Monument to Louise de Bettignies - Lille
At the top of Boulevard Carnot, on the road to Roubaix and Tourcoing, a humble soldier respectfully kisses the hand of the woman who ran probably the largest spy network of the Great War: Louise de Bettignies.
Louise de Bettignies was born on 15 July 1880 in Saint-Amand-les-Eaux to an aristocratic family which suffered from financial problems. As a result, she was forced to earn her living as a governess and tutor to children of wealthy families in various European countries. Indeed, she was a modern and cultivated young woman who spoke English, German and Italian fluently and, to a lesser degree, Russian, Czech and Spanish.
Lille's Queen of Spies
After the invasion of Lille, in October 1914, she fled to Saint-Omer where she helped care for the wounded. In February 1915 she enrolled in the British Secret Intelligence Service under the pseudonym Alice Dubois and was soon joined by a woman from Roubaix called Marie-Léonie Vanhoutte, alias Charlotte Lameron. The Alice Network was born and enlisted over eighty agents in the region of Lille, an important logistics hub for the German Army, before extending its operations to Cambrai, Valenciennes and Saint-Quentin. The network monitored troop movements, located gun batteries and munitions depots, and helped Allied soldiers escape to Holland, then a neutral country.
Based in Belgium, Louise passed on the documents she received to British Intelligence. On 24 September 1915 her accomplice Marie-Léonie was caught in a trap and less than one month later, on 21 October, it was Louise's turn. Both women were sentenced to death on 16 March 1916 but their sentences were subsequently reduced to forced labour, fifteen years for Marie-Léonie and life for Louise. Deported to Cologne, Louise continued to show spirit and determination while in prison, encouraging dissent and protest among the prisoners; however she died on 27 September 1918 after a bout of pneumonia which her jailers refused to treat.
Lille's Queen of Spies was brought back to France and laid to rest in the family vault in Saint-Amand-les-Eaux; while the wooden cross which marked her temporary grave in Cologne was taken to the church on Lorette Spur and can be seen there today.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Boulevard Carnot - 59000 LILLE
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE LILLE
Call: 08 91 56 20 04 - +33(0)3 59 57 94 00
Website: www.lilletourism.com

























































































































































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