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Nancy Wake started the war as a wealthy socialite in Marseille. She ended it as the most decorated servicewoman of World War II, commanding seven thousand resistance fighters and personally killing German soldiers with her bare hands. This is the extraordinary true story of the woman the Gestapo called "The White Mouse" — because no matter how hard they tried, they could never catch her. Nancy Grace Augusta Wake was a New Zealand-born journalist who married a wealthy French industrialist and seemed destined for a life of champagne and dinner parties. When France fell to Nazi Germany in 1940, she made a different choice. She joined the Resistance, building escape networks that smuggled over a thousand Allied soldiers to safety. By 1943, she had become the Gestapo's most wanted person in France, with a five million franc bounty on her head. When the net finally closed around her, she fled over the Pyrenees into Spain — leaving behind her husband Henri, who would be captured, tortured, and executed for refusing to reveal her location. Nancy trained with Britain's Special Operations Executive, parachuted back into occupied France, and took command of seven thousand Maquis fighters in the Auvergne region. She killed an SS sentry with her bare hands, cycled five hundred kilometers in seventy-two hours to replace destroyed radio codes, and led her forces in a raid that killed fourteen hundred German soldiers. The story of Nancy Wake represents one of the most remarkable personal journeys of World War II — from society wife to guerrilla commander, from refugee to legend. Her actions in the Auvergne helped disrupt German reinforcements heading to Normandy after D-Day, contributing directly to Allied victory in France. She received decorations from Britain, France, the United States, and Australia, becoming the most honored woman of the entire war. Yet her story remains largely unknown outside military history circles. In this documentary, you'll discover: • How Nancy Wake built resistance networks under the Gestapo's nose for two years • The harrowing six-attempt journey over the Pyrenees that nearly killed her • Why SOE trained a 32-year-old socialite to kill with her bare hands • The impossible 500-kilometer bicycle ride that saved seven thousand men • How she overcame resistance from fighters who refused to follow a woman • The heartbreaking truth about her husband's fate — revealed only after the war Subscribe to our channel for untold stories of military history three times a week. Hit the notification bell so you never miss the incredible true accounts of ordinary people who achieved the extraordinary in humanity's darkest hours. TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - The bicycle ride: 72 hours without sleep 5:30 - The girl who ran: Nancy's early life 11:00 - Love in Marseille and the fall of France 16:30 - The White Mouse: Building the Resistance 22:00 - Five million francs: The Gestapo closes in 27:30 - Over the Pyrenees: Six attempts to escape 33:00 - SOE training: Becoming a weapon 38:30 - Parachuting into occupied France 44:00 - Taking command of seven thousand fighters 49:30 - The killing and the impossible bicycle ride 55:00 - The Montluçon raid and liberation Nancy Wake's journey from Australian runaway to Special Operations Executive commander exemplifies the transformation that war demanded of ordinary people. Her work with the French Maquis resistance fighters helped prepare the way for Allied liberation, while her personal courage under impossible circumstances — including the legendary bicycle ride through German-occupied territory — demonstrated what one determined individual could accomplish against overwhelming odds. The White Mouse remains one of World War II's most compelling figures, a woman who fought not for glory but for revenge against the fascism she had witnessed firsthand in the streets of Vienna. #WWII #WorldWar2 #MilitaryHistory #NancyWake #WhiteMouse #SOE #FrenchResistance #Maquis #WomenInWar #TrueStory #ForgottenHeroes #Documentary