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Vigo Militaria and Collectables

WW2 SOE/Resistance Bolt with concealed pencil and message paper. Includes wartime message!

Regular price £195.00 GBP
Regular price Sale price £195.00 GBP
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Here we have a super rare SOE/Resistance bolt. 
The head of the bolt unscrews to reveal a small pencil and message paper. There is a wartime message written on the paper. See pictures.

Operating in plain sight, the bolt would have either been passed between operatives, or resistance members who worked in factories in occupied countries, or screwed into a machine by an agent and removed by a second agent who would act on the message.

The bolt is in excellent condition and measures 5cm x 2cm.

A super rare WW2 item from the British SOE or Resistance.

USA, Canada and overseas customers please email vigomilitaria@gmail.com before trying to purchase.

Setting Europe Ablaze.

In June 1940, a new volunteer force - the Special Operations Executive (SOE) - was set up to wage a secret war. Its agents were mainly tasked with sabotage and subversion behind enemy lines. They had an influential supporter in Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who famously ordered them to 'set Europe ablaze!'

SOE's director of operations was Commando officer Brigadier Colin Gubbins whose interest in irregular warfare originated from his service during the Irish War of Independence (1919-21). Gubbins had also been involved in planning to establish a sabotage force to work behind the lines during any German invasion of Britain.

Gubbins’s approach to warfare included blowing up trains, bridges and factories, as well as fostering revolt and guerrilla warfare in enemy-occupied countries.

After completing a gruelling training regime, SOE agents were parachuted into occupied Europe and the Far East to work with resistance movements. Many were serving soldiers, often with Commando training, but others joined directly from civilian life.

Women also joined up. Some were enlisted in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) to disguise their secret work. These were the only women permitted a combat role during the Second World War.