The Countess
Let me begin this blog with the stories of two women, both British – one a countess, the other a housewife. Today’s story is about our Countess, a woman who managed to fluster the British military during World War II in an effort to serve her country while spending time with her new husband. Our countess is Hermoine Ranfurly nee Llewellyn who had moved to Australia at the age of 24 to become the personal assistant of the Governor of New South Wales. While in Australia, she met Daniel Knox, the 6th Earl of Ranfurly, and subsequently married him. When World War II broke out, her husband’s Yeomanry unit, the Notts Sherwood Rangers (part of the 1st Cavalry Division, later the 10th Armoured Division) was shipped to the middle-east. Hermoine wants to do her part, finding a job in London where her boss was – in her words – “too fast for me in every respect.”
Desperate to be near her husband, she goes to a small travel agency and books herself a one-way passage to Egypt, in her attempt to get to Palestine. She lands a job as a secretary to the head of the regional Red Crescent in Haifa, but despite her best efforts, Brigadier Brunskill of the General Headquarters in Jerusalem says she cannot stay. To quote her diary: ‘You will go,’ he said, ‘on the first evacuation ship, very soon. You may stay in South Africa or proceed to England. You can’t expect me to believe that a Countess can type.’
By the end of September, our Hermoine finds herself with the other illegal wives, under military guard, on the S.S. Empress of Britain. Don’t worry, though: She slips off the ship in South Africa, writing in her journal on October 11, 1940: “I am going back to Dan.” She walks into a passport office in South Africa, obtains a 3-month visa for Egypt, secures a small loan from a bank, and gets on a flying boat back to Cairo, where – having spent the last of her money – shows up a friend’s house where she cannot pay the taxi driver. In her October 31 entry, Hermoine reports:
Today Pam returned from GHQ to lunch in the flat. She was loaded with news: ‘Dan is coming with his General to Cairo tomorrow for two nights; the news of your return is out at GHQ and there is much gossip– some think it very funny but the authorities concerned are furious and suspect you must have used someone else’s passport as such care had been taken that you should not return. They are determined to ‘‘ make an example’’ of you and throw you out again. My girlfriend in the Provost Marshal’s office says the Military Police have been told to find you.
Hermoine, however, is incredibly resourceful. She finds a job working for the SOE in Cairo, and even then the military wants her deported. The Ambassador refuses to pull her passport, saying: ‘As you do not appear to be a white slave trafficker or involved with drugs, I cannot remove your passport.’ The Brits still want to send her home, appealing to General Jumbo Wilson. As her husband has been taken a prisoner of war, they were no longer in the same theatre of war, making the original order moot. At this point, Wilson adds: ‘This lady has outmanoeuvred every General in the Middle East and I do not myself intend to enter the arena.’
By November of 1942, General Jumbo – as she calls him in her diary – has taken Hermoine on as his own secretary. Her posts take her from Cairo to Algiers to Caserta (Italy). In late November 1944, her General is notified that he will be transferred to Washington, DC as the head of the British Joint Staff Mission. At first Hermoine is to go along to America, but the General’s wife objects and she is left behind in England. But, does this stop Hermoine from serving her country? No. She gets herself to back to Italy and secures a job with Air Marshal Slessor, continuing in this position after Slessor is moved to London towards the end of the war.
Now, that’s grit.
Source: Ranfurly, H. (2014). To War with Whitaker: Wartime Diaries of the Countess of Ranfurly, 1939-45. [Kindle Android version]. Bello. [Primary Source: Diary]
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