The war came to her: Pat Owtram gleaned critical intelligence by listening in on German U-boats

Pat Owtram didn’t need to go to war. It came to her.

As the Nazis took control of Germany and Austria, her father hired Jewish refugees to cook and clean at the family home in Lancashire, where the Owtram family raised pedigreed shorthorn cows and Pat rode a pony named Dolly.

One of them, Lily Getzel, was a cultured woman from Vienna who told stories of concerts and the opera _ exotic fare for a girl who rarely left her rural home because of fuel shortages. They spoke in a combination of German, Austrian German, and English.

“Wartime evenings, with petrol rationed, were pretty boring,’’ Owtram, who will turn 101 next month, told the Associated Press. “So we did a lot of talking.’’

All those conversations paid off in 1942, when Owtram applied to join the Women’s Royal Naval Service and a test showed that she was fluent in German. Overlooking a childhood illness that could have disqualified her from service, the Wrens made her one of the 400 or so women who served at “Y stations” along the British coast, intercepting German naval signals throughout the war.

Plain language traffic was translated and passed on to the navy. But the real gold were the coded signals. Those went directly to Bletchley Park, where mathematicians and analysts developed technology to decipher messages encrypted with the previously unbeatable Enigma machine, providing crucial information for Allied military planners in the run up to D-Day.

Patricia Owtram who was a serving Wren at the time of D-Day,  shows her medals at her home in London, Wednesday, April 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Patricia Owtram who was a serving Wren at the time of D-Day, shows her medals at her home in London, Wednesday, April 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

The only downside for Owtram was that after contracting tuberculosis as a child, she was barred from serving overseas. Her younger sister Jean parlayed her language and puzzle-solving skills into assignments in Egypt and Italy as a cipher officer working with the Special Operations Executive, nicknamed Churchill’s Secret Army.

“We could listen to the German fleet when the ships came out of the Baltic or went back or down the North Sea,’’ Owtram said, describing her own service. “So my German was quite useful at home in Britain.’’

As a consolation, Owtram was awarded the Legion d’Honneur, France’s highest honor, for her work with Bletchley Park.

She did have one surreal moment in the days leading up to D-day, when she sat down on a clifftop overlooking the English Channel to relax after her latest four-hour shift straining her ears for German signals.

Looking up from her book, Owtram was startled to see Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, Britain’s most senior military officer, walking up the path toward her.

WWII WREN Pat Owtram describes her experience during the war. (AP Video/Kwiyeon Ha)

“I wasn’t quite sure what to do, because if you met those kind of people in the war and were wearing a hat you saluted. If you were not wearing a hat, you did not salute,” she said, recalling her predicament. “So all I could do was wave and say, ‘Hello, everybody! Good morning!’ And, and they all said, ‘Good morning,’ and sort of smiled in a very nice friendly way.”

She heard later that Churchill and Montgomery had wanted to be seen on the Kent coast as part of Allied efforts to fool the Germans into thinking that the invasion would be targeted at Calais, not 150 miles to the west in Normandy.

After the war, Owtram worked briefly for the British embassy in Norway, studied at the University of St. Andrews, Oxford and Harvard before getting married and settling into a lengthy career in broadcasting.

She will proudly mark the 80th anniversary of D-Day as much for her sister, who died last year, as for herself.

While she never fired a shot in anger, Owtram and her colleagues did persuade the guards at their base near Dover to teach them how to use a machine gun.

“I thought I was probably the only respectable old lady in Chiswick who knew how to use a light machine gun,” she said. “I hope I am never asked to demonstrate. I am sure I should miss the target these days.”

READ THE STORY: Codebreakers, cartographers and coxswains: Barred from combat, women helped ensure D-Day success

Women of WWII

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BEHIND THE REPORTING: My month with the Wrens: A personal story about four women who helped win World War II —By Danica Kirka

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