PODCAST SPECIAL – 80 DAYS TO LIBERATION WITH SIMON DE LA RUE.

Nick spoke to Simon De La Rue of the Guernsey Press about his project 80 days to Liberation which started on 18 February and runs all the way to the 80th anniversary of Liberation on 9 May 2025.

Find out what the project involves, how he is going about it and how you can get involved.

Email Simon on sdelarue@guernseypress.com if you have a story for him.

During the episode IWM – liberation footage

You can watch a video edition of the podcast here where you can see Simon and Myself.

Or Listen on your favourite podcast app by searching Islands at War or online below.

MARCH 1942 – THE ENTIRE GUERNSEY POLICE FORCE ARE ARRESTED, GERMAN SECRET POLICE, ALDERNEY EVENTS AND A FUNNY STORY FROM JERSEY!

March is a busy month with a lot going on!

Not least the whole of the Guernsey Police Force being arrested.  We talk about how this happened.

A bit about the German Police and their methods.

A funny story from Jersey!

Alderney goings on! 

There are a couple of articles below and a film.

You can find Islands at War on all the good podcast apps.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

PODCAST – FEBRUARY 1942 EPSIODE IS OUT! WE TALK SOME DIFFICULT TOPICS PLUS THIEVES, RATS, SPANIARDS AND MORE.

February 1942 had some fairly depressing and difficult topics for us to discuss not least the eighth Jewish Order. They are important to discuss and particularly as this episode was recorded during the week of the 80th Anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

We also talk about the impact of the occupation on the mental health of Channel Islanders.

We have a some lighter topics to discuss as well as a few book recommendations!

Our Jersey diarist is still complaining that Guernsey is still getting bombed more than Jersey by the RAF! Not an aspect of inter-island rivalry I would have had down on my bingo card but it gets mentioned a lot.

We mention Churchill’s Spaniards: Continuing the Fight in the British Army 1939-46- by Séan Scullion. This is an excellent book that Nick & Keith both recommend.

We also talk about a book that is out in April 2025 written by Jenny O’Brien which is a novel set during the occupation. You can find her social media and books here. Looking forward to reading this when it is out! Jenny is appearing at the Guernsey Literary Festival.

We talk about much more as well!

Please do subscribe, it is totally free, write us a review etc it all helps.

Thanks for listening!

DECEMBER 1941 PODCAST – AMERICANS SUFFER POST PEARL HARBOUR, MILITARY ACTIVITY HOTS UP, A HUGE GUN, UNWELCOME GUESTS, FOOD AND MORE!

It is the December 1941 episode and we look at what Christmas was like for different families and across the Channel Islands.

We talk about food and some of the crazy prices being paid for livestock, difficulties in obtaining some some essentials.

Military activity hots up and the barrels are delivered for the huge Mirus Battery. This unfortunately causes a tragic death of a 6 year old girl who was crushed. This happened at Le Ville au Roi. In the photograph below you can see the junction itself.

Below you can see photographs of the vehicles used to pull the gun barrel.

Read more about the big guns in the article below.

Pearl Harbour happens and the Germans take measures against the Americans resident in the Channel Islands.

We look at various different families and how their lives were impacted so far.

We also touch on the German Officer who as a boy scout had been awarded a medal by the King of England.

Listen on your favourite podcast app or click the player below.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

NOVEMBER 1941 – FRITZ TODT VISITS, FRENCHMEN STRIKE, ESPIONAGE AND SPITFIRES.

It is November 1941 and there is a lot going on! Link to podcast in player and then details and photographs and more below.

Dr Fritz Todt visits the Channel Islands to assess what fortifications.

We talk about espionage and the arrest of William ‘Bill’ Symes who was arrested for smuggling information out of Guernsey about the German occupation and forces. He ended up in a concentration camp, but was remarkably released to an internment camp. You can read more of his story here.

French workers arrive and then protest before running amok in Town.

Thank you to Simon De La Rue who sent us some information and photographs relating to the tragic death of Ernest Brouard along with some photographs that are below.

Ernest Brouard top left and his wife Lily bottom right taken in 1905.
Obituary from the Guernsey Evening Press
Funeral Notice from the Guernsey Evening Press
A photo of two of Ernest’s grandchildren – Isabel and Richard De La Rue – photographed by a German soldier

I talked about a gentleman in Jersey who was complaining the RAF weren’t bombing Jersey enough and that Guernsey was getting all the attention! During a discussion about RAF activity in the area we gave a nod to one of Nick’s favourite podcasts Never Mind the Dambusters. Go check it out for all your Bomber Command related content.

Two Spitfires crash land in Alderney and we talk about what happened.

The Germans cause a potato crisis with far reaching implications and blame the potato growers!

The other podcast that may be of interest is Ham & Jam a WW2 Airborne Podcast.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

OCTOBER 1941 PODCAST – KOMMANDANTS, REVERSE INVASION THREATS, NEUTRAL CITIZENS, AND A BIT OF DEVIATION!

Its October 1941 and the Germans are worried about a British attempt to retake the Channel Islands.

We had a couple of clarifications and corrections that we talked about. One being the American officer who was in fact Canadian. Learn more about Major Alan Chambers in the article below.

We reference Operation Attaboy which was planned earlier in the year. If you want to read about that go to my article.

We talk about the Fortress Order and the French workers that arrive. Lists of men of military age drawn up. You can find out more here about the order.

We talk neutral citizens and their experience.

During the podcast we mentioned the Digimap ariel photo map. You can find it here. The gallery of WW2 reconnaissance photos is here.

A look ahead to Liberation 80 for next year, a couple of forthcoming walks.

Guernsey Walking Tours which is Keith’s walking tours can be found here.

We also mentioned another tour guide that I am friends with Jo May whose website is on the link in her name.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

SEPTEMBER 1941 – GERMANY’S GOT TALENT, AN ESCAPE FROM JERSEY AND MORE!

In the September 1941 edition of the Islands at War podcast we cover a number of aspects of events that month.

As requested by many people we have expanded the podcast to include regular Jersey content so each month going forward there will a more about Jersey.

We kick off this episode with the incredible escape of Denis Vibert from Jersey in a tiny boat. Moving on to some rumours of a tunnel being constructed from Jersey to France!

The Guernsey Press organised a charity swimming gala. Pictures and report below. See if you can spot any relatives! 2,000 people, a tenth of the population, attended.

One person didn’t do so well as he ended up in court!

The Germans hold a review where German artistes could perform. Wish I had thought of this before we recorded the episode but it is kind of “Germany’s Got Talent”.

We also talk about RAF activity in the area and shipping attacks.

You can find the podcast episode on all the major podcast apps or listen in the player below.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

AUGUST 1941 PODCAST IS OUT! IT’S THE ECONOMY STUPID! PLUS SOME STRANGE ORDERS, HORSES, A PATOIS SPEAKING GERMAN, AND MORE

August 1941 – In this episode Keith and Nick look at the German reliance on horses. Thanks to Nick’s friend Simon Edwards for helping resolve the conundrum of what to call this episode.

Then move on to how the Germans ruined the economy and left the Channel Islands virtually bankrupt.  British banks lent money to the Channel Islands governments. 

The unusual story of a German who was fluent in Guernésiais (Patois) and the mystery surrounding this.  If you want to find out about Guernésiais your can find more info here.

German morale and disorder along with a Diphtheria outbreak.

We wrap up with listeners emails and questions.

It really helps us if you share the podcast on social media and with your friends. Also ratings and reviews help.

Thanks for listening!

NICK TALKS TO HISTORIAN DR PHILIP BLOOD ABOUT THE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF THE CHANNEL ISLANDS.

Nick was delighted to be invited to talk to the well known historian and author Dr Philip Blood about the German occupation of the Channel Islands during the Second World War. Phil has written a number of books and contributes to the Fallout Sub stack. Please do go and take a look at the Substack site and if you like the content subscribe.

It was an absolute privilege for Nick to be invited to speak to Phil. Phil has a great amount of knowledge about life in the occupied territories of mainland Europe including the Channel Islands and how it was different to the mainland Europe experience.

We had a great chat about resistance and how it was different from mainland Europe, collaboration, food and much more.

Watch the YouTube video or listen to the podcast here.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray

RUMOURS, LIES AND WHY!

I was chatting to my friend Jim Delbridge about what the next topic we could cover on his BBC Radio Guernsey & Jersey show. We were trying to think of something different that hasn’t really been covered before in our chats and I thought what about all the rumours that circulated around the Channel Islands! The show went out today, 28th July 2024, and we had a great chat about rumours.

There are plenty to choose from and they range from funny, bizarre, plausible to rumours that must have been worrying. When talking or writing about these rumours I like to categorise them as ‘Wish’, ‘Worry’, and ‘Wind up’ rumours.

You might at this point be wondering how on earth all these years on I know about the rumours that circulated and the veracity or not of the rumours! I have numerous diarists, both published and unpublished, to thank for this. The Rev Ord’s diary is a great source of these rumours and he records his assessment of them. He was respected, came into contact with many people through the church. They also confided in him, not just civilians, but also Germans as he was a fluent German speaker.

Often these rumours were based on something that had happened but was then misconstrued and the story grew and grew.

One has to remember that the local population had very little information, especially when the radios were taken away, and little to entertain themselves with during the course of the almost five years of the German occupation. Gossiping and rumours partially filled the void. One thing that does amaze me is how quickly these rumours got around the islands.

Wish Rumours

These are rumours that start to circulate because the local population wish or hope something is about to happen, happening or happened! As time went on they became more and more fantastic! A lot of these types of rumours centred around supposed activity of the allied forces around or in the islands, or the supposed retreat of the Germans and liberation of the islands.

One of these rumours started in the days immediately prior to the Occupation beginning. In the days immediately prior to the Germans arriving there were a lot of rumours about what was going to happen. Including that Channel Islanders were being forced to sleep in parks, which was untrue. After the initial evacuation a rumour was circulating in Guernsey that Ocean Liners were about to arrive and take the entire population to Canada.

Following the escape of eight men from Guernsey in September 1940 there was a rumour circulating the next morning that they had arranged to rendezvous with the Royal Navy to be picked up by a Destroyer or a Submarine depending on which version of the rumour you heard!

In February 1941 there was a rumour running rife in Guernsey that a Royal Navy submarine had surfaced next to a fishing boat and the Captain had a conversation with the two fisherman. He enquired what conditions were like and offered to take them to England. They declined as their wives were still in Guernsey. Anyone who heard this rumour should have known that by this stage that would not have been possible as fishing was strictly limited and involved having a German guard on your boat or German boats keeping an eye on the fishing fleet. That didn’t stop this rumour from circulating.

At varying times throughout the occupation there were rumours that Churchill & Eden had sent messages to the German Government to say that the Islands must be surrendered within forty days or they would be taken by force. Other rumours that circulated where that Eden and Churchill had died/left the Government etc. The King was also rumoured to have abdicated. Run away to Canada or more.

20th August 1942 Violet Carey records in her diary that the latest rumour is that two large boats are to take all the Germans back to Germany. This would have been a bit of a push given the shipping available at the time and the number of Germans in the Islands.

By December 1942 a rumour was circulating that the Islands were to be declared neutral, that the Germans would leave and the International Red Cross would take over responsibility for feeding the Channel Islanders. In addition to this the rumour said that a local defence force was to be raised, presumably unarmed to keep order as the Germans were not taking the enforced labour of various nationalities with them. The ships were rumoured to be sailing under the Jersey flag. Again this rumour was rather far fetched.

Worry Rumours

Worry rumours are those that came about because faced with an unpredictable occupying force who made endless rules and controlled every aspect of life. This led to rumours about what they were going to do next.

Philip Le Sauter has some fantastic turns of phrase in his diary about life in Jersey. On 23rd September 1941 he notes “Today’s rumours also concern our local Nazi builder – he is starting to build a tunnel to France, he is making a tunnel at St. Ouen from the beach to the Airport, and another at Gorey, and he is building another aerodrome at Gorey. Actually, he appears to be wholly concerned with fortifications, building pill boxes and gun emplacements.”

Now you are probably wondering how people just didn’t go an have a look to dispel the rumours. The issue being that if you didn’t live in the area you had to cycle or walk there to take a look, assuming it wasn’t in one of the forbidden zones.

In August 1943 Violet Carey recorded in her diary that there was a rumour going around that five Organisation Todt workers had tried to burn down St Peter Port, the main town, in Guernsey. Depending on which rumour you heard they were either:
1. In Prison
2. Already been shot
3. Been deported.

These sort of rumours really did cause worry as to what the very unpredictable occupiers were likely to get up to.

In addition to this there was a rumour going around that a German officer had told a local that if his wife and children were injured or killed in Hamburg by the bombing he would shoot five local women. Thankfully this never happened but given the situation it could well have so the worry was real.

One of the most sinister rumours that arose was in late 1944 when the Allies were advancing through France and onwards towards Germany. But while there was a sense of relief that the Germans were on the way to being defeated a certain amount of fear and foreboding existed. In Guernsey there many rumours going around, that gas chambers were being built, so that some civilians would be put in to reduce the population in order to save food. Given that the islands were effectively cut off and there were severe food shortages it is not surprising that this was given some credence.

Another rumour that circulated in both Guernsey & Jersey at this time was that the Americans were going to conduct a 1,000 bomber raid on the islands and that a warning had been issued on the BBC! Such a raid would have been devastating for the islands leading to enormous casualties. Of course those that had an illicit radio set knew that this was untrue, however they couldn’t say anything as to do so would have given that fact away! If they had said this and someone had overheard they could of ended up jailed or shot.

Nobody in the Channel Islands could possibly have known at the time as there was no such broadcast, but this rumour was actually not too far from the truth as the allies had considered bombing the Channel Islands in a number of plans that were formulated over the years to retake the Channel Islands. I wrote about these operations

Wind Up Rumours

Starting a rumour in the hope that it would reach German ears and then cause them to waste time and resources investigating them. These rumours could also be used as a form of resistance by making the German forces doubt if the news they were receiving was true. This wasn’t without risk and occasionally backfired on those starting or perpetuating them.

A classic example of this was in February & March 1941. A practical joke made the Germans look very silly but led to serious consequences for the two teenage maids that started the rumour that British parachutists had landed in Guernsey. They then pretended to be signalling to them which led to the Germans staking out the house and trying to capture the parachutists! Keith and I talked about this on the February 1941 episode of our podcast which you can find here. Keith and I talk about it in some detail on the podcast. Whilst it made the Germans look silly it resulted in serious consequences for those involved in the prank and for others that were suspected to be involved by the Germans.

There were many other rumours that were started either to wind up the Germans and cause them to waste time and resources or just to look silly. They also caused unsettlement in the ranks as Germans worried particularly in the later days as things were turning against the Germans.

Post War Rumours

Unsurprisingly some of these rumours found their way into local folklore and others sprung up. If I had a pound for every time someone told me a story about the occupation that is just not supported by fact I wouldn’t be working a full time job!

The veracity of these stories goes unchecked and are unfortunately perpetuated by some who write about the occupation years without checking if there is a scintilla of truth in them.

I hope that you have enjoyed reading the blog post.

I also co-host a podcast with Keith Pengelley in which we talk about the occupation of the Channel Islands month by month using first hand accounts, diaries and our research in the archives. You can find us on all the major podcast services. Just search “Islands at War” or visit our podcast page here.

You can also follow the blog on Twitter at @Fortress_Island where I share other information and photographs. If you prefer Facebook I also have a page there.

If you would like to receive email notifications of future blogs, you can sign up to the right of this blog post or here. Feel free to look around the website, where I have categorised posts to make them easier to find and other resources such as tours, places to visit and films that may be of interest.

If you have questions or information to share you can contact me by email on Contact@Island-Fortress.Com.

You can also find articles, podcasts, TV appearances and other social media etc here.


I will be adding more as time permits. Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I hope you enjoyed it. Please share it on social media or add a comment if you did. Feedback is always appreciated.

Also happy to be contacted with questions about the war in the Channel Islands, media appearances, podcasts etc.

© Nick Le Huray