Frank Foley: Difference between revisions
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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* Michael Smith. ''Foley: The spy who saved 10,000 Jews''. Hodder, 1999. ISBN 0340766034. |
* Michael Smith. ''Foley: The spy who saved 10,000 Jews''. Hodder, 1999. ISBN 0340766034. |
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== External links == |
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* [http://www.hearthasreasons.com/bibliography.php Holocaust Rescuers Bibliography] |
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[[Category:1884 births|Foley, Frank]] |
[[Category:1884 births|Foley, Frank]] |
Revision as of 13:44, 1 January 2006
Captain Francis (Frank) Edward Foley (1884 in Highbridge, Somerset – 1958 in Stourbridge) was a British secret service agent.
During the 1930s, Foley worked as a passport control officer in Berlin as cover for his role as head of the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) station in the city, acquiring key details of German military research and development.
He is primarily remembered as a "British Schindler". Using his cover as a Passport Control Officer in Berlin during the 1920s and 30s, he helped thousands of Jews escape from Nazi Germany. At the 1961 trial of former ranking Nazi Adolf Eichmann, he was described as a "Scarlet Pimpernel" for the way he risked his own life to save Jews threatened with death by the Nazis. Despite having no diplomatic immunity and being liable to arrest at any time, Foley went into internment camps to get Jews out, hid them in his home, and helped them get forged passports. Or, whilst pretending to do his job stamping passports and issuing visas, he would simply bend the rules to allow Jews to escape "legally" to Britain or Palestine, which was then controlled by the British. One Jewish aid worker estimated that he saved "tens of thousands" of people from the Holocaust.
After the war Foley retired to Stourbridge, a town in the Black Country, where he died in 1958; he is buried at Stourbridge Crematorium. In 2004 a remembrance plaque was dedicated to him at the entrance to Stourbridge's Mary Stevens Park. The following year volunteers from Highbridge, Foley's birthplace, raised money to erect their own tribute. A statue was commissioned from sculptor Jonathan Sells and unveiled on the anniversary of VE Day. (BBC News: "Statue to Briton who saved Jews", 8 May 2005 )
Further reading
- Michael Smith. Foley: The spy who saved 10,000 Jews. Hodder, 1999. ISBN 0340766034.