Neill Storey (UBHS and RhArmy) Writes:-
Have been meaning to send you the attached (copy of newspaper 
   cutting) for a while - unfortunately cannot lay my hands on my copy 
   which would have noted the date it appeared in the Telegraph - 
   apparently April 96. 
   
   Have to say we were gob smacked having grown up with his younger 
   children Grania and Terry we had no idea of his wartime exploits and 
   I dont believe anyone else in Umtali did either.
In true SAS fashion he kept very quiet. You and brother Peter must 
   be of elder brother Tim's vintage ( ish ) and sadly I cannot recall 
   the name of the other older brother.
   Sadly their mother Mary died last week here in England.
MAJOR MILES MacDERMOT, who has died aged 75, was awarded an MC in 
   North Africa in 1941, and the next year joined the newly created 
   SAS, when it was destroying Axis aircraft and other targets on 
   airfields deep in enemy-held territory.
In 1943 he was taken prisoner in company with David Stirling, the 
   founder of the SAS; the two men escaped, but both were recaptured. 
   MacDermot made three more escape attempts, the last of which 
   succeeded.
After leaving the Army in 1949, he served for 25 years in the 
   Internal Affairs Department of Southern Rhodesia, later Zimbabwe.
Miles Hugh Charles MacDermot, the son of a planter, was born on June 
   4 1920 in Taiping, Malaya. He was educated at Downside.
In 1939 he was commissioned into the Royal Artillery, and in 1941 he 
   saw action in Syria, where the pro-Vichy government hadallowed the 
   Germans to establish air-bases at Damascus, Palmyra and Rayak.
A mixed force or British and Free French was dispatched lo put Syria 
   under Free French control. This was achieved after an arduous 
   five-week campaign, which witnessed the last horsed cavalry charge 
   by a unit of the British Army.
MacDermot then moved on to North Africa where he was awarded an MC 
   the following November. The citation recorded that "OnNovember 25, 
   near Sidi Omar, this officer's troop of Light Anti-Aircraft Guns was 
   sited in protection of a Field Battery when it was attacked by 28 tanks.
"A very fierce engagement ensued lasting three quarters of an hour 
   during which enemy and machine gun fire was intense. Lt MacDermot 
   set a splendid example to his men, moving to each of the guns and 
   endeavouring to get the damaged ones in action again. The efforts of his troop contributed in no small way to the 
   defeat of the attacks."
The SAS had by then been created by David Stirling, with the object 
   of destroyingon the ground German aircraft which were too fast and numerous for the Desert Air Force to shoot down.
In order to reach their targets, the SAS soon abandoned the idea of 
   parachuting into areas behind the enemy lines. Instead they relied 
   on the expertise of the Long Range Desert Group, a reconnaissance 
   unit, to assist them to reach their targets, and sometimes to help 
   to extricate them when SAS vehicles had been badly damaged in raids.
Col RB Mayne, who had been with the SAS from the beginning (and won 
   four DSOs) wrote to MacDermot's father, "Miles joined my Squadron in 
   September last and he wasn't very long with us before I made him a 
   Captain; he was good. The first job he did with us was to blow out a 
   railway line between Matuib and Tobruk, and not content with that he 
   captured a post with 16 Italians and four machine guns, which was 
   guarding a siding, blew the siding to pieces and then chased and 
   caught a German truck and burnt it. He had five men with him. He was 
   continually operating from then until he was caught. Last time he 
   was with our CO, David Stirling, when they were motoring through to 
   contact 1st Army, they were caught somewhere near Gabes."
By late 1943 the Germans, who had by then lost 350 aircraft and much 
   else destroyed by the SAS, had imported a special regiment to 
   counter them. By this time the operational area was much smaller, 
   but the SAS managed to mine the Sfax- Gabe's railway line and 
   destroy a number of trucks.
MacDermot and Stirling moved by night and slept by day; they were 
   discovered accidentally by 500 Germans who were on a cordon and 
   search exercise at the time. Both men managed to escape the next 
   night, but were betrayed by Arabs who had been offered a large 
   reward by the Germans.
Stirling also made four attempts to escape, but at 6 ft 5in he was 
   too conspicuous to avoid capture for long, and was eventually 
   interned in Colditz. After MacDermot's third escape he, too, was 
   threatened with Colditz, but he escaped yet again during a forced 
   march of Allied prisoners to Czechoslovakia.
To reach safety he took shelter in a forest during a battle until 
   American infantry rolled over his position. He was repatriated and 
   was en route to the Far East when the war ended with the Japanese 
   surrender.
Back in England, he served with the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire 
   Regiment and was briefly adjutant with the Oxford University 
   Officers' Training Corps.
In 1947 MacDermot was posted to Palestine, in Military Intelligence, 
   and had a narrow escape when the Officers Mess of the Intelligence 
   Unit was blown up by a Zionist saboteur. MacDermot was in a field 
   hospital at the time, having broken his legplaying hockey the 
   previous day.
In 1949 he left the Army and moved to Tanganyika to join an old 
   friend in a fish-farming venture. This ended in disaster, the local 
   crocodiles thrived on the abundance of fish; nets and dams were 
   destroyed by hippo.
MacDermot then tried growing sugar in Natal, and in 1959 joined the 
   Internal Affairs Department of the Government of Southern Rhodesia, 
   at Umtali.
During the next 25 years in Rhodesia and Zimbabwe he made long trips 
   into the Tribal Trust Lands, promoting agricultural conservation and 
   encouraging peasant farmers to adopt modern husbandry methods. 
   Later, he served on the Agricultural Advisory 
Committee in Zimbabwe.
Miles MacDermot married, in 1951, Mary Gordon- Creed, who survives 
   him; they had three sons and a daughter.
End 
Jeepers - what a man! Special thanks to Neill for sharing this 
   information with ORAFs.
Thanks also to the "Telegraph" for the use of their material.
Comments are welcome - does anyone remember the family in Umtali? 
   Send comments to Eddy Norris at 
   orafs11@gmail.com
If anyone would like a scanned image of the newspaper cutting then 
   please simply let Eddy know at 
   orafs11@gmail.com
Ref. Rhodesia
Labels: Miles  MacDermot