Canadian soldiers stand guard over bindfolded German pows captured during the Dieppe Raid - Aug 1942. The raid where Allied forces combined was a very costly failure. Photo by Popperfoto
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Canadian soldiers stand guard over bindfolded German pows captured during the Dieppe Raid - Aug 1942. The raid where Allied forces combined was a very costly failure. Photo by Popperfoto
Les corps de soldats canadiens gisent parmi les péniches de débarquement endommagées et les chars "Churchill" du Calgary Regiment à la suite de l'opération Jubilee (Raid de Dieppe) - Dieppe - 19 août 1942
©Bibliothèque et Archives Canada - 3192368
Dieppe Raid Case - 1951
Reports of the hearing of ghostly sounds of a bloody World War Il air and sea battle fought near Dieppe, France. The case, documented and examined by psychical researchers, attained fame in the 1950s. It is considered to be an example of paranormal collective auditory hallucinations.
The case was reported by two Englishwomen on holiday at Puys, near Dieppe, in late July and early August 1951. The women, identified pseudonymously in reports as Dorothy Norton and her sister-in-law Agnes Norton, stayed in a house that during World War II had been occupied by German soldiers. Dorothy Norton was accompanied by her two children and a nurse.
On the morning of August 4, at about 4:20, the women were awakened by loud noises that started suddenly and at first sounded like a storm arising at sea. The sounds ebbed and flowed, and then they could distinctly hear sounds of gunfire, shellfire, divebombers, and men shouting and crying out. The women got up and went out on their balcony, where they could not actually see the sea, but they detected nothing that could account for the noises. Meanwhile, the noises came in from the direction of the sea, loud and intense, and still seemed like gunfire, divebombing and voices shouting. The roaring abruptly stopped at 4:50 A.M. and resumed at about 5:07 A.M. The noise became so intense that the Norton women were amazed that other occupants of the house were not awakened. As the sky grew light, they heard a rifle shot on the beach below. The noise became more distinct as the sound of divebombing planes that came in waves. It stopped abruply at 5:40 A.M. The noise resumed at 5:50 A.M., not as loud, but stil sounding distinctly like planes. The noise died away at 6 A.M. and resumed at 6.20 A.M., much fainter. The women heard nothing at all after 6:55 A.M.
Both women knew that a battle had taken place in the vicinity during the war, but neither knew the details. They consulted a French guidebook and, during the experience, sat and read the account of the battle. They concluded they might have heard ghostly sounds of the real battle, and agreed to write independent versions of their experience. With a small discrepancy in time (probably due to a difference in watches), their reports matched. Later, they asked several persons if they, too, had been disturbed during the night, but received negative answers.
The sounds bore a remarkable correspondence to the fierce battle that took place in the Dieppe environs on August 19, 1942, at precisely the times experienced by the Nortons. The Royal Regiment of Canada launched a predawn assault on German forces from Puys, about 1.5 miles east of Dieppe, to Berneval, about 5 miles east, to Purville, about 2.5 miles west of Dieppe and to Varengeville about 3 miles further west. Flank landings were scheduled to make surprise arrivals at 4:50 A.M. to destroy coastal batteries. At about 3:47, the Canadians encountered a small German convoy off the coast, and the two forces exchanged fire until after 4 A.M. The Canadians arrived at Dieppe a few minutes late, at 5:07. At 5:12 A.M., destroyers started to bombard Dieppe with shells, and at 5:15 Hurricane planes attacked, at Puys as well as Dieppe. At 5:20 A.M., main landings at Dieppe were made, covered by a bombardment of shells from destroyers and by heavy air attack. A second wave went ashore at about 5:45 A.M. At about 5:50 A.M., new air fighters from England arrived, and German planes were in the sky as well.
The Germans, who were able to man their beach defenses, waited until the landing craft nearly touched shore before opening heavy fire with rifles, machine guns and howitzers. The Canadians were trapped by a high sea-wall. Within two or three hours, the Royal Regiment of Canada was nearly destroyed. Thirty-four officers and 727 men were killed. Two officers and 65 men, half of whom were wounded, were rescued and taken away, and another 16 officers and 264 men were captured by the Germans.
A comparison of the Nortons' experience with the phases of the Dieppe raid showed consistencies between times and the changes in the noises they heard, with a few exceptions. The information in the French guidebook was not specific enough for them to have subconsciously matched their description to the real event after reading about it.
The Nortons, interviewed by psychical researchers G.W. Lambert and Kathleen Gray, came across as well balanced individuals who displayed no tendency to embellish their accounts, and no desire to prove they had had a paranormal experience. Dorothy Norton said she had been avakened by similar, but fainter, noises on the morning of July 30, but had not mentioned the experience to Agnes (who had not heard the noises) because she had not wanted to spoil the holiday with something mysterious.
Skeptics proposed other explanations for the experience, such as surf sounds, noise from commercial airplanes flying a nearby route across the English Channel, or noise from a dredger. Agnes Norton had served in the women's Royal Naval Service during the war, however, and she probably would have been able to distinguish the sounds of the sea and of a single commercial aircraft, had those been the natural sources. The dredger was not in operation at the times corresponding to the Nortons' experience.
Both women were familiar with the Versailles Haunting, a similar case in which two Englishwomen on holiday in France felt they had paranormal experiences in encountering the ghostly past. Skeptics also suggested that this familiarity may have subconsciously primed the Nortons to have their own experience. The possibility is remote, since the Norton women were not previously acquainted with the details of the Dieppe case.
Text from The Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits, Third Edition by Rosemary Ellen Guiley (Checkmark Books - 2007)
The Dieppe Raid August 19, 1942
Subscriber Content Add content here that will only be visible to your subscribers. Payment One pilot, rescued. August 19 1942, during the Dieppe Raid (Operation Jubilee). #DieppeRaid https://amzn.to/46R8Jvq If you enjoy my Canadian military history content, you can support it with a donation at https://buymeacoffee.com/CanadasMilitaryHistory The Dieppe Raid was an Allied operation designed…
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A group from No. 4 Commando walk by a collapsed Goatley boat upon returning to New Haven U.K. after the Dieppe Raid, 19 August 1942. Unknown photographer, Department of National Defence, (DND), Library Archives Canada, (LAC), PA 141307.
Photo and caption featured in Of Courage and Determination: The First Special Service Force, "The Devil's Brigade," 1942-44 by Bernd Horn and Michel Wyczynski
Grateful British soldiers smile as they arrive back in Britain after the disastrous raid at Dieppe - Aug 1942
Un soldat canadien blessé débarqué du destroyer d'escorte de la marine polonaise ORP Ślązak (L26) à Portsmouth au retour du raid sur Dieppe - 19 août 1942
Photographe : Sergent A. W. P. Wooldridge - War Office official photographer
©Imperial War Museums - H 22637
On this day:
BATTLE TIMESLIPS
On August 4, 1951, two English women were abruptly shaken from their sleep by the sound of fierce gunfire—from nearly nine years earlier!
Dorothy Naughton and her sister-in-law, Agnes, were vacationing at the seaside village of Puys, near Dieppe, France. They were staying in a house where German troops had lived during World War II. The women experienced an audio replay of the fierce fighting that took place in the area on August 19, 1942, during the Dieppe Raid (also known as Operation Jubilee).
The first burst of battle sounds took place at 4 a.m., the actual time when Canadian and British troops had attacked the German-held post. Once awakened, the two ladies went out onto their balcony, where they heard sounds coming from the beach. For the next three hours the cries of soldiers shouting over a storm of gunshots and bad weather rose and fell, interspersed with uncanny silence. Then came the roar of dive-bombing planes, followed by explosions. The report of the sounds the two women heard matched with official military records of the previous battle.
On August 4, 1642, a pamphlet printed in London reported:
“A Signe from Heaven, or a Rearful and Terrible Noise heard in the Ayre at Aldborow in the County of Suffoke, on Thursday, the 4th day of August, at 5 of the clocke in the afternoone--wherein was heard the beating of Drums, the discharging of Muskets and great Ordnance for the space of an houre or more.”
The small publication continued by stating that the eyewitnesses, "many men of good worth," would be giving evidence before the House of Commons as well as displaying a large stone which fell from the sky during the phantom battle.
Text from: Almanac of the Infamous, the Incredible, and the Ignored by Juanita Rose Violins, published by Weiser Books, 2009