Career
While training to become an opera singer, she relayed messages that helped bring about the Allied invasion of Normandy. The 2003 novel Foreign Freedom: The Story of a French Spy by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley was based on interviews with Hall. According to Bradley"s book, Hall"s conviction to fight for France began on the day she and her best friend Yvette went down to the beach.
After the missiles ceased, Yvette and Suzanne looked up to find Madame Montagne lying dead.
lieutenant was Wednesday, 29 May 1940. Hall was 13. The Germans forced Hall and her family to move out of their house and into a dingy apartment.
Two years later, she had to see her doctor, a Mr. Leclerc, about an abscess.
As she was with her voice teacher at the time, Mr.
Leclerc asked if she traveled much for her opera singing. When she replied that she did, the doctor asked if she would like to be a spy for the French Resistance. Hall never told her name to any of the other spies.
To them, she was spy number 22, the 22nd spy in Cherbourg, where she lived.
When she was 17, Suzanne Hall was captured by the Germans. She was interrogated for hours, but she never confessed.
She was saved when the Allies landed nearby in 1944. Soon afterward, she found out from another captured spy, number 14, that all of the others had confessed and been killed.
Doctor Leclerc and his family had been shot in the street.
She died on July 7, 2011 in Kingsport, Tennessee (Obituary ).