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  • U.K
    Friday Sep 29, 1939

    The deception paper used by the British

    U.K
    Friday Sep 29, 1939

    On 29 September 1939, soon after the start of the Second World War, Rear Admiral John Godfrey, the Director of Naval Intelligence, circulated the Trout memo, a paper that compared the deception of an enemy in wartime to fly fishing.




  • Egypt
    Aug, 1942

    Battle of Alam el Halfa

    Egypt
    Aug, 1942

    In August 1942, before the Battle of Alam el Halfa, a corpse was placed in a blown-up scout car, in a minefield facing the German 90th Light Division. On the corpse was a map purportedly showing the locations of British minefields; the Germans used the map, and their tanks were routed to areas of soft sand where they bogged down.




  • Cádiz, Spain
    Sep, 1942

    An aircraft flying Britain crashed

    Cádiz, Spain
    Sep, 1942

    In September 1942 an aircraft flying from Britain to Gibraltar crashed off Cádiz. All aboard were killed, including Paymaster-Lieutenant James Hadden Turner – a courier carrying top secret documents – and a French agent.




  • North African
    Dec, 1942

    Britain plan to invade France

    North African
    Dec, 1942

    In late 1942, with the Allied success in the North African campaign, military planners turned their attention to the next target. British planners considered that an invasion of France from Britain could not take place until 1944 and the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, wanted to use the Allied forces from North Africa to attack Europe's "soft underbelly".




  • Casablanca-Settat, Morocco
    1943

    Casablanca Conference

    Casablanca-Settat, Morocco
    1943

    At the Casablanca Conference in January 1943, Allied planners agreed on the selection of Sicily – codenamed Operation Husky – and decided to undertake the invasion no later than July. There was concern among the Allied planners that Sicily was an obvious choice – Churchill is reputed to have said "Everyone but a bloody fool would know that it's Sicily"– and that the build-up of resources for the invasion would be detected.




  • Spain
    Thursday Jan 28, 1943

    A suitable body to carry out the plan

    Spain
    Thursday Jan 28, 1943

    On 28 January 1943 Bentley Purchase contacted Montagu with the news he had located a suitable body, probably that of Glyndwr Michael, a tramp who died from eating rat poison that contained phosphorus.




  • U.k
    Thursday Feb 4, 1943

    Montagu and Cholmondeley filed a plan with the Twenty Committee

    U.k
    Thursday Feb 4, 1943

    Montagu selected the code name Mincemeat from a list of centrally held available possibilities. On 4 February 1943 Montagu and Cholmondeley filed their plan for the operation with the Twenty Committee; it was a re-working of Cholmondeley's Trojan Horse plan.


  • U.K
    Tuesday Apr 13, 1943

    The committee articulated that Operation Mincemeat must be complete

    U.K
    Tuesday Apr 13, 1943

    On 13 April 1943 the committee of the Chiefs of Staff met and agreed that they thought the plan should proceed. The committee informed Colonel John Bevan – the head of London Controlling Section, which controlled the planning and co-ordination of deception operations – that he needed to obtain final approval from Churchill.


  • U.K
    Saturday Apr 17, 1943

    Solving the problem of freezing Michael's corpse feet

    U.K
    Saturday Apr 17, 1943

    In the early hours of 17 April 1943 the corpse of Michael was dressed as Martin, although there was one last-minute hitch: the feet had . Purchase, Montagu and Cholmondeley could not put the boots on, so an electric heater was located and the feet defrosted enough to put the boots on properly. The pocket litter was placed on the body, and the briefcase attached.


  • Huelva, Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943

    Execution of the operation

    Huelva, Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943
    04:15:00 AM

    Seraph set sail and arrived just off the coast of Huelva on 29 April after having been bombed twice en route. After spending the day reconnoitring the coastline, at 4:15 am on 30 April, Seraph surfaced. Jewell had the canister brought up on deck, then sent all his crew below except the officers.


  • Huelva, Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943

    A local fisherman found the body of "Major Martin"

    Huelva, Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943
    09:30:20 AM

    The body of "Major Martin" was found at around 9:30 am on 30 April 1943 by a local fisherman; it was taken to Huelva by Spanish soldiers, where it was handed over to a naval judge. Haselden, as vice-consul, was officially informed by the Spaniards; he reported back to the Admiralty that the body and briefcase had been found.


  • Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943

    Martin's body pushed into the sea

    Spain
    Friday Apr 30, 1943

    On 30 April 1943, Lt. Norman Jewell, captain of the submarine HMS Seraph, read the 39th Psalm, and Martin's body was gently pushed into the sea where the tide, aided by the push of the submarine's propellers, would bring it ashore off Huelva on the Spanish Atlantic coast.


  • Spain
    May, 1943

    Verify the identity of the dead body

    Spain
    May, 1943

    At midday on 1 May an autopsy was undertaken on Michael's body; Haselden was present and – in order to minimise the possibilities that the two Spanish doctors identified that the body was a three-month-old corpse – Haselden asked if, in the heat of the day and smell of the corpse, the doctors should bring the post mortem to a close and have lunch.


  • San Fernando, Cádiz, Spain
    Wednesday May 5, 1943

    The briefcase send to Madrid

    San Fernando, Cádiz, Spain
    Wednesday May 5, 1943

    On 5 May, the briefcase was passed to the naval headquarters at San Fernando near Cadiz, for forwarding to Madrid.


  • Spain
    Tuesday May 11, 1943

    Spanish authorities returned the briefcase to Haselden

    Spain
    Tuesday May 11, 1943

    On 11 May the briefcase, complete with the documents, was returned to Haselden by the Spanish authorities; he forwarded it to London in the diplomatic bag.


  • Germany
    Friday May 14, 1943

    German reaction after the information about the briefcase

    Germany
    Friday May 14, 1943

    On 14 May 1943 Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz met Hitler to discuss Dönitz's recent visit to Italy, his meeting with the Italian leader Benito Mussolini and the progress of the war.


  • Berlin, Germany
    Friday Jul 9, 1943

    Hitler realized the mistake too late

    Berlin, Germany
    Friday Jul 9, 1943

    On 9 July the Allies invaded Sicily in Operation Husky. German signals intercepted by GC&CS showed that even four hours after the invasion of Sicily began, twenty-one aircraft left Sicily to reinforce Sardinia. For a considerable time after the initial invasion, Hitler was still convinced that an attack on the Balkans was imminent, and in late July he sent General Erwin Rommel to Salonika to prepare the defence of the region. By the time the German high command realised the mistake, it was too late to make a difference.


  • Sicily, Italy
    Sunday Jul 25, 1943

    Mussolini was imprisoned

    Sicily, Italy
    Sunday Jul 25, 1943

    On 25 July 1943, as the battle for Sicily went against the Axis forces, the Italian Grand Council of Fascism voted to limit the power of Mussolini, and handed control of the Italian armed forces over to King Victor Emmanuel III. The following day Mussolini met the King, who dismissed him as prime minister; the former dictator was then imprisoned. A new Italian government took power and began secret negotiations with the Allies.


  • U.K
    1944

    Montagu was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire

    U.K
    1944

    Montagu was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1944 for his part in Operation Mincemeat; for masterminding the plan, Cholmondeley was appointed a Member of the Order in 1948.


  • U.K
    Friday Apr 22, 2022

    Operation Mincemeat (film)

    U.K
    Friday Apr 22, 2022

    Operation Mincemeat is a 2021 British war drama film directed by John Madden. It is based upon Ben Macintyre's book on the British Operation Mincemeat during the Second World War. The film stars Colin Firth, Kelly Macdonald, Matthew Macfadyen, Penelope Wilton, Johnny Flynn, and Jason Isaacs. This marks Paul Ritter’s final film appearance following his death and was dedicated to his memory. Production companies were Film Nation Entertainment and Cross City Films and See-Saw Films and Cohen Media Group and Archery Films.


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