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  1. Lise Marie Jeanette de Baissac nació el 11 de mayo de 1905 en las islas Mauricio. Era la pequeña de tres hermanos de una familia francesa que en 1919 se instaló en París. Con la llegada de los nazis en 1940, ella y sus dos hermanos mayores participaron activamente en la guerra.

  2. 21 de ene. de 2016 · Lise se dedicó hasta el final de la guerra a realizar peligrosas misiones para el SOE colaborando con la resistencia francesa. Cuando terminó el conflicto, se casó con un decorador interiorista llamado Gustave Villameur con quien se trasladó a vivir a Marsella. Lise Baissac falleció el 28 de marzo de 2004 a los noventa y ocho años.

  3. Marie Lise de Boucherville Baissac. Date of death. 29 March 2004. 9th arrondissement of Marseille. Country of citizenship. France. United Kingdom. United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927, –1927) Occupation.

  4. 21 de nov. de 2013 · Lise de Baissac (1905-2004) DOSSIER: Lise Marie Jeanette de Baissac was born on 11 May 1905 in Mauritus and moved to Paris with her family in 1919. After the war she married Gustave Villameur. They had no children. She died on 28 Mar 2004.

  5. Francine Agazarian lived to be 85, Lise de Baissac to 98, and Pearl Witherington to 93. The last living female SOE member is Phyllis Latour, who during her time as an agent sent over 135 coded messages from Normandy to Britain, knitted into her silken hair ties. In April 2021, she turned 100 years old. Timeline.

  6. Lise Marie Jeanette de Baissac MBE CdeG, code names Odile and Marguerite, was a Mauritian agent in the United Kingdom's clandestine Special Operations Executive (SOE) organization in France during World War II. The purpose of SOE was to conduct espionage, sabotage, and reconnaissance in countries occupied by the Axis powers, especially Nazi Germany.

  7. Lise de Baissac was born on May 11, 1905, and she was one of the best. England’s Special Operations Executive (SOE) recruited her. This spy organization covertly parachuted her into France in 1942. Lise de Baissac passed for a widowed archaeologist. For 11 months, she scouted the countryside for landing strips and drop zones.