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At the top of St Erth Hill lies a secret from the depths of World War Two. Many locals refer to the site as a radar station, but in fact it was a Radio Security Service station set up by MI8 in 1939 and later taken over by MI6. Personnel serving there scanned the airwaves for encoded enemy wireless traffic and passed the messages up to RSS HQ who then fed them into Bletchley Park. This video looks at what is known about RSS St Erth and what remains of the station today. My further research since 2011, including interviewing a veteran who served there, makes this video somewhat out of date. I now have a clear understanding of the three locations that made up the station. The one remaining shed shown in this video was the Generator Hut. (It was not the Home Guard shed which was further down St Erth Hill.) The main listening posts were in huts in the field on the opposite side of the road. The Direction Finding posts were in the Generator Hut field and at a separate location about 1 mile away. For a more detailed description read my historical novel A Place And A Name which features the site. Details at http://www.philhadleypublications.com One day I'll get around to posting a new video! Are you able to add any detail to what is known about the site? Do you know the location of its other components? Do you have any wartime photographs of the site or its personnel? Did any of your relatives serve there or billet those who did? If so please leave a comment. The music includes "You can't stop Germany beating you" (a paraody of 'You can't stop me from dreaming' by Cliff Friend & David Franklin) performed by Karl Schwedler in Berlin 1941, "Lili Marlene" by Marlene Dietrich (1944) and "There'll always be an England" performed by a Massed Choir in 1942. If you enjoyed this, please check out my other videos of World War Two sites in Cornwall. Thanks for looking.