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Private Pigeon

The Forgotten Winged Soldiers of the Second World War

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Private Pigeon

Auteur(s): Cyril Marlen
Narrateur(s): John Bowman
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À propos de cet audio

Wars are often remembered for tanks, planes, and generals. Yet, hidden in the background of the Second World War was an unlikely and unsung ally: the humble carrier pigeon. Against all odds, these birds became messengers of life and death, flying through skies thick with smoke and gunfire to deliver scraps of paper that could decide the fate of men, battles, and even nations.

In this deeply researched and vivid account, Cyril Marlen uncovers the astonishing role pigeons played in the most destructive conflict of the twentieth century. Radios could be jammed, batteries failed in freezing cold, and transmissions risked interception. But pigeons, guided only by instinct and loyalty to their home lofts, rose into the air and carried messages across battlefields, seas, and occupied territories. Their journeys were often short, sometimes perilously long, but always fraught with danger from bullets, hawks, storms, and exhaustion.

From the beaches of Dunkirk to the skies above Arnhem, from lifeboats adrift in the Atlantic to clandestine hideouts in occupied France, pigeons delivered more than words on paper—they carried hope. Their service was not quaint or symbolic. It was vital. The British National Pigeon Service mobilised a quarter of a million birds, many donated by fanciers who handed over their best racers to the war effort. American Signal Corps units trained pigeons to fly from jungle outposts and naval ships, while German, Soviet, and Japanese forces relied on them too. The birds became a universal language of war, respected even by enemies who sometimes tried to intercept or shoot them down.

Private Pigeon brings these stories to life through chapters that follow their varied duties. Listeners will discover how pigeons were trained, transported, and deployed under fire; how they supported resistance fighters in occupied Europe by carrying intelligence across borders; and how navies relied on them when radios fell silent at sea. The book also explores the strange countermeasures developed to thwart them—hawks released to intercept, camouflage lofts hidden in barns, and codes miniaturised to fit inside a leg tube no bigger than a thimble.

Some of these birds became legends. Pigeons were awarded the Dickin Medal, the animal equivalent of the Victoria Cross, for flights that saved hundreds of lives. One bird flew through smoke and anti-aircraft fire on D-Day to bring back news of the landing’s success. Another carried an urgent message from a downed aircraft in Burma, arriving just before monsoon rains might have drowned the stranded crew. They were heroes with wings, recognised officially in citations, yet largely forgotten in the grand narratives of the war.

The book also examines the logistics behind the pigeon service: the breeding programmes, the careful diets, the meticulous mapping that relied not on charts but on instinct and the earth’s magnetic pull. It was a form of warfare as old as antiquity, yet as modern as radar and codebreaking in its effectiveness.

When peace finally came, the pigeons were retired, released, or returned to their civilian lofts. Some became cherished pets, others faded back into anonymity. Yet their legacy endures. They remind us that wars are not only fought with machines, but with loyalty, courage, and the smallest of messengers.

Private Pigeon: The Forgotten Winged Soldiers of the Second World War is both a tribute and a revelation. It restores these feathered couriers to their rightful place in history, showing how they carried not only scraps of paper but the weight of human lives and hopes. For listeners fascinated by military history, World War II, or the extraordinary intersection of nature and warfare, this book is an unforgettable journey into a hidden chapter of the past.

©2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
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