Ambrose Sherwill

Sir Ambrose Sherwill
Born 12 February 1890
Guernsey, Channel Islands
Died 1968
Alderney, Channel Islands

Sir Ambrose James Sherwill KBE MC (18901968) was Bailiff of Guernsey from 1946 to 1959.

Early life

Educated in Guernsey and in Cherbourg he worked for a lawyer in Guernsey before passing the qualification of Licencié en Droit at Caen University (necessary to practice law in Guernsey) in 1914, just before the war broke out.[1]:11

Although a member of the Royal Guernsey Militia Sherwill volunteering as a dispatch rider but was called up as an air mechanic in the Royal Navy Air Service Armoured Car Division and served as a petty officer until he was commissioned into The Buffs in 1916. Sherwill was awarded the Military Cross (MC) for services at the battle of Messines in 1917, where he was wounded,[1]:18 being promoted to Lieutenant shortly afterwards. Picking up a second bad wound in 1918 and using the recovery time to continue with his law studies. On demobilisation in 1919 he moved to England to pass the English Bar exams before returning to Guernsey in May 1920 to apply for admittance to the Bar as an Advocate of the Royal Court.[1]:27

His military service continuing with the Royal Guernsey Militia being appointed Lieutenant in 1921, Captain in 1922 and Major in 1925 before retiring in 1928 when the militia was scaled back.[2]:68

Standing for election to the States of Guernsey, he served as a Deputy from 1921 to 1926 whilst continuing to practice law. In 1935 Sherwill became His Majesty's Attorney General (with the duties of public prosecutor), having to give up private practice and accept the reduced income associated with public office.[1]:32

World War II

During World War II, he was President of the Controlling Committee during the German occupation of the Channel Islands, responsible for the running of the Island government and the main contact for the German authorities, reporting only to the elderly Bailiff, Victor Carey, until he was deported to Cherche-Midi Prison, (Jurat John Leale took over his responsibilities as president) for his part in the Nicolle and Symes affair.

German proclamation of measures against Sherwill, Nicolle, Symes and others following Operation Ambassador

Sherwill's patriotism was confirmed, when at great personal risk he doctored Guernsey militia uniforms to make them appear to be British Army uniforms, in order that Nicolle and Symes would be treated as soldiers, rather than spies (as undercover operatives were routinely shot by both sides as part of protocol.)

Sentenced to two months in prison, taken to France in a Junkers Ju 52, he spent November and December 1940 in several prisons including 45 days in the very unpleasant Cherche-Midi Prison in Paris. On his return he was informed he would no longer be allowed any contact with the German authorities.[1]:167 This was lifted for the winter of 1942-3 when he again practiced as Attorney General.

He conducted himself with distinction at the Laufen Internment Camp whither he was eventually deported in February 1943, becoming head of the British forces/citizens at the camp in June 1943.[1]:196 Laufen was a chateau housing single men, mainly from the Channel Islands as well as some "American" men, who had been in Europe when America entered the war. Liberation came on 4 May 1945 with the internees being flown to England in June.[3]:152–7

Controversy

Sherwill has been variously accused of excessively cordial relations with the German occupying troops, and acquiescing without due resistance to the Feldkommandant. Most notable perhaps is the episode of August 1940, when Sherwill, with the professed intention of reassuring those evacuated Guernsey citizens who anxiously awaited news of their loved ones who had chosen to remain on the Island, recorded a broadcast for Radio Bremen assuring of the 'kindly' treatment of islanders at the hands of the German troops. No doubt Sherwill's intentions were noble, but his naivety was nonetheless exploited by the German propaganda machine in their desire to show that the realities of German occupation were far removed from the bleak picture propagated by British communiqués and propaganda.

Post 1945

He returned to Guernsey after the War, and was made a Commander of the British Empire in December 1945.[4] He served as Bailiff between 1946 and 1959. He was knighted in 1949. In 1960, he retired to Alderney, where he died in 1968.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Sherwill, Ambrose. A fair and Honest Book. ISBN 978-1-84753-149-0.
  2. Parkes, Major Edwin. The Royal Guernsey Militia. La Société Guernesiaise. ISBN 978-0951807514.
  3. Stroobant, Frank. One Man’s War. Guernsey Press 1967.
  4. "The London Gazette" (37383). p. 6021.

Bibliography

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