Event    From /4/1943  To /4/1943

Operation Mincemeat

Categories: Armed Forces, Espionage

Operation Mincemeat was a successful WW2 British deception operation to disguise the 1943 Allied invasion of Sicily. British intelligence obtained an unwanted body and took it to Hackney Mortuary where it was dressed as an officer of the Royal Marines and given personal items identifying him as the fictitious Captain (Acting Major) William Martin. Also placed on the body was correspondence between two British generals which suggested that the Allies planned to invade Greece and Sardinia, while pretending to invade Sicily.

The body was taken to Scotland and then by submarine close to the coast of southern Spain and released into the sea. It was picked up by a Spanish fisherman who took it to the authorities and the documents were shared  with the Germans. Result: German reinforcements were shifted to Greece and Sardinia, leaving Sicily relatively unprotected, meaning there were fewer casualties when the Allies landed in July 1943.

The pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury advised on what state the body should be in to be convincing as the victim of an air crash and/or drowning and having spent some time in the sea.

This image from the National WW2 museum in New Orleans shows some of the ‘pocket litter’ that was "created for Martin – various bits and bobs that would go inside the man’s jacket and wallet that would add flavour to his story and help convince the Spanish and the Germans that he was a real man."

The Operation was, at least in part, based on a idea of Ian Fleming's.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Operation Mincemeat

Commemorated ati

Hester Leggatt

A musical comedy 'Operation Mincemeat' with a plot based on the WW2 Operation...

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Operation Mincemeat

The Biblical quotation draws attention to the secrecy which was essential to ...

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Other Subjects

British Navy, officers & men who lost lives in submarines, WW1&2

British Navy, officers & men who lost lives in submarines, WW1&2

The British Navy is known as the Senior Service because it is the oldest of the British armed services (not because it was named after the cigarettes).

Group, Armed Forces

1 memorial
Lieutenant General William Strode

Lieutenant General William Strode

Buried at Westminster Abbey where his monument reads: "Near this place lye the remains of William Strode Esq. Lieutenant General of His Majestys forces and Colonel of the LXII Regiment of Foot. He ...

Person, Armed Forces

1 memorial
D. P. Moore

D. P. Moore

J. Lyons & Co. Ltd. staff member who died in WW2.

Person, Armed Forces

War dead, WW2
1 memorial
Pioneer George Jerome Dickson

Pioneer George Jerome Dickson

George Jerome Dickson was born in 1894 in Battersea, London, the son of Jerome Dickson (1873-1954) and Sarah Ann Dickson née Sawyer (1867-1902). His birth was registered in the 3rd quarter of 1894 ...

Person, Armed Forces, France

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
George Thomas Dorrell, VC, MBE

George Thomas Dorrell, VC, MBE

Soldier. Born George Thomas Dorrell in Paddington. Wikipedia informs that he joined the army at the age of fifteen and first served in the Second Boer War. On 1st September 1914, at Néry, France, d...

Person, Armed Forces, Belgium, France, India, South Africa

War served, WW1
3 memorials