service still does today. Some 1,084 agents served in the White Lady, more than a third of whom were women.

This was an army in the shadows, an army without uniform or guns, whose members took an oath of allegiance and were given military ranks. The men and the women equally swore an oath of allegiance and were given a military rank and, in some cases, the women outranked the men. They used early spycraft in their operations, including invisible ink, knitting simple codes into scarves and hiding messages in items such as potatoes, broom handles and bicycle valves.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Scottish Daily Express

Scottish Daily Express

Hiding in plain sight or hidden? How grooming gangs scandal went from 'no reported cases in London' to 9,000 needing urgent review

EVENTUALLY, Susan Hall snapped. The Conservative London Assembly leader had repeatedly asked Sadiq Khan about the number of rape gangs in the capital, only for the mayor to demand she be \"more specific\".

time to read

6 mins

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

An island in the limelight

If you missed the boat this summer, now's the perfect time to head to Menorca, says Samantha Wostear

time to read

4 mins

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

Scottish Daily Express

ANNE'S ROYAL DUTY IS BEST MEDICINE TO FORGET FAMILY DRAMA

PRINCESS Anne shrugged off her family drama yesterday as she opened a new facility at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.

time to read

1 min

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

Scottish Daily Express

Queen central to decision to strip Andrew of titles and focus on the victims of Epstein abuse

IN HISTORIC ROYAL UPHEAVAL

time to read

3 mins

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

Scottish Daily Express

It's 75 out and 16,000 in as deal with France flops

SOME 75 Channel migrants have now been returned to France under Sir Keir Starmer's one in, one out deal with Emmanuel Macron.

time to read

1 min

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

STUNNED SKIPPER DIDN'T SEE CHANGE COMING BUT IS POSITIVE ABOUT FUTURE

CALLUM MCGREGOR admits he was stunned by Brendan Rodgers’ shock departure - and is gutted his old boss didn't get a fairytale finale at Celtic.

time to read

1 mins

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

Josh on mission to Mahs

JOSH ALLEN'S career would probably include a couple of Super Bowl rings by now if Patrick Mahomes had decided to play baseball rather than American football.

time to read

1 min

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

Xi backs free trade after Trump's snub

XI Jinping told Asia-Pacific leaders yesterday that China would help to defend global free trade, at an economic regional forum spurned by Donald Trump.

time to read

1 min

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

GENERATION GAME

MARTIN O'NEILL insists he won't be in the frame to become permanent Celtic boss again - even if they leave Hampden tomorrow with a cup final in the diary.

time to read

2 mins

November 01, 2025

Scottish Daily Express

READY FOR BIG SHO

SHOAIB BASHIR is raring to go for the Ashes and make up for the anguish of his summer ending prematurely.

time to read

1 min

November 01, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size