Re: The Evasion and Exeuction of Alfred Jones
Date: February 24, 2004
"Story
of a soldier hounded by Nazis
Colin Hughes, The Western Mail
HEROIC exploits by a Welsh soldier during World War II have been revealed to
his niece 60 years after his death.
Bombardier Alfred Jones, from Velindre Street, Port Talbot, was aged 30 when
he was executed by the Gestapo at a concentration camp in 1944, even though
he had been cleared by a court of being a spy.
But he had been "on the run" from the Germans for around 18 months
with the help of Belgian partisans operating in the Brussels underground.
It is believed that this connection may have sealed his fate because he was
treated as a political prisoner rather than a British prisoner of war.
It is only now that the true story of Alfred Jones can be told thanks to the
efforts of retired post office worker John Clinch, 54, of Sidcup, Kent.
He uncovered the remarkable tale of an "ordinary Welsh soldier" when
he was researching the story of his Belgian grandmother, Marcelline Deloge,
who died in Auschwitz after being arrested for helping British troops to escape
from Brussels.
Mr Clinch discovered that Alfred Jones lied about his age to join the Army in
1931, later serving in India before going to France with the British Expeditionary
Force in 1939.
He was captured by the German Army in 1940 but escaped while being taken to
a PoW camp. He survived the next 18 months in Brussels with the help of the
Belgian resistance until he was recaptured in October 1941.
He was put on trial with his Belgian helpers and accused of espionage. Although
found not guilty he ended up in a variety of concentration camps, including
Dachau and Maut-hausen, where he was eventually executed.
Hans Marsalek, in his book The History of the Concentration Camp Mauthausen,
states that "an Englishman not known by name was executed by a shot in
the neck on the 9th November 1944" - and John Clinch is convinced this
refers to Alfred Jones.
His name is remembered with honour on the Dunkirk Memorial in Nord, France,
but this gives the year of his death as 1940 rather than 1944.
Mr Clinch, who is still adding to his factual World War II website (at www.belgiumww2.info),
praised Alfred Jones's experiences as "really unique".
He said, "The people he was mixing with in the camps and the life he obviously
led in Brussels add up to make him quite a character.
"He certainly must have enjoyed life on the run in Brussels and to some
extent he was having a good time in Belgium because he was pretty involved in
various things.
"A lawyer, Paul Lurquin, who was in the next cell to Alfred at St Gilles
Prison, Brussels, described, for example, how they had gone horse racing together
under the noses of the Germans.
"I did further research in the National Archives at Kew and found a file
on the post-war search for Alf.
"This was remarkable because the person who provided information was the
famous Lieutenant Commander Pat O'Leary RN - in reality a Belgian Army doctor,
Albert Guerisse, founder of the Pat Escape Line.
"He had also been imprisoned with Alf."
Mr Clinch also discovered from Mauthausen Memorial Archives that Alfred Jones
was listed as Prisoner 98320, a British soldier in protective custody.
The register of official executions confirms that he died on November 9, 1944,
despite claims by other prisoners that he had been gassed.
But one who was in Maut-hausen with Alfred later wrote, "I can tell you
that the SS of the Mauthausen concentration camp were hanged and among them
were the murderers of Alfred."
Niece Gaynor Harrison, 61, of Llansadwrn, Carmarthenshire, admits she is indebted
to Mr Clinch because she previously knew nothing about her dead uncle.
"I was born in 1943 and oddly enough the family never spoke about him even
though we had his pictures on the wall," she said.
"He was the pride and joy of the family but they never talked about him
probably because he was a casualty of war.
"He was the favourite of the family, happy go lucky and carefree. But nobody
could hold him down - he wanted excitement.
"The information has brought him alive and I feel I know him now a lot
better than I did.
"To me he is a superhero. I just had no idea - all I was told was that
he had escaped and eventually went into a gas chamber and was gassed.
"But the escapades he got up to make him a real hero. It is the sort of
thing he craved for - and this is what has got me really enthralled and interested
in his story."
© owned by or licensed to Trinity Mirror Plc 2004 Wales"
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