[]
Your ongoing selection
Asset(s) Assets
Your quote 0

Your selection

Clear selection
{"event":"pageview","page_type1":"catalog","page_type2":"image_page","language":"en","user_logged":"false","user_type":"ecommerce","nl_subscriber":"false"}
{"event":"ecommerce_event","event_name":"view_item","event_category":"browse_catalog","ecommerce":{"items":[{"item_id":"NAM5920591","item_brand":"other","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"unknown_photographer_20th_century","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"captain_michael_trotobas_the_manchester_regiment_september_1943_b_w_photo","item_variant":"undefined"}]}}
Metadata Block (Hidden)

Contact us for further help

High res file dimension

Search for more high res images or videos

Captain Michael Trotobas, The Manchester Regiment, September 1943 (b/w photo)

IMAGE number
NAM5920591
Image title
Captain Michael Trotobas, The Manchester Regiment, September 1943 (b/w photo)
Auto-translated text View Original Source
Artist
Unknown photographer, (20th century)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
black and white photograph
Date
1943 AD (C20th AD)
Image description

Captain Michael Trotobas, The Manchester Regiment, 1942 circa. Photograph, World War Two, Home Front (1939-1945), 1942 circa. Michael Alfred Raymond Trotobas (1914-1943) was born of British and French parents and spent part of his early life in both Northern France and England. In 1939 he became a regular soldier in the Middlesex Regiment. After Dunkirk (1940) he was recruited to the Special Operations Executive’s (SOE) French Section and given a commission in the Manchester Regiment. In 1941, under the code name ‘Sylvestre’, he was parachuted into the Chateauroux area. Six weeks later he and nine agents were arrested. However, in 1942 Trotobas took part in a mass escape of SOE agents from Mauzac prison. He then went on to establish and lead the Lille- based ‘Farmer’ circuit. From 1943 Trotobas, or ‘Capitaine Michel’, successfully led a sabotage campaign against the Germans, targeting the Lans-Béthune railway, tool factories at Armentières, and naval depots and wharfs at Amiens, Boulogne and Calais. His most important operation was the destruction of the Lilles-Fives S.N.C.F Locomotive works, which was extremely important to the running of the German railway. In June 1943 the factory was destroyed. Trotobas was killed in November 1943 whilst trying to evade arrest by a Sicherheitsdienst (SD) raiding party who had been given the address of his safe house by a captured agent, code named ‘Olivier’. Trotobas was recommended for a posthumous Victoria Cross (VC), but this was rejected as there was no one senior to him present to report on his actions. There is a memorial dedicated to him in Lille. One of 18 photographs relating to Captain Trotobas, Special Operations Executive.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
recruitment / special forces / resistance / strategy / Photograph / Photography / Mzphoto
Leave the work to our dedicated Account Managers
License details
Your details
*
*
*
*
*
Asset - General information
Copyright status
No Additional Copyright
Largest available format 3306 × 5276 px 11 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 3306 × 5276 px 280 × 447 mm 11.0 MB
Medium 642 × 1024 px 54 × 87 mm 375 KB

Similar Images