Sunday, August 19, 2012

Vera Erikson: my femme fatale

How many of you, I wonder, believe in ghosts? I ask because I am haunted regularly by the ghost of a woman by the name of Vera Erikson. Except that wasn't her name or at least it wasn't her name other than for the inconvenient period in 1940 when she was arrested for being a Nazi spy. She might have been Vera Schalburg, Vera Stravritzka, Vera de Cottani, Vera di Chalbur, Vera de Witte....in fact Vera Anything. Vera visits me regularly and frequently arrives unannounced and often entirely unwanted. She has done this since I was a child and you will, of course, appreciate that being stalked by this woman can be exceedingly irritating. No matter what I do to try to rid myself of this ghost, she continues to appear and, I fear, will be a spectre that haunts me for all eternity.

Let me explain and some of you (Alan and Susan for example) will know about this. I live in the old police station in the village of Port Gordon and I've lived here all my life. I am currently typing this in my study which used to be the police office, through the door behind me is the passage which led to the two cells. Few people ever spent a night in those cells, save for the occasional drunk and disorderly. However, this tiny little village police station attained enormous notoriety on 30th September 1940. On that autumnal day, the village bobby, Bob Grieve, was amazed to receive a telephone call first thing in the morning from the stationmaster, John Donald, who reported some strange (in all senses of the word) people at the village railway station.

Bob Grieve went up to the station and, sure enough, there were two very out-of-the-ordinary individuals there. They had tried to buy tickets for "Forrest" (meaning Forres), their shoes were wet and they were decidedly foreign in manner. Although claiming to be Danish refugees they were, in fact, both German agents. And, the remarkable thing was (no sexism intended) that one of them was a woman. And that woman was Vera Erikson. Bob Grieve detained them and took them to the Police Station and to the very room I am sitting in now. Later, when joined by his superior officer, John Simpson, he searched their luggage and found a pistol, a knife and radio equipment. The pair were indeed German agents and that lone village bobby had arrested them.

They left the village shortly afterwards and were eventually taken to London. The third person in the gang (who had gone to Buckie alone rather than coming to Port Gordon with them) was arrested at Waverley. About nine months later a trial was held at the Old Bailey and the two men were found guilty and sentenced to death (and were executed a month later). The court had been told, however, that "Madame Erikson would not appear". The assumption widely being that she had turned King's Evidence.

However, the tale is a good deal more complicated than that. Vera was of Danish-Russian extraction and her family had fled the Bolshevik Revolution and settled in Jutland. Later she became a ballet dancer performing, amongst other places, at the the Folies Bergere and became hopelessly addicted to drugs. Still later she was recruited to the Abwehr (mostly to escape the mad and criminal White Russian aristocrat she had become involved with). She may have been sent to spy in London prior to the War, she may have compromised some British establishment figures (in a Mata Hari way), she may have had a child, she may have been recruited by the British, she may have been a double-agent. In fact, she may have been all of these things and so much more.

She disappeared after the War after being deported back to Germany, or so say the files in the National Archives. She probably never went near Post-War Germany and almost certainly had a new and highly secret identity and lived out the rest of her days in England (the Isle of Wight seems to be the most favoured location). Most of the evidence suggests she died in 1993. However, the sheer intrigue of, and misinformation about, Vera makes her incredibly enigmatic and attracts enormous interest (try googling Vera Erikson). She also attracts conspiracy theorists by the bucket-load and I suspect if you listened to some you would find out she had a hand in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

You will understand that I have a very real interest in Vera because she once sat where I am sitting now. I'm often asked to do talks to local history groups about "the Port Gordon Spies" and I always try to be careful to stick to the facts that we do know; that said, I do cover the speculation about her and her later life without endorsing those things that we cannot confirm.

Vera, my femme fatale, has appeared again today because I've had an email, out-of-the-blue, with some new and very different facts which are not at all clear to me at the moment. Are they correct? Are they reliable? Oh Vera......here we go again. How is it possible for the ghost of this German agent to continue to exert such a hold on me?

In the old kirkyard at Rathven, about three miles from here, there is a memorial stone which has the words "Eternity. How long?". Yes, Vera, please will you answer that question.

3 comments:

  1. Alan Reid3:55 pm

    It is never a good idea to go to Buckie alone.

    August 20, 2012 | Alan Reid

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  2. Susan Reid3:55 pm

    This is a wonderful tale which has the potential to be a best seller and Hollywood blockbuster (I hope I may be considered for the part of Vera!). I will then be able to boast that I knew THE PRESIDENT before he became famous, even more famous than he is now.

    August 20, 2012 | Susan Reid

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  3. Tom Burns3:56 pm

    Another one for Ben MacIntyre, I think!

    August 20, 2012 | Tom Burns

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