Sunday, June 26, 2022

Jewish connections with the Aberystwyth Area during World War II

 Although it is not known exactly how many Jews were living in Wales during the Second World War years there was undoubtedly a temporary increase in the Jewish population at that time.  Those who settled here were basically from two groups. Firstly, refugees and their families from Eastern Europe who from the 1890s onwards had fled from persecution in pogroms in East Europe. These people had settled principally in South Wales where the industrial areas offered them good opportunities to find work. Popular areas were Cardiff, Swansea, and the Valleys, particularly Merthyr Tydfil. As many of them became well established it was natural that other relatives and friends might choose to join them where there were already thriving Jewish communities.

 The second group was made up of people who migrated to Wales after the outbreak of war. These were city dwellers escaping from the threat of aerial bombing in cities to safe zones in Wales. Some people came as part of the official government evacuation scheme from cities such as London, Liverpool, Manchester which were put into practice as soon as war broke out. Others made their own decision to come to Wales making private arrangements relating to their particular circumstances. After the outbreak of war the main area of migration continued to be to south Wales, with some people particularly from Liverpool arriving in north Wales and a few to Mid Wales.

One small group who did come here in 1939 for a brief stay were students from University College London who were evacuated to University College Aberystwyth.  They started a short-lived Hebrew congregation. There is little record of their activities or of how many people attended but it seems that services were conducted by the students themselves.  According to the Jewish Chronicle in October 1939, the first ever minyan in the history of Aberystwyth was held in the home of drapers, Mr. and Mrs. John Brodie, described as ‘the [town’s] only Jewish residents’. Later that month weekly Friday evening and Sabbath morning services were organised at 5, King Street Aberystwyth but the arrangement came to an end in the summer of 1940 when the students returned to London. However, it seems that some evacuated Jews continued to live in Aberystwyth and there is a record again in the Jewish Chronicle of a boy named Stanley Ash whose family had come here from North London and celebrated his bar mitzvah at the Meeting Hall Aberystwyth in March 1945.

The story of one family who made their own arrangements to evacuate to Aberystwyth was the Kiverstein family. It seems that some members of the family were already living in Aberystwyth when Israel Kiverstein then living in Hendon was killed by a bomb on September 1943. His wife Leah and her son came to live in Aberystwyth temporarily. There are records of four households of the Ephron family in Aberystwyth during the war years, which include Leah’s three brothers with their families. One of them had a grocery shop in or near the town.

The reaction to the arrival of Jews in Wales in the war years seems to have been overall tolerant. However, Saunders Lewis, founder of Plaid Cymru, wrote what were seen as anti-Semitic poems such as Golyga mewn Caffe ( Scene in a CafĂ©) . in the poem he spoke disparagingly of Jewish evacuees from London - of “White Chapel’s lard-bellied women” and “Golders Green Ethiopians”. However, his views did not receive widespread support. After the war he explained that his negative opinions applied equally to Jews and non-Jews, in that he was opposed to any incomers to Wales because of their potential detrimental effect on the Welsh language and culture. Elsewhere in his writing he did express sympathy and empathy with the suffering of the Jewish people under the Nazis.

In the immediate prewar years, the UK was reluctant to allow large numbers of refugees from Europe including Jews to settle here. However, this approach softened after the events of what became known as Kristallnacht. This took place on 9 November 1938 when Jewish homes, shops, synagogues and businesses in Germany and Austria were attacked and ransacked by Nazi troops. A hundred Jews were killed and a further 30,000 were sent to concentration camps. The British government reacted by setting up the Kindertransport, a scheme to evacuate children from Nazi occupied territories and bring them to Britain. The scheme was for children between the ages of 3 and 17 who had to leave alone without friends or family and many of them never saw their parents again. 

Thousands of children were transported to safety on the Kindertransport ahead of WWII
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-49349239
 

Some Jewish children from the Kindertransport of 1939 were sent to Wales. These children had mixed experiences depending on where they were sent to live. Some lived in hostels whilst others were placed with foster families mostly in south Wales.  Quite often they were sent to live with non-Jewish families which raised concerns in the Jewish community about their upbringing especially as a few foster families sought to convert them to Christianity. In an attempt to overcome both problems several more hostels were set up specifically for Jewish children such as Tan-Y-Bryn House in Cefn-Coed-Y-Cymmer near Merthyr Tydfil. One facility set up in mid Wales to provide a home and education for Kindertransport children was the Czechoslovak State Boarding School in Llanwrtyd Wells , Powys.  This school was set up by the Czech government in exile who rented the large house which was originally part of a farm estate. The school took in 120 children in 1943.  

 

The Czechoslovak State  School in Llanwrtyd Wells, now the Abernant Lake Hotel

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-46230748

One of the Czech refugees was Lady Milena Grenfell-Baines who spent a happy time there and remembered it with fondness and gratitude.

 


Lady Milena Grenfell-Baines' travel document showing her photograph as a child in 1939
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-46230748


Another Jewish evacuee Frank Schwelb who was at the school from 1943 to 1945 spoke of his special affection for the Welsh people who helped him and others in their time of need.

There does not appear to be any record of Kindertransport children coming directly to Aberystwyth but there is a connection between the town and someone who did come to the UK on the Kindertransport in 1939. This was  William Dieneman who worked at Aberystwyth University. William - formerly Wolfgang Dienemann - was from a German Jewish family and grew up in Berlin.   He left Germany aged nine with his sister on the Kindertransport on the SS Manhattan in January 1939. After living in several foster homes in England he was sent to a boarding school in Bristol before going on to university. Having gained varied experience in librarianship,  Dieneman was appointed as librarian at Aberystwyth University in 1970 where he became a well known figure.  In 2012 he talked about his memories of his childhood his journey to England and adjusting to life in the UK. A special exhibition was set up in Aberystwyth Arts Centre in 2018 on the 80th anniversary of the Kindertransport in which his experiences were once again featured.


William Dieneman (right) being presented to Prince Charles, date unknown  

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-49349239

Once the war began, the British government was unsure about how to deal with German Jewish refugees and some men were interned as enemy aliens. However, as the war progressed attitudes soon changed, and many Jewish refugees were able to serve in the British armed services and did so with distinction.

In the autumn of 1942, a group of Jewish German speaking refugees from Nazi Germany were recruited as part of a special commando unit. Of the 130 men chosen, 86 were German speaking refugees, many of whom were Jewish and all of whom had fled from the Nazi regime. They received highly specialized training at Aberdyfi to enable them to undertake special secret missions in Europe.  They were chosen as they were fluent German speakers, and their role was mainly reconnaissance and intelligence gathering. They lived with local families in the Aberdyfi area from September 1942 to May 1943 and trained in places such as  Cader Idris, practised beach assaults on the Dyfi estuary and went climbing in Snowdonia. Their official title was No.3 Troop of No. 10 (Inter-Allied) Commandos. 

Because of the need for secrecy they were known as the X Troop,. They all had to adopt fictitious English names as part of the need to conceal their identity. One of the German Jewish refugees trained at Aberdyfi was Colin Edward  Anson, born Claus Leopold Octavio Ascher in Frankfurt. Anson’s father had been arrested in Germany and sent to Dachau concentration camp in 1937 after speaking out against the Nazis. In February 1939 Anson’s mother was able to get him on to the Kindertransport to the UK and in 1942 he joined the X Troop.  The refugees were well motivated to gain revenge over those who had ruined their lives. X Troop never fought together as a unit but rather as individuals or in small groups working alongside other Commando units.  Anson’s first action was in the invasion of Sicily in Operation Husky in 1943, a campaign that led to the downfall of Mussolini’s regime in Italy. 

 

X Troop at Aberdyfi, 1943
https://time.com/6074084/secret-unit-jewish-commandos-world-war-two/

 

X group was disbanded in 1944  and Colin Anson was fortunate enough to survive the war. In 1999 a special memorial was erected in Penhelyg Park Aberdyfi commemorating the twenty men of X Troop who died. There is no special mention of their Jewish status as others were involved alongside them.

 

Memorial to the members of 3 Troop No 10 (IA) who trained at Aberdyfi and lost their lives  
 
It seems that there were never many Jews based in Aberystwyth during World War 2. Other locations in the north and south of Wales offered not only better chances of employment to Jewish refugees but also the attraction of joining an established Jewish community. It would appear that most of those who did come to the town did so for a brief period only and records of their experience are very limited. In the wider area of mid Wales there were interesting connections with the refugees for example at the Czechoslovak School and the hospitality and training given to the Jewish soldiers in Aberdyfi.

Blog by Frances Foley 

 

Bibliography:

Cai Parry-Jones The History of the Jewish Diaspora in Wales: https://research.bangor.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-history-of-the-jewish-diaspora-in-wales(bd879761-bd99-4362-8641-76913628040f).htmlhttps://research.bangor.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-history-of-the-jewish-diaspora-in-wales(bd879761-bd99-4362-8641-76913628040f).html

BBC news items

IWM Sound Collection  Colin Anson oral history: https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011624

 










Friday, June 17, 2022

David Owen Evans, the International Nickel Company, and winning WWII

 In the course of my PhD research, I made my way to the Ceredigion Archives in June 2021 to dig into the papers of Sir David Owen Evans, the Liberal M.P. for Cardiganshire between 1932-45. Compared to other politicians, Evans’s papers are not exactly extensive. But there was one thing that caught my eye. Or, to be specific, the one file of newspaper cuttings. Each article came from various British and Canadian newspapers and magazines from 12th June 1945 and recorded Evans’s death and the same basic information about him. One example from the Calgary Herald recorded that Evans had died on Monday (11th June) due to ‘a heart ailment’, having been knighted the previous week by King George VI (1).  The short article went on to state that Evans had been vice-president of the International Nickel Company of Canada and ‘was credited in 1929 with effecting the world’s biggest nickel merger, a $544,500,000 deal which brought virtually all the nickel resources of the world under British control.’ With minor variations, each article conveyed what was essentially the same information. Since my research is focused on the parliamentary opposition to appeasement, it was not immediately relevant. However, I have gotten into the habit of keeping a note of various things that do not seem significant on the off chance that it may prove useful. In this case, it has certainly proved so.

As it was, I had quite forgotten about this titbit until reading the memoirs of Lord Chandos, the wartime president of the Board of Trade and trusted ally of Winston Churchill (2).  Chandos, then plain old Oliver Lyttelton, had worked for the British Metal Corporation and had a distinguished career in the City of London by trading in non-ferrous metals (not containing iron).  As such, Chandos had some dealings with the International Nickel Company in the 1930s since it also produced large quantities of copper. In 1935, when Italy invaded Abyssinia, Lyttelton met with the Director of Army Contracts at the War Office to discuss their requirements for copper, which was used in all kinds of military equipment, and invite tenders (3).  As it transpired, with the threat of war on the horizon, the British government estimated that it needed 50,000 tons of copper but wished to acquire it without alarming the public and their international rivals, or moving the market price. In order to avoid this, they wished to do it discretely, so Lyttelton agreed to do it through the British Metal Corporation, as such a large order could be dismissed as either building up their own stocks or to increase sales. As it was, they had only bought up a small quantity before the Abyssinians surrendered and the order was cancelled. 

Even so, this had raised Lyttelton’s stock in government circles and so, when Germany invaded the rump of Czechoslovakia in March 1939, he was informed that, if it came to war, he would be offered the post of Controller of Non-Ferrous Metals (4).  In preparation for this, Lyttelton devised a plan for the purchase and allocation of the four principal non-ferrous metals: copper, tin, lead, and zinc. Copper and zinc would be especially important for use in cartridge and shell cases, both of which were made of brass, an alloy of copper and zinc. For some time, Lyttelton had been urging the Government to build up its copper stocks and warning of the abnormal increase in Germany’s purchase of copper on international markets. When these were rebuffed, he began to take private measures including persuading Robert Stanley, the president of the International Nickel Company, to hold their working stocks in Britain and warned that, if war broke out, those stocks would certainly be requisitioned (5).  As a result, Stanley built up the Company’s stocks to 15,000 tons of copper in short order. Though even this was nothing by what would be needed to fight a modern war. After the outbreak of war, Lyttelton was officially appointed, and the British Metal Corporation nationalised.

Reading this prompted me to dig out the notes I had taken from the cuttings about Evans’s death and then to look into the International Nickel Company. There had been nickel mining in Ontario since 1902 and the Company had been formed as a joint venture between the Canadian Copper, Orford Copper, and American Nickel Works in New York that same year. It was here that Evans becomes relevant to this story. Born in Penbryn in 1876 to a farming family, Evans was educated at Llandovery College and then the Imperial College of Science, London. In 1896, he went to work for the Inland Revenue as a civil servant, where he began to study law. He was called to the Bar at Gray’s Inn in 1909 and practised as a barrister. In 1916, on the advice of the industrialist and politician Sir Alfred Mond, he joined the Mond Nickel Company, which had extensive operations in Canada and South Wales (6).  After becoming a director, Evans oversaw the merger, in 1928-29, of the Company with the International Nickel Company when each began mining the same bodies of ore in Canada. As part of the merger, Evans became vice-president of the new company and, in 1932, was elected as Liberal M.P. for his native Cardiganshire.

As an M.P., Evans spoke on a variety of issues. His maiden speech was on unemployment, and he could be found speaking on topics as diverse as civil service examinations in Welsh (1934), the merchant marine (1938), agriculture (1941), and economic warfare (1943) (7).  Evans was also involved with local institutions, including the National Library of Wales, the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and the Council of the National Eisteddfod. He was also loyal to the Liberal programme of free trade, cutting costs, and supporting the League of Nations (8).  In 1938, he was one of the Liberal M.P.s who, outraged at the betrayal of Czechoslovakia, voted against the Munich Agreement, even though it seemed hugely popular with the public. However, it was Evans’s work in merging the nickel companies that paid unexpectedly handsome dividends. By the middle of the 1930s, this huge mining firm was playing a crucial role in feeding global demand for nickel and copper, as well as being part of Lyttelton’s plan for stockpiling in preparation for war.

 Between 1935 and the outbreak of war in 1939, the International Nickel Company’s sales exceeded £200 million a year and it provided more than 80% of the world’s copper (9).  It was also in this period that Finland’s extensive nickel deposits became ‘a bargaining chip in the Great Powers’ political game’, in which the International Nickel Company played a role in competition with Germany’s I.G. Farben (10).  In the Second World War, Evans’s work bore fruit when the Company’s Frood Mine, the ore field that had led the two to merge, produced 40% of the nickel used in artillery by the Allies. Through the course of the war, the Company provided more than 1.5 billion pounds of nickel, 1.75 billion pounds of copper, and more than 1.8 million ounces of platinum metals to the Allied war effort (11).  Its role in providing the necessary copper for the war effort is, I think, best demonstrated by the fact that there was such a short supply that the U.S. Mint limited its use of copper in coin production throughout the war (12).  Back in 1929, Evans achievement, apparently so notable that every obituary felt it should be mentioned, seemed nothing more than a successful business transaction. Ten years later, it proved itself absolutely vital to the Allied war effort. 

Blog by Ewan Lawry 

Footnotes

[1] Calgary Herald cutting, David Owen Evans Papers, Ceredigion Archives, Acc. 1216 ADX/460

[2] Oliver Lyttelton, Viscount Chandos, The Memoirs of Lord Chandos (London, 1962)

[3] Lyttelton, The Memoirs of Lord Chandos, p.149

[4] Lyttelton, The Memoirs of Lord Chandos, p.150

[5] Lyttelton, The Memoirs of Lord Chandos, p.151

[6] T. Maelgwyn Davies, ‘Evans, Sir David Owen (1876-1945), barrister, industrialist and politician’, https://biography.wales/article/s2-EVAN-OWE-1876, accessed 26/4/22

[7] Hansard, https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/people/mr-david-evans/index.html, accessed 26/4/22

[8] Cardiganshire Bye-election 1932 parliamentary election address, https://syllwr.llyfrgell.cymru/5116745#?c=&m=&s=&cv=54&manifest=https%3A%2F%2Fdamsssl.llgc.org.uk%2Fiiif%2F2.0%2F5116745%2Fmanifest.json&xywh=-1301%2C332%2C5782%2C4695, accessed 26/4/22

[9] J. Eloranta, I. Nummela, ‘Finnish nickel as a strategic metal, 1920-1944’, Scandinavian Journal of History, 32:4 (2007), p.325

[10] Eloranta, Nummela, ‘Finnish nickel as a strategic metal’, p.337

[11] Our History, http://www.vale.com/canada/EN/business/mining/nickel/vale-canada/history/Pages/default.aspx#:~:text=1939%E2%80%931945%20%E2%80%93%20International%20Nickel%20delivers%201.5%20billion%20pounds,as%20it%20did%20in%20the%2054%20preceding%20years., accessed 26/4/22

[12] ‘A Penny for Your Thoughts’, http://www.nww2m.com/tag/copper/, accessed 26/4/22

 

From "Refugees" to "Enemy Aliens" ~ Part Six

  Germans, Austrians and Czechs at Pantgwyn and in the Domestic Services in Aberystwyth and the surrounding areas during the Second World Wa...