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  1. 3 de jul. de 2022 · Geoffrey MacLeod Hallowes (15 April 1918 25 September 2006) was an officer of the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during the Second World War. He was the third husband of World War II heroine Odette Sansom (ne Brailly) they married in 1956.

  2. In 1959 E. Price Hallowes retired and passed the "Dry Monopole" agency to his son, Geoffrey M. Hallowes. The agency representation had always been a personal one to the Hallowes family by Heidsieck & Co. This arrangement continued until 1962, when IDV was created and a more formal agreement became neccessary. In 1962 United Wine Traders bought ...

  3. 20 de mar. de 1995 · LONDON -- Odette Hallowes, 82, a British agent tortured by the Gestapo in World War II and the first woman awarded Britain's George Cross, ... Geoffrey Hallowes. Share this article Share.

  4. 10 de mai. de 2010 · Six firearms which once belonged to World War II hero Geoffrey Hallowes have been handed over to a museum after being found at a house in Surrey. The guns were discovered in March 2008 by a woman ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HallowesHallowes - Wikipedia

    Hallowes is an English surname deriving from the Old English word halh meaning "hollow". [1] [2] Notable people with this surname include: Geoffrey Hallowes (1918–2006), British officer of the Special Operations Executive during World War II. Harry Hallowes, Irishman known in the mid 20th century for living on Hampstead Heath.

  6. Odette Hallowes. Odette Sansom Hallowes GC, MBE (28 de abril de 1912 – 13 de março de 1995 [ 1] ), também conhecida como Odette Sansom e como Odette Churchill, foi uma oficial de inteligência dos Aliados durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial. Suas façanhas bélicas e a resistência de um interrogatório brutal, que foram narrados nos livros e ...

  7. Odette Sansom Hallowes GC, MBE, Chevalier de la légion d'honneur (28 April 1912—13 March 1995) was an Allied heroine of the Second World War. She was born Odette Marie Céline Brailly in Amiens, France, the daughter of the First World War hero, Gaston Brailly, who was killed at Verdun in 1918. At seven, she caught polio, and spent a year blind and another without the movement of her limbs ...