Though the name Virginia Hall might not be familiar to most, during World War II, the American from Baltimore, who was living in Europe before war broke out, ended up becoming one of the most powerful ...
Virginia Hall's upbringing in Baltimore helped shape her future as a spy. The Central Intelligence Agency is the nation's clearinghouse for foreign intelligence. The seeds for its current, coordinated ...
The one-legged socialite from Baltimore has only been comparatively recently been publicly acknowledged as an unqualified war heroine When Gina Haspel became the first female director of the CIA in ...
It sounds like propaganda meant to misdirect WWII Germans: a lone foreigner running riot in occupied France, everywhere at once, unrecognizable despite a trademark gait, able to bewitch information ...
Observances of the 75th anniversary of D-Day are properly focusing on the troops and the architect of Operation Overlord, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who freed Europe from Hitler and his Nazi hordes.
The story of Virginia Hall, a spy who eluded capture in France by the Nazis during World War II, is remarkable and compelling. Her biographers say the Gestapo considered her the most dangerous of all ...
Virginia Hall Williamsburg – Virginia Eberly Hall passed away on Friday, November 8, 2013 in the comfort of her home and surrounded by her family after having achieved her most recent goal of reaching ...
WEBVTT JENNIFER: YOU MAY NOT KNOW, BUT BALTIMORE'S VIRGINIA HALL PLAYED A ROLE IN THE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. SHE CREW UP AT THE FAMILY FARM IN PARKTON. DEBORAH: THE UPBRINGING HELPED SHAPE HER FUTURE AS ...
Hall, Virginia Buhrke Known as Ginny to her friends, 93, of Glenview, Illinois, passed away peacefully from kidney failure on May 20, 2014, in Altamonte Springs, Florida. Virginia was born on November ...
Virginia (Morin) Hall, 85, West Reading, died Sept. 18, 2010, in The Reading Hospital and Medical Center. Born May 20, 1925, in Saco, Maine, she was a daughter of the late Louis F. and Alice A.