Background
Born Mildred Elizabeth Sisk in Portland, Maine, she took the surname Gillars in 1911 after her mother remarried. At 16, she moved to Conneaut, Ohio, with her family.
Born Mildred Elizabeth Sisk in Portland, Maine, she took the surname Gillars in 1911 after her mother remarried. At 16, she moved to Conneaut, Ohio, with her family.
In 1918, she enrolled at Ohio Wesleyan University to study dramatic arts, but left without graduating.
During World War II her voice became known to many thousands of U.S. servicemen who heard her on short-wave radio, playing nostalgic American songs and speculating about the fidelity of the wives and sweethearts whom the soldiers, sailors, and airmen had left behind in the United States.
Just before the Allied invasion of Normandy in 1944, Axis Sally (an American appellation; she introduced herself in her sultry voice simply as “Sally”) broadcast a demoralizing and exaggerated account of the horrors awaiting any Allied soldiers foolhardy enough to invade Adolf Hitler’s Fortress Europe.
In 1946 a U.S. counterintelligence agent spotted Mildred Gillars in Berlin. Eventually she was brought back to the United States, indicted on 10 counts of treason (1947), and convicted on one of them (1949), the preinvasion broadcast, tape recordings of which were played at her trial. She was fined $10,000 and was sentenced to imprisonment for 10 to 30 years. She was paroled after 12 years in 1961. On her release she entered the convent near Columbus, Ohio, of a Roman Catholic religious order and taught French, music, and German at a high school operated by the order.
Having converted to Roman Catholicism while in prison, Gillars went to live at the Our Lady of Bethlehem Convent in Columbus, Ohio, and taught German, French, and music at St. Joseph Academy, Columbus.