Simkins, Anthony

Summary

Anthony Simkins was captured near Derna, in Libya, by the Germans, then handed over to the Italians. After being taken to Sulmona, Abruzzo, he was transferred to Montalbo, south of Milan, and then in spring 1943 to Fontanellato, near Parma. On 8 September, following the Italian surrender, he escaped in the exit organised by the Italian commandant.

Simkins left as part of a group of four, initially aiming west towards the Ligurian coast, and in the first few days was generously sheltered by the Boriani family. He then set off south with Captain Philip Morris-Keating, also of the Rifle Brigade. After passing through Lombardy, Liguria and Tuscany, they went through Perugia, in Umbria, and the outskirts of L’Aquila. Near Rocassaro, south of Sulmona, they were recaptured after asking directions from men repairing a roof, who turned out to be German soldiers. They were initially imprisoned at Frosinone before being taken to Germany.


The full story follows, in two versions. The version in the first window below is the original scanned version of the story. In the second window below is the transcribed version in plain text.

[Digital page 1]

Anthony Simkins was captured near Derna in May 1941. After Sulmona and Montalbo he was moved to Fontanellato and so joined the general exit from there organised by Col. de Burgh and the Italian commandant – who was deported to Germany for so doing and died shortly after his return. Simkins was, like many others, attracted to possible landings around Genoa and set off in a party of four. The Boriani family gave them generous but dangerous help and hospitality.

However, Simkins and Philip Morris-Keating decided to set off on their own, first encountering the passes at Futa and Giogo – later to be part of the German’s Gothic Line. One night they slept in the Franciscan monastery at La Verna, near Bibbione. Some hundreds of kilometres later they found the road and river crossing near L’Aquila hard going. Finally they reached the area of the front line near Roccaraso and asked their way from men repairing a farmhouse roof. They were German soldiers. After a bitterly cold drive in an open truck they were imprisoned at Frosinone. A fellow prisoner was awaiting a priest. He was an Italian officer about to be shot. (The Italians paid dearly for Mussolini joining Hitler’s war and they paid dearly for getting out – and often for their humanity in helping Allied POWs.)

Anthony Simkins was another who generously remembered the Monte San Martino Trust in his will.

[Digital page 2]

Captain C.A.G. (Anthony) Simkins (1912-2003) served during the second world war with the Battalion, Rifle Brigade. He was captured by the Germans near Derna in Libya in May 1941, handed over to the Italians and taken first to a prisoner of war camp at Sulmona in the Abruzzo. In May 1942 he was transferred to Montalbo, north [south] of Milan, and in spring 1943 to Fontanellato, near Parma.

The following memoir of his walk down Italy following the Italian surrender in September 1943 was written in 1983.

Upon recapture, he was taken to Germany and the Czechoslovak Protectorate and was eventually liberated from a camp near Brunswick in April 1945.

Upon his return to Britain, Anthony – who had been called to the Bar before the war – joined MI5, the security service, eventually becoming deputy director-general. He was married, with a daughter and two sons. He lived at Guildford, Surrey.

Curiously, I have no recollection of how or exactly when the news of the Italian surrender on the evening of 8 September 1943 reached us at Fontanellato. I think it must have come from the Italian Commandant, who immediately withdrew the guards and allowed us to evacuate the camp the same night. No doubt he acted on the orders of the Italian General Staff in accordance with the terms of the surrender. They cost him dear as the Germans arrested him when they arrived to take over the camp and he was sent to Poland, returning at the end of the war in broken health. Not unnaturally the Germans regarded the Italians as traitors.

We remained near the camp, more or less concealed, for twenty four hours. Obviously this could not continue, and we were ordered to disperse and find our way home. We now had to decide whether to go north and try to get into Switzerland, which was the nearest haven (where we would be interned) or south to meet the Allied forces, or to wait for other landings. For example in the Gulf of Genoa, which might be conveniently close. Four of us set off together. We were anxious to get well away from Fontanellato, and the well populated Po valley, and decided to move in the direction of Genoa. I think we spent at least one night in the open, and I cannot remember how we chose the first place where we asked for help. But the choice proved most fortunate. It belonged to a substantial yeoman fanner. Signor Borioni, aged probably in his sixties, with a grown up family, some of whom were living there. I think there was a son in law (not present) who was an Army officer. We were made extremely welcome. The atmosphere at that time was euphoric. The Italians hated the war and the Germans, and encouraged by the Allied radio propaganda believed that liberation was really at hand. This family was amazingly kind, a foretaste of what we were to encounter all through our journey. They fed us generously, gave us beds, and fitted us out in civilian clothes so that we could move about less

[Digital page 3]

conspicuously. (We kept our uniforms in case we might need them). All that our hosts wanted in return and this was to prove universally true, was to find out as much as they could about us and our families, and to talk about their own relations in the Services, or abroad as emigrants. Photographs of wives and children were valuable currency. I was able to speak a bit of Italian and became interpreter for the party. I think we stayed  two days in this hospitable refuge. We left in the evening, the head of the family accompanied us a little way and gave us his blessing as he turned for home.

We left behind some regimental souvenirs, and a note saying that we had been most generously helped and asking that our hosts be compensated by the Allied forces.

I have no clear recollection of the next two or three days. We were walking west-north-west in very rugged, sparsely populated country, in no particular hurry, hoping to hear that the Allies had landed in the neighbourhood of Genoa. The weather was hot. The grapes were ripening.

I remember washing and shaving in a mountain stream. The allied communiqués which we heard were now much less optimistic – in fact the battle at Salerno had been touch and go – and another landing looking increasingly unlikely. We debated what to do. The smaller the party the easier it would be to find food and shelter, and we agreed to split up into pairs. I joined up with Philip Morris-Keating of the Rifle Brigade. I think we were then in the neighbourhood of Nibbiano.

It would be difficult after the passage of forty years to give a detailed account of our journey over the next seven weeks which, allowing for the inevitable diversions caused by the lie of the land and the difficulties of finding the way using a small school map of Italy, must have covered many miles. Uncertain of the extent of German control, and of how far Fascist authority had been restored in German-occupied Italy, we decided, with perhaps exaggerated caution, to stay as much as possible in the mountains and well away from all towns. This meant that nearly all the route was extremely rugged and arduous, the more so as we were crossing the grain of the Apennines. Boots took a tremendous pasting and repairs caused anxiety. Fortunately we managed to get them competently done a couple of times. In my memory the weather was always fine and hot. I suppose there must have been wet days, but apart from one near Sansepolcro, I have no recollection of them. I believe that the summer and autumn of 1943 were in fact very fine. They were followed by an exceptionally severe winter.

So far as meeting Germans was concerned, road and river crossings, and bottlenecks such as that at L’Aquila near the end of our journey, presented the principal danger and we approached them with great care. We

[Digital page 4]

did not know, of course, that our route between Pievepelago and Sansepolcro, via the Futa and Giogo passes, closely approximated to the famous Gothic Line where the great battles of the autumn of 1944 were to be fought.

I know now that the Germans had already begun to reconnoitre the position: however we did not encounter them. For food and lodging we depended entirely on the inhabitants who never failed us. Towards evening we would look for a farm, more properly perhaps a small holding, and the more isolated the better. If we had to enter a village we would probably call first on the priest, who would tell us where to go. Generally we would approach someone in the fields, or knock on a door, and I would explain that we were going south to meet the Allies. Could we have shelter for the night and something to eat? The answer seems to have been almost invariably Yes. There were certainly very few refusals.

The people who helped us were often very poor, particularly in the early stages of our journey. We would sleep in a hay loft if we were lucky, or a cow shed if we were not. Food might be chestnut polenta, bread and cheese. There was nearly always some rough wine. Where the country was more prosperous we would be given pasta rather than polenta. Sometimes we had treats such as eggs, or even chicken. One old lady made us cannelloni of which she was rightly proud. Two of three times, the last time somewhere in Perugia, we found ourselves in prosperous circumstances and were given beds. Poor or better off, our hosts invariably gave us something on which to start the day (I remember breakfasting on walnuts and wine) and often food to take with us.

All these people were taking considerable risks. The Germans had threatened dire penalties and were known to be ruthless. Even if the Germans were not close at hand there was the possibility of betrayal by a Fascist sympathiser, few as these appeared to be by now. Our hosts acted out of the goodness of their hearts and the charity which their religion had taught them. (It is right to pay tribute to the efforts made by the Church in Italy, led by the often maligned Pope Pius, to look after prisoners).

Ail that we could give in return for the help so generously offered was to sing for our suppers:  to talk about our homes and families, to show our photographs, to look at theirs and to listen to their stories of sons and brothers in the forces who were often prisoners themselves, and of the relations in America who were mentioned so frequently: and finally, on leaving, to give them a note to show the Allied forces when they arrived. Where hospitality had been particularly warm we looked for a souvenir, such as a regimental button. I gave the badge off my side-cap on almost our

[Digital page 5]

last night of freedom. Talking did not prove too much of a problem for me. My Italian, though ungrammatical, was intelligible and improved as my confidence and vocabulary grew. It was very interesting to note the changes of dialect as we passed from Lombardy into Liguria, Tuscany, Umbria and the Abruzzi. Perugia, in Umbria, was the most prosperous area and also the easiest walking.

During this long journey one day was much like another except in the severity of the ground and the distance we accomplished. There is hardly any incident that sticks in my memory except for a sudden encounter, probably early on, with two very smart Alpini who were travelling north.

We met face to face, to our mutual surprise, on a mountain path. We heard rumours of partisan bands but never met any. I was not keen to go looking for them.

Every night was different, but more or less conformed to a pattern, apart from one that was spent at the Franciscan monastery of La Verna near Bibbiena. Many years later I returned and my memories of the two visits are probably muddled. I remember signing the visitors’ book on the first occasion, but when I looked for our names on the second visit I could not find them, I presume they had been removed very wisely.

The food seemed very good on the first visit and deplorable on the second. The contrast is easily explained. We certainly slept in monks’ cells both times. I think that on our first visit we were taken after supper to a rather grand house nearby, where we met an extremely smart Italian lady and an officer, who may have been her husband or her lover. They must have thought us pretty uncouth in our borrowed and battered clothes.

We made very good speed through Perugia and, after a rather nerve-wracking passage round the outskirts of L’Aquila, headed for Sulmona. I am not sure whether we actually saw it. The walking during this last stage was again extremely arduous, but we were of course very fit. It was also November and turning very cold. I think we spent what was to be our last night of freedom (probably 9-10 November) near Roccaraso, or it may have been Pescasseroli.

We were getting close to the fighting, and decided to put on uniform again as a precaution against being shot out of hand as partisans or spies. We strode on full of confidence that we were going to get through.

There were German tanks moving along the road in the valley below us. A little later we saw a farmhouse with men working on the roof and decided to ask them for information. We went up close and I called out in Italian: the men looked up, saw our uniforms, and seized their rifles. They were

[Digital page 6]

Germans and called on us to surrender. Totally taken aback we did so – a feeble and humiliating end.

The Germans treated us with absolute propriety, but in the barn where we were held under guard for two or three days we met another prisoner in a much worse case. He was an Italian officer, who had been captured in civilian clothes trying to get home. He had been court-martialled and sentenced to death, had appealed to Field Marshal Kesselring, the German Commander in Chief, and was awaiting the result. He put a very brave face on it, talked cheerfully and played cards. Kesselring’s decision was not known by the time we were taken away. I fear it was most probably adverse: when we arrived at Frosinone, after a bitterly cold drive in an open track, we had a glimpse of another brave Italian officer, this time in uniform, with a priest who had come to hear his confession before he was taken away and shot.

After the Italian surrender my wife, Sylvia, had to wait many weeks for news of me, only to hear at last that I was a prisoner in Germany.

[Digital Page 7]

[Handwritten Note from Maurice to Keith Killby]

Keith

I thought this might interest you. I do not remember him at Fontanellato because we were only there about 3 months and we tended to keep in touch with those with whom we had been previously. In my case Capua PC66 & Rezzanello PG17.

John Langrishe knew him quite well but could not get him interested in the lunches.

Strange to say, when Binks Forster and I rejoined our regiment in Burma in 1944 we met a Brian Buck who later, after the war, lived nearby to me in West Byfleet. Brian Buck’s wife was Anthony Simkins sister.

All good wishes to you for the year ahead,

Maurice

[In the original file at this point is an obituary from the Daily Telegraph for Anthony Simkins. It could not be published for copyright reasons. If you wish to consult the original please contact the Trust.]

[Digital page 8]

[Handwritten note Allied Screening Letter by Anthony Simkins giving a statement about the help the Leonardi Family had given him.]

To: Officer Commanding Allied Troops in the district of PARMA.
The family LEONARDI [1 word obscured] have helped us most generously with food and shelter in spite of the danger of reprisals by the Germans. We have therefore the honour to request that they should be given every assistance and protection they may require.
21st September 1943
A. Simkins, Captain, The Rifle Brigade, No 88592
Morris Keating, Capt, The Rifle Brigade, No 56634.

Connect with us via Facebook or email - [email protected]