Ghislaine Scheidhauer épouse Niox - Les Français Libres

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Une Française Libre parmi 62960
 

Ghislaine Scheidhauer épouse Niox



Naissance : 14 juin 1914 - Brest (29)

Point de départ vers la France Libre : Metropole

Engagement dans la France Libre : en octobre 1942

Affectation principale : Résistance intérieure / Action

Grade atteint pendant la guerre et spécialité : P2

Décès à 76 ans - 2 février 1991 - Aincourt (95)

Soeur de Bernard Scheidhauer 

Dossier administratif de résistant : GR 16 P 539163

Dans la liste d'Henri Ecochard V40 : ligne 38870


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Ghislaine Scheidhauer épouse Niox - son Livre ouvert !
 

Elles ont suivi de Gaulle De Sébastien ALBERTELLI

Laurent Laloup le jeudi 11 juin 2020 - Demander un contact

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Additif

Bonjour,

quelques petites précisions sur Mme NIOX.

Elle naît le 14 juin 1914 (et non le 1er) à Brest sous le nom de Scheidhauer (ce qu'il faudrait mettre à la place de NIOX).

Elle fait bien partie de la résistance intérieure, dans le mouvement "Libération-Nord".

C'est la sœur de Bernard: 

Elle épouse Yves NIOX à Brest en 1933.

Elle décède le 2 février 1991 à AINCOURT (95)

Le SHD de Vincennes conserve un dossier à son nom sous la cote: GR 16 P 539163



Cliquez pour agrandir

PRIOL Gildas le lundi 21 août 2017 - Demander un contact

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Réponse :

Peut être la nièce ou la jeune soeur ou la cousine de Georges Scheidhauer  ?


Lt. Walter Hargrove remembers Ghislaine Niox

The younger Scheidhauer daughter, ‘Jo” (Mme. Ghislaine Niox), had been taught to handle weapons and explosives, and we gathered that she had helped eliminate a German collaborator. Ghislaine spoke English well and did not mind talking about her escapades. She and Christiane had several young children and knew the risks they were taking. Often, the children would be sent as guides for evaders or messengers to other Resistance workers.

The Colonel and Jo were gone one night and when they returned late, Jo gave me a rucksack full of papers that were marked classified. It turned out they were secret German papers that gave a breakdown of all forces in Brest, including diagrams of the submarine pens, lists of regiments that were present,and the location of tanks. I told Jo that even without the backpack, I would probably be severely interrogated and executed, and tried to decline the offer. At a later time, however, it became necessary for Jo to leave France, and then I agreed to assist with the documents.

James Hargrove le vendredi 24 mai 2013 - Demander un contact

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cf.geocities.com 

"Le Capitaine Niox et son epouse Ghislaine"

Laurent Laloup le vendredi 20 mars 2009 - Demander un contact

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"...The rescue mission of Dec. 25/26 was the last one MGB318 made to Tariec Island. The ship probably picked up 32 people. The manifest included 11 US airmen including Lt. Hargrove and S/Sgt. Rice, 6 members of the Royal Navy, 2 men from the RAF, and several French agents or airmen along with 2 women. One of the women was Madame Ghislaine Niox, the Colonel’s youngest daughter. The other was Madame Maguy, who was probably the Doctor’s Red Cross nurse (Lt. Hargrove called her “Maggie” in his E&E report). Madame Niox carried the plans to the German fortifications at Poulmic. T/Sgt. Merl Martin (388 BG) was carrying the rucksack with information that Ghislaine and her father had obtained. Her son, Jean-Loup Niox, was sent from Brest to her sister Christiane Magne’s home. For her work assisting the Allied causes, Ghislaine Niox was awarded the Order of the British Empire...."

freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com 

Laurent Laloup le jeudi 12 février 2009 - Demander un contact

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"..."I tried valiantly to defeat the Colonel at Chess, but to no avail. He told me that I had good defence, but had to improve my offence. Madame Scheidhauer was very active in arranging safe houses for airmen during this period, and finally she arranged for us to stay with her younger sister, Madame Bizian, (a pseudonym for Ghislaine Niox) for a few weeks until we could be sent on our way."

Col. Jim Karnezis said, "I stayed with this elderly couple in their Brest apartment for about 3 days in October 1943 along with a P-47 pilot named Warren Graff, who was of Canadian origin and could speak French. Warren played Chess with the Colonel and I played solitaire. His Wife, Jeanne, would roll out the tea cart about 4:00 o'clock every afternoon and we enjoyed our High Tea together. I remember I had picked up a lip irritation (Impetigo) in Paris and couldn't shake it until Madam 'S's Motherly instinct took note and dried up my sore lip in a day by daubing it with ether."

The senior Scheidhauers had three children; Bernard, the only son, has been chronicled above, but there were also two daughters, Christiane, the oldest, and Ghislaine, the youngest. The daughters had married prior to the war and Christiane was Madame Magne, and Ghislaine was Madame Niox. Very little is known about their husbands except that they were prisoners who quite possibly were in German Prisoners of War camps. There were Grandchildren with William, Francoise, Xavier and Bernard being born to Christiane and Jean-Loup to Ghislaine. ..."

www.thegreatescapememorialproject.com 

Laurent Laloup le jeudi 12 février 2009 - Demander un contact

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"Warren Graff USAAF had only had 10 hours of flying time on this aircraft type when the crash occured above Clougton. This aircraft was new, it had just less than 32 hours use. On the 3rd May 1943 he crashed P-47 41-6220 at Duxford and again survived. From internet searches for information on this pilot it seems likely that he was of Canadian origin and could speak French. During October 1943 he was staying with a French family in the French town of Brest. Madame Bizian, (a pseudonym for Ghislaine Niox) ran a safe house. He had been shot down on 30th July 1943 over France whilst flying P-47c 41-6391 MX-Y (of 82nd FS, 78th FG, MACR 135)evaded capture in France and returned to England. The family who ran the safe house had been very successful during 1943 in getting over 30 Allied service personnel back to England."

www.allenby.info 

Laurent Laloup le jeudi 12 février 2009 - Demander un contact

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Extrait de : cf.geocities.com/ralphdebutler  

Ghislaine Niox (AKA "Madame Bizien", "Pitch", "Lieutenant Langlois", ou "Ghislaine Benoit" ) étant dans la résistance, a du partir en Angleterre en 1943.

Laurent Laloup le mardi 23 janvier 2007 - Demander un contact

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Dernière mise à jour le jeudi 11 juin 2020

 

Vous pouvez à tout moment obtenir la rectification des données, vous concernant, inscrites dans cette base qui est déclarée sous le n° 1137942 auprès de la Commission Nationale Informatique et Liberté





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