Shipley Zero Station
This page was last updated at 12:44 pm on 19/12/11
The Special Duties Organisation,
branch of the Auxiliary Units, was formed after the sabotage side of the resistance had already been
established. Its members were never told of the many patrols in existence all around the country. The Special
Duties Organisation's role involved radio communications and spying. The headquarters for the unit was located
at Hannington Hall, Hannington, Wiltshire. The section's personnel consisted
of spies, cut-outs, out-station radio operators and the people who would operate the control and zero
stations.
Unlike the sabotage-minded patrols both men and women could be chosen for the task of spying.
The main people recruited for this role were people whose jobs allowed plenty of movement - doctors, midwives,
postmen, vicars and farm workers. These people were trained separately in their own areas, being taught how to make
simple intelligence reports. In the event of a German invasion they would have carried on their usual business or
routine, making reports of any German troop movements, or anything else of interest they had observed. Once a
report was completed the spy needed to pass the information on to a radio operator. This was achieved by use of a
secret 'letter box'. This could take many forms. For instance an old tin can, or hole in a tree or under a rock
could be adopted. All that was required was a place where the report could be hidden and be accessible to the radio
operator.
If the radio operator did not pick up the report himself, someone known
as a 'cut-out' would pick it up and transfer it to a second secret letter box where it could be retrieved for
transmission. The use of this system kept the identity of the spies and cut-outs from the radio-operators and
vice-versa.
A radio operator along with his equipment was classified as an out-station. The radio's
whereabouts had to be kept totally secret. This was achieved by siting most of the radios in underground hideouts.
The radio used by the Special Duties Organisation was purpose built to be
basic in design and simple to use. The radio sets measured approximately 15 inches long, 6 inches high and 5 inches
wide. They worked on the, then rarely used, frequency between 60 and 65 megacycles that was probably not even
monitored by the Germans. A six volt car battery was used to power the radio set.
This needed a 40 feet long aerial to be able to transmit its messages. Had the Germans landed the radio operators
would have carried on with their normal occupations, only visiting their out-stations to transmit short reports of
information. These out-station operators would all be transmitting to their local control stations, of which Sussex
had three. The purpose of a control station was to relay information gained from the various out-stations back to
headquarters at Hannington Hall.
A control station was operated by three specially trained women of the ATS Auxiliary Unit,
each station having two transmitters and two receivers. One set was for everyday use whilst the whole radio network
was in training, the other to be used in the event of an invasion. The training set was often housed in a surface
building. The other set would have been close by in an underground hideout known as a 'zero station', so-called
because when the station's code-name was used it was always followed by the code suffix 'zero'. There were no
transmitting schedules for the out-station operators to keep so the women would have to listen for messages coming
in for long stretches of time. The purpose of a Zero Station was to receive coded information from the many
out-stations in the surrounding area, passing on the details via a direct phone line to the Special Duties
headquarters at Hannington Hall. Sussex had three underground Zero Stations, one
in a wood in Heathfield, East Sussex, and two in West Sussex.

Survey by Stewart Angell
All three were built to the same plan, the only variant being the length of the emergency
exit tunnel. The women operatives of these Zero Stations were members of the ATS with Beatrice Temple as their
Senior Commander. Miss Temple would often visit the underground sites around the country to check that the women
were all right and generally monitor how the system was working. The Royal Corps of Signals were in charge of
checking and maintaining the radio equipment.
Built on a solid concrete base with corrugated iron arched across to form
its roof, the hideout resembles, like many of the sabotage patrol hideouts, an underground Nissan hut.
Entrance was gained by lifting a concealed earth-covered wooden trapdoor. At Shipley this had a counterbalance weight to assist opening. With the trapdoor open, a wooden ladder
led down the entrance shaft, which opened out into a small room containing explosives and ammunition. This
room was made to appear as if it were the only one, giving no indication of the main chamber, behind one of
its walls, containing all the radio equipment. A system of shelves and carefully-stacked boxes hid the 5ft
high door leading to this main chamber
When a secret catch was lifted, a section of the shelving moved out of the way, allowing the
door to be opened. Along with the radio equipment, the main chamber contained a small table with chairs, bunk beds,
spare batteries with a generator to recharge them and a good supply of food. The batteries were used for powering
the radio equipment and a simple lighting arrangement.
 
The other end of the main chamber led into another small room which contained a chemical
toilet, a drain in the floor, storage space and the entrance to the emergency exit tunnel. The three feet wide
emergency exit tunnel was 16 feet long and terminated by opening out into a square concrete structure that had an
earth covered wooden hatch above it concealing its existence. Fresh air was supplied into the hideout by two one
foot diameter asbestos pipes. One was positioned just off the floor and the other just below the roof. They ran
along from the main chamber through the small end room until coming to the surface disguised as the holes of a
badger sett. In fact when the site was visited in 1994 a badger had adopted part of the hideout as its
home.

The 40 foot long wire aerial ran up an adjacent oak tree trunk. A groove was cut out of the
tree bark and the aerial wire hidden in the groove. The bark would then have been put back into the groove and
fixed in position. The groove is still clearly visible in the oak tree today.
The main chamber of the Shipley Zero station collapsed some time between November 1997 and
March 1999. No other Zero Station's in Sussex are currently accessible but a similar zero station hideout can be
visited at Hollingbourne in Kent.
For a detailed history of the Auxiliary Units in Sussex see Stewart Angell's book The Secret
Sussex Resistance. Published by Middleton Press ISBN 1 873793 820 and available in our shop
Source of page text: Stewart Angell
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