The Seaforth News, 1950-08-17, Page 3The Man Who "Doubled"
For Field Marshal Montgomery
Living in a quiet little house on
the South Coast is a sick, middle-
aged actor called Clifton James,
who once stood OO the stage of the
world itself—and played a part that
every actor alive would have ac-
cepted with an excited, thumping
heart.
Clifton James is the Due-Bte lieu-
tenant in the Royal Army Pay
Corps who "doubled" for Field
llarslial Montgomery in the vital
hours before D -Day, he came into
the news again recently when the
Press reported that his application
for a disability run -about chair had
been turned down because he was
not totally disabled, writes Lcouard
Samson in a recent issue of "An-
swers."
wait down to his home at
Worthing to see frim and hear again
the fantastic story of how he hood-
winked the Germans into thinking
that Monty was hi Gibraltar at a
time when he was really standing
on the spring -board of the Euro-
pean invasion,
The orders given to Janies were
probably the most vital and colour-
ful ones ever put before an insig-
nificant subaltern, and 1 wanted to
find out something of the years that
had led up to one of the greatest
deceptions in history,
His First Battle
He was seventeen years old, a
schoolboy, when the First World
War broke out, but he lied about
his age and a few months later
found himself an infantry officer in
the British trenches, just another
shy, frightened boy suddenly flung
into the thick of the Battle of the
Somme.
He doesn't talk much about those
days (although enemy gas may
have contributed to his present ill-
ness) but he did mention one inci-
dent concerning a German soldier
who surrendered with a grenade
clasped in 0116 hand. James woke
up to find an M.O. picking lumps
of metal out of his body. And the
middle finger of his right hand was
missing. That finger was to cause
many a headache in Whitehall
nearly thirty years later,
Two years after the Kaiser sur-
rendered, James was still in hospi-
tal, but a few weeks later he had
recovered sufficiently to try to pick
up the threads of his pre-war life.
"My father had died when I was
one-year old, and my guardian was
no longer responsible for rise, so
I was pretty well alone," he told
use. "I decided to become an actor.
It wasn't easy, but I gradually be-
gan to snake headway,"
There were long tours up and
down Wales with a company that
had fifty plays in its repertoire—a
different play each night; there were
resident companies in England, and
tours of the British Isles, The years
passed, and James became a reli-
able, competent actor. He had a
bad period of unemployment, when
he tried his hand at selling p'anos,
but by the middle thirties he was
making a success of his career.
Then cause the Second World
War.
"I joined the Army again, and
this time I was put in the Royal
Army Pay Corps," he said. "Being
an actor, I organized entertain-
ments and took part in troop
shows,"
One day Clifton James was called
to London from his unit in Leices-
ter to meet Colonel Davit! Niven
and chat abort Army films, But
their conversation was only a pre-
text.
A few minutes after meeting each
other, Niven ushered hint into an-
other room where he was iutro-
duccd to Colonel Lester.
"At least, that's what he called
himself," Ames went on. He asked
me to sign an extract from the
Oficial Secrets Act, and then told
sue that I resembled General Mout-
gouiery so closely that, if I was
witting, I ttiiglit be called upon to
'double' for frim. I was completely
bewildered, but I said immediately
that I'd do it,"
The curtain was about to be rung
up on the greatest role of Clifton
James' career.
General Ivloutgomery himself was
at a secret rendezvous on the South
Coast, ready to watch a full dress
rehearsal of the invasion. It was
also a rehearsal for. James. A. few
days later he had beat "demoted"
to a sergeant of the Intelligence
Corps, and posted to Montgomery's
headquarters so that he could study
the general at close range.
"If I'd Been A Spy"
"When the exercise ended," said
James, "1 travelled back to Lon-
don by train, In the same compart-
ment was a sailor who told me
practically every detail of the inva-
sion rehearsal I had just witnessed.
If I'd been a spy the Germans
would have had the whole set-up.
Fortunately, it was just another lit-
tle incident, Back at the War Office
they told nie that Monty was going
to Scotland on a fishing trip. I was
to go up there and see hint privately
so that I could catch the intona-
tions and pitch of his voice,
"I lead two or three fifteen -min-
ute interviews with hint, when we
would talk about the theatre—he
was deeply interested in it— or
Australia, the country where I was
born. I was terribly nervous, but
by the time I returned to London
I had begun to take on his charac-
ter."
Awkward Questions
On Friday, May- 26th, Lieuten-
ant M. E, Clifton Janies became
General B, L. Montgomery. He
wore the famous beret and uniforms,
whitened his moustache and tem-
ples—and tied a cunningly con-
trived bandage on his right hand in
place of the missing finger,
He drove through the streets of
London to Northolt, and along the
route he returned the salutes and
waves of soldiers and civilians. At
the airport, highranking officers of
the Army and Air Force saw lour
into the plane which was to fly
hien to Gibraltar.
"My 'aide' was a brigadier who
knew Monty intimately. He was
travelling with me to keep at a
distance anyone who might ask
awkward questions; the general's
own relatives, perhaps."
They Saluted
Janies laughed suddenly: "I wish
I could have enjoyed the role I
was playing, but the last words
Colonel Lester said to me were 'Do
your best, James. You've got the
lives of two divisions on your shoul-
ders.' I was terrified that I would
make that one little slip that would
give the game away."
As the plane approached Gibral-
tar, James prepared himself for thc
scene that he had rehearsed so
many tines back in London. He
stepped out of the aircraft and re-
turned the salutes of the officers
standing at attention to greet him,
"I was driven to Government
House," Janies continued, "to meet
Sir Ralph Eastwood, the Governor
of Gibraltar.
"He and Monty were very old
friends so, of course, he knew all
about the plan. \Ve wandered into
the garden together and went
through a pre -arranged conversa-
tion. While we were talking, two
Bucs Change Hands—Topa Johnson (left) and John Galbraith,
new heads of the Pittsburgh Pirates, drop clown to Forbes
Field in Pittsburgh for a look-see. Galbraith will be president
and Johnson secretary -treasurer. Prank McKinney sold out his
interest in the National League's cellar team.
Tanks Are Coming—Light tanks of the First Marine Division are loaded aboard an LSU in
San Diego, Calif, The tanks are part of the equipment of the Kbrea-bound Leatherneck's.
men walked up the path and the
Governor introduced me to them,
Later I was told that one of them
was a Spanish nobleman in the
service of the Germans. It had all
been worked out so that the enemy
would know of my arrival on the
Rock.
"And here's a thrilling sidelight
on the whole thing, One hour after
I arrived Madrid had the news,
That sante night Berlin knew all
about Montgomery's visit to Gi-
braltar, The new reached Berlin
through the most secret channels,
but our own agents hi the German
capital were so well organized that
they were able to pass the informa-
tion back to London almost imme-
diately."
All Over
Front Gibraltar, James flew to
Algiers, and there lie was driven by
one of General Maitland Wilson's
aides to G.H.Q. It was a ride plan-
ned to display himself as Mont-
gomery.
When the car drew to a halt and
he entered the house, the last act
was over. The curtain had rung
down. But there was no applause
from, an appreciative audience. Alt
that remained was for the actor to
sit down quietly, smoke a cigarette,
and remove his costume and make-
up.
A few clays later, after an incon-
spicuous stay in Cairo, Lieutenant
Clifton Janies flew back to England,
The anti -climax reached its lowest
depths when Itis C.O. at Leicester
threatened to put hint on a charge
for being absent without leave. A
call to I10,5 soon cleared matters
up,
"That Fake"
The months dragged by and in
June, 1946, he was demobbed, Still
sworn to secrecy, Janies read an
extract one day in Harry C.
Butcher's book "My Three Years
With Eisenhower," which stated
that someone, with tongue in cheek,
had reported to Montgomery at
SHAEI' (Supreme Headquarters
American ]ixpeditionary Force) that
"the fake Montgomery is swagger-
ing about half drunk in Gibraltar,
smoking mammoth cigars like a
chimney,"
The information had never been
refuted, so James contacted the
War Office and was given permis-
sion by Viscount Montgomery to
tell publicly the true version of his
dramatic flight and impersonation.
PEOPLE ARE READING
THE ATLAS AGAIN - -
A few days ago a lot of people
made the sante old journey to the
bookshelf' to take down the atlas
and loot: up the location of un-
familiar places. This time is was
Seoul, the Kum River and Taiwan.
There may have been a time when
a tutor could be content if he knew
his own country and the towns in
it, but not in the past twenty-five
years. During those years after the
First World War there was many
a journey to the shelf for the maps
of places far away. The first time,
back in 1925, may have been for
pleasant purposes. In those days
maps showed chiefly where for-
eign friends might live or they
mapped the route for a leisurely,
bicycle tour of England and West-
ern Europe. They might e'en have
showed the itineraries of Intourist
journeys to the Soviet Union, in
those days when tourists were wel-
come, in those days when Stalin-
grad vas simply a two-hour stop
in the evening son the boat ride
down the Volga .to Astrakhan. In
thc next years the atlas had•other
uses: to show the exact location
of Locarno and the treaty signers,
and a close study of what was
called the Great Circle route, which
Lindbergh and other pilots were
flying.
In 1932 the atlas became some-
thing else—a means for quickly le -
eating the latest horror. The Far
Eastern section showed just where
the Japanese were landing in their
punitive expeditions on Chinese
soil. Not long after, it was the
maps of Germany and Austria,
with Hitler in power and Dolfuss
dead. Lt 1935 a than had to tuns
to a totally unfamiliar part of the
atlas to search down the strange
places named Addis Ababa, Adowa
and Makale. There was one un-
happy day, apart from wars and
fighting in those years, when the
atlas had to be used to locate Point
Barrow, where Will Rogers had
just died.
The atlas was off the shelf almost
every day after 1937, to fill out the
details in the maps the newspapers
were publishing, They showed Sev- .
ille, Granada, Cordoba and Guer-
nica, the towns of the Spanish
Civil War, They showed the exact
course of the Yangtze, where the
Japanese had hit an American gun-
boat. They showed the route
through Austria along which Hit-
ler's troops were marching. They
located the sinall towns of the
Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia. A
little later they marked the urs -
happy places of Hitler's first blitz
in Western Poland, from Bud -
games and Poznan to Zoppot and
Westerplattc by Danzig,
Soon thereafter a 111511 had .to
turn to the snaps of the coastal
cities of Norway, Berges and
Stavanger, of the roads through
Holland, of tlic English Channel
and particularly of its varying
width at various places, The list
of places searched foe lengthened
and spread wide, from Dunkerque
and Dover to Coventry, Sidi Bar -
rani and Tobruk. Then to another
part of the atlas for Pearl Harbor
and a detailed map of the Bataan
Peninsula, and anyone could be-
come impatient with an atlas for
not showing everything in the
most minute detail, An atlas was
almost a necessity now, if only to
know the distance between a matt
and the danger that could put an
end to all he cared for.
The maps of \Vestcrn Europe,
of the North African coast, of the
Far East, were always open then.
The towns of Western Russia to
the suburbs of Moscow, the routes
through the Ukraine and to the
Volga were searched out on the
appropriate neap, A man's eye
climbed the ladder up the Pacific,
from Darwin in Australia to New
Guinea, Ilougainville, the Solomons.
Later the atlas came off the self
for the maps of the North African
and Italian coasts and then the
towns of Normandy. Then Rema -
gen, the Oder River, and Dongo,
where Mussolini was shot. More
recently it has been the towns of
Indo-China and Burma, of northern
Greece, the deserts of Palestine
and the Bulgarian towns across
from Yugoslavia. And now Korea.
This generation has had to know
he geography, as a matter of life
and death, probably better than
any generation heretofore, To learn
it front an atlas when some new
trouble hits the headlines may be
one way to learn It, but it is a
grim way. Once an atlas used to
be a pleasant book—a book that
merely showed pleasant places to
visit and new seas to sail.
—From The New York Times.
INDAYSCII00I,
LESSON
By Rev, R. Barclay Warren,
B.A., B,D.
Ezra, Interpreter of God's Word
Nehemiah 8:1-4a, 5-6, 8. 10, 18
Golden Text: This day is holy unto
our Lord; neither be ye sorry; for
the joy of the Lord is your strength.
8:101).
Zerubbabel led the first band of
captives from Babylon to Judea in
458 B,C. Seventy-eight years later,
Ezra, a priest and a scribe, returned
to teach the people. In today's les -
on the find the people asking Ezra
to give them the book of the law
of Moses, They made a pulpit, and
Ezra stood on it. He and his thir-
teen helpers "read in the book in
the law of God distinctly, and gave
the sense, and caused them to un-
derstand the reading" This went on
for a week.
It was a time of happiness. They
were happy not merely because they
were hearers of the word, but be-
cause they became doers of the
word. They confessed their sins and
the iniquities of their fathers. Then
they could worship. They made a
covenant with God. They brought
in the tithes and offerings which
had been neglected. They observed
the Sabbath. Nehemiah, the ruler,
took a stern stand against those
who persiscd in doing their work on
the Sabbath and selling their wares.
Likewise the practice of intermar-
rying with the neighboring heathen
was publicly rebuked. That was a
great turning to God.
If only our nation would turn to
God's Word for guidance todayl If
there were more Ezra's whose main
concern was to give the meaning
of God's Word to the people; de-
fense of then' denominational doc-
trinal position being quite second-
ary. A national turning to God's
Word would result in a revival of
righteousness. May it soon comet
He Barbers Royalty
Benedetto Viccari is bald-headed,
but that doesn't worry him. Ile has
made his name looking after other
Pe.
hair,
Anyone can drop into his Iday-
Wfair hairdressing saloon, but his
appointment look reads like Mho's
ho.
'T'hir'ty years ago he came to
London with may a few shillings
in his pocket. 'Today fifty -six-year-
old Mr. Viccari is hairdresser to the
world's kings, princes, diplomats
and celebrities of every proi&'ndon.
After the first world war he was
just one of London's Italian bar-
bers. He, moved from saloon to
saloon. it `'wasnt until :;,e early
thirties, 'wlieit he was appointed to
Claridge's, England's top-ranking
hotel, that he achieved eminence.
Ilis first fatuous client was the
Aga Khan.
Some clients sign his autograph
book, others read it. There is such
a collection of well -know names
scrawled across the pages that the
illegible ones' are almost ignored.
A quick glance reveals the signa-
tures of ex -King Alphonso of Spain
(who would send a Rolls Royce for
Mr. Viccari to visit him to cut his
hair), the Duke of Milford Haven,
Lord Anson, the late Jan Masaryk,
of Czechoslovakia, Sir John Bar-
birolli, Anton Walbrook, Anthony
.Asquith, several Indian princes, and
so many Ministers of the Crown
that the pages read like an imagin-
ary House of Commons roll call
spanning twenty years.
Mr, Viccari is a modest man and
confesses in his Italian accent that
he is bewildered by his own pres-
tige.
"Some people have put it down
to personality," he says, "but that's
too easy an answer. All I know is
that I enjoy hairdressing, it's au
art to me, and every customer is
someone different."
A Precise Haircut
So determined is he to give the
finest haircut possible that he defies
a golden rule and sits down to his
work.
"That way," lie points out, "I
can take my time and make sure
of a precise haircut"
Mr. Viccari will readily chat about
himself, but rarely about his clients,
He knows that, as the confidante
of kings, tact is his greatest asset,
Question hitn further and he re-
plies with a smile: "I'm still a
working man. One day I'll retire—
and maybe write the memoirs of
a barber."
They should be worth reading.
New Chief Of Railway Engin-
eers — Janies P. Shields of
Cleveland, 0., above, is the
new grand chief engineer of
the Brotherhood of I-ocomo-
tive Engineers, Elected at the
]3LE convention, Shields suc-
ceeds Alvanley Johnston, who
was chief executive of the union
for 25 years.
Seventy -One Beds 1 For How Many Reds P— Neighbot's to the
above, on Mantinecock Point, Glen Cove, N. Y., are concerned
bor, Leonid A. lvtorozov, Soviet diplomat at the UN, pians to
recently moved into the mansion. If lie plants ed to use the pro
they say, he's violating zoning laws,
old J. 1'. Morgan mansion,
about what their new neigh.
do frith the 71 folding beds
petty for a summer resort.