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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nancy_WakeNancy Wake - Wikipedia

    Nancy Grace Augusta Wake, AC, GM (30 August 1912 – 7 August 2011), also known as Madame Fiocca and Nancy Fiocca, was a nurse and journalist who joined the French Resistance and later the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during World War II, and briefly pursued a post-war career as an intelligence officer in the Air Ministry.

    • Lily Johnson
    • She was born in New Zealand in 1912. Born in Wellington, New Zealand in 1912, Nancy Wake was the youngest of the six children of Charles and Ella Wake.
    • She worked as a journalist in Europe as a young woman. At the age of 16, Nancy ran away from home and worked as a nurse, before leaving Australia and journeying to New York City.
    • She married a wealthy man and became a socialite. In 1937, Wake met and fell in love with wealthy French industrialist Henri Edmond Fiocca. They were married on 30 November 1939 and settled in Marseilles, becoming notable members of the city’s wealthy social circles.
    • She joined the French Resistance. After witnessing the senseless violence of Hitler’s regime in Europe, Nancy resolved to join the Resistance movement in France soon after it was invaded.
  2. Nancy Wake was the Allies' most decorated servicewoman of the Second World War. At the outbreak of war she was an attractive young woman, married to a wealthy Frenchman in Marseilles, but...

  3. Nancy Wake (1912–2011) was an agent for the Special Operations Executive and the most wanted woman in France during the Second World War. Dubbed the 'White Mouse' by the Nazis, she was the one...

  4. Nancy Wake, a French Resistance hero of World War II, in 2004. Adam Butler/Associated Press. She once described herself — as a young woman — as someone who loved nothing more than “a good...

  5. Feb 7, 2018 · Trained in hand-to-hand combat, espionage, sabotage, and able to drink almost all of her male counterparts under the table, Nancy Wake was known as one of the most fearsome French Resistance fighters during World War II.

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  7. Mar 21, 2018 · Though the war drew to a close not long after the Allied Forces liberated France, Wake didn’t give up her wartime efforts to return to a quiet civilian life. Instead, the incredible secret agent stayed with the SOE, leaving France to work within the Intelligence Department at the British Air Ministry.

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