First wartime commando raid remembered
Friday 9th July 2010, 2:29PM BST.

Hubert Nicolle came ashore on a recon mission 70 years ago and a stone to mark the event was unveiled at Icart yesterday. Pictured with standard bearers Keith Pike, left, and Dave Ogier are Barbara Gaiger, who married Mr Nicolle in 1948, and son Steven. (0996064)
A MEMORIAL stone to mark the 70th anniversary of the first commando landing in Guernsey was unveiled by the local soldier’s former wife and Bailiff Sir Geoffrey Rowland yesterday evening at Icart.
It commemorates Hubert Nicolle, of the Royal Hampshire Regiment, who came ashore on 8 July 1940, just eight days after the start of the German Occupation.
A submarine from Plymouth dropped him two miles offshore in a canoe at midnight. He arrived at Le Jaonnet Bay, St Martin’s, after capsizing, and in soaking wet clothes made his way up the cliffs on his mission to reconnoitre enemy defences.
His former wife, Barbara Gaiger, had the idea for a memorial stone a year ago and last night stood surrounded by friends and family as she unveiled it. She married Mr Nicolle in 1948 and was with him for more than 50 years. They had two children, Steven and Jane.
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Ah yes!
And what a to do that was; the Germans were here there and everywhere: arresting people willy nilly.-
But the one I felt most sorry for was the old Groundsman of Elisabeth colleges playing fields, for he sheltered them till they were caught.
Some of their family also suffered.
It was a tough time for they were to be shot as spies, but that old Groundsman found some old uniforms from the College if you remember they had British uniforms (being an English College) that saved them for they were then POW.
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