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His film footage released after the Liberation showed a defiant teenager in blue shorts, a black-and-white top with a red sash and a khaki cap, toting her Schmeisser MP 40.
She went on to help in the liberation of Chartres, and it was on August 25, during a visit to the city by the Free French leader General de Gaulle, that she was spotted by the American reporter Jack Belden and the photographer Robert Capa, eating a baguette, her machine gun by her side.
They spoke to her as women who had taken up with German soldiers during the occupation were being dragged into the streets to have their hair forcibly shaved off.
A month later, in September 1944, Capa’s photographs of “Nicole” in shorts and a beret, brandishing her sub-machine gun, appeared in a Life magazine feature written by Belden under the headline “The Girl Partisan of Chartres”. The images were subsequently syndicated around the world.
“I could find no trace of what is conventionally called toughness in Nicole,” Belden reported.
“After routine farm life, she finds her present job thrilling and exhilarating. Now that the war is passing beyond her own home district she does not think of going back to the farm. She wants to go on with the Partisans and help free the rest of France.”
Indeed by this time, Simone Seguin had joined de Gaulle as he headed towards Paris, where she took part in the battles for the city as the outnumbered German garrison fought a hopeless rearguard action.
Meanwhile, she had fallen in love with Roland Boursier, a dashing FTP commander who had recruited her in 1943 to act as his runner.
“I studied her for a while to see what were her feelings,” Boursier said later.
“When I discovered she had French feelings I told her little by little about the work I was doing. I asked her if she would be scared to do such work. She said, ‘No. It would please me to kill Boche [Germans].’ ”
They had a long relationship which produced six children, though they never married.
In 1946 Simone Segouin was promoted to second lieutenant and was awarded the Croix de Guerre. She went on to become a paediatric nurse in Chartres and later settled in nearby Courville-sur-Eure, where a street is named after her.
The photographs taken by Robert Capa helped to publicise the role of female resistance fighters and change attitudes in France. In 1945 French women voted for the first time in local and national elections.
In 2021, Simone Segouin was appointed a Chevalier of the Légion d’honneur.
“I was fighting for the resistance, that’s all,” she explained. “If I had to start over, I would, because I have no regrets. The Germans were our enemies, we were French.”
Telegraph, London
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