Piping Press

Remembering the Heroes of St Valery – On This Day in 1940

Eighty years ago today, at St Valery-en-Caux, France, men of the 20,000 strong 51st Highland Division surrendered to German forces under the command of Major General Erwin Rommel. The division had fought almost continuously for ten days against overwhelming odds. Exhausted and out of ammunition, they were surrounded by vastly superior forces. Rescue by sea from the coastal town proved impossible.

The Division’s valiant effort bought time for the British Expeditionary Force and contributed to the success of the evacuation at Dunkirk. The captured soldiers were marched from St Valery into Germany or Poland where most remained until liberation in 1945.

By Cailean Maclean

Pipes and weapons had to be abandoned and during the march the soldiers relied on locals to feed them during days of exhaustion and privation when they had to sleep by the roadside in all weathers.

Famous pipers caught up in the debacle were William MacDonald, Inverness, P/M Donald MacLeod, Lewis, who escaped and returned to fight at the front once more, P/M Donald Maclean, Lewis, the composer of the tune the Heroes of St Valery, John Wilson, Edinburgh & Toronto, Ian Lawrie, the son of William Lawrie (Ballachulish) and George MacIntyre, Campbeltown, the noted composer.

While in captivity the PoWs were provided with a newspaper which was published in Berlin by the Nazi authorities. Some of these papers were brought back to Scotland by returning PoWs and I have fallen heir to a few copies. Actually, I had a lot more of them but gave some to the Highlanders’ Museum at Fort George and to archives locally.

The masthead below is of the edition of the paper which probably gave the PoWs their first news of Pearl Harbour:

Inside this issue was a short, light-hearted ditty about piping written by one of the PoWs, WJ Maitland. I notice he asks forgiveness of ‘a Piping Society’. Does that suggest there was one in the camp?

More on St Valery

Donald Maclean (front, centre) and the Seaforths in Aldershot in 1939. To Donald’s immediate right is P/M Donald MacLeod. All of the men in this picture are likely to have been either killed or captured at St Valery
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