The End of the Spanish Civil War  
Alicante 1939
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399063937
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A history of the final stages of Franco's victory.

The Spanish Civil War ended in Alicante. After Catalonia fell to the Hitler and Mussolini backed military rebellion of Franco’s Nationalists at the outset of 1939, the legitimate Republican government of Dr Negrín was faced with a choice between apparently futile resistance or unconditional surrender to the triumphant Nationalists. Choosing the path of continued defiance until they could force concessions or at least implement a mass evacuation of those Republicans most at risk in Franco’s new Spain, the government withdrew to Elda in the province of Alicante.

However, their plans were thwarted by a new rebellion of Republican officers, led by Colonel Segismundo Casado, who resented Negrín’s reliance on the Communist Party and the USSR and believed themselves better equipped to negotiate a peace settlement with Franco. They were misguided, Franco had no wish, and ultimately no need to negotiate. Meanwhile, faced with the imminent risk of arrest by the new junta, the Prime Minister and his cabinet were forced to abandon Spain from the tiny aerodrome of Monóvar.

A relatively quiet port on the eastern, Mediterranean coast of Spain, Alicante had remained at some distance from the frontlines throughout the fighting on the ground, but swiftly became a target for Italian bombers operating out of bases in the Balearic Islands. In May 1938, at the height of the air offensive, Italian bombers attacked the marketplace, causing a massacre as tragic as the events in Guernica, yet largely ignored by historians.

As the war drew towards its conclusion, Alicante became increasingly significant as attention focused on the plight of the defeated Republicans. In the second half of March 1939, the fronts collapsed, and Madrid finally fell to the insurgents. Tens of thousands of refugees descended on Alicante in the forlorn hope of rescue by French and British ships that had been promised but which failed to materialise. Amid the tragedy, as the British and French governments declined to engage in any humanitarian intervention that might offend Hitler and Mussolini, a single hero emerged; Captain Archibald Dickson, the Welsh master of the Stanbrook who ditched his cargo and transported 3,000 refugees to safety in North Africa.

On 30 March 1939, Franco’s vanguard, the Italian ‘Volunteer’ Corps under General Gastone Gambara, occupied a town already under the control of the Fifth Column. Two days later the Generalísimo issued a communiqué from his headquarters in Burgos, declaring that the war was over. The bulk of the Republicans surrounded and captured in the port were marched to an improvised internment camp, known as the Campo de los Almendros (Field of Almond Trees). They were then transferred to the infamous concentration camp at Albatera to share the fate of defeated Republicans across Spain and to undergo the program of ideological cleansing of the new fascist authorities.
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A history of the final stages of Franco's victory.

The Spanish Civil War ended in Alicante. After Catalonia fell to the Hitler and Mussolini backed military rebellion of Franco’s Nationalists at the outset of 1939, the legitimate Republican government of Dr Negrín was faced with a choice between apparently futile resistance or unconditional surrender to the triumphant Nationalists. Choosing the path of continued defiance until they could force concessions or at least implement a mass evacuation of those Republicans most at risk in Franco’s new Spain, the government withdrew to Elda in the province of Alicante.

However, their plans were thwarted by a new rebellion of Republican officers, led by Colonel Segismundo Casado, who resented Negrín’s reliance on the Communist Party and the USSR and believed themselves better equipped to negotiate a peace settlement with Franco. They were misguided, Franco had no wish, and ultimately no need to negotiate. Meanwhile, faced with the imminent risk of arrest by the new junta, the Prime Minister and his cabinet were forced to abandon Spain from the tiny aerodrome of Monóvar.

A relatively quiet port on the eastern, Mediterranean coast of Spain, Alicante had remained at some distance from the frontlines throughout the fighting on the ground, but swiftly became a target for Italian bombers operating out of bases in the Balearic Islands. In May 1938, at the height of the air offensive, Italian bombers attacked the marketplace, causing a massacre as tragic as the events in Guernica, yet largely ignored by historians.

As the war drew towards its conclusion, Alicante became increasingly significant as attention focused on the plight of the defeated Republicans. In the second half of March 1939, the fronts collapsed, and Madrid finally fell to the insurgents. Tens of thousands of refugees descended on Alicante in the forlorn hope of rescue by French and British ships that had been promised but which failed to materialise. Amid the tragedy, as the British and French governments declined to engage in any humanitarian intervention that might offend Hitler and Mussolini, a single hero emerged; Captain Archibald Dickson, the Welsh master of the Stanbrook who ditched his cargo and transported 3,000 refugees to safety in North Africa.

On 30 March 1939, Franco’s vanguard, the Italian ‘Volunteer’ Corps under General Gastone Gambara, occupied a town already under the control of the Fifth Column. Two days later the Generalísimo issued a communiqué from his headquarters in Burgos, declaring that the war was over. The bulk of the Republicans surrounded and captured in the port were marched to an improvised internment camp, known as the Campo de los Almendros (Field of Almond Trees). They were then transferred to the infamous concentration camp at Albatera to share the fate of defeated Republicans across Spain and to undergo the program of ideological cleansing of the new fascist authorities.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Translation and Place Names
  • Maps
  • Part One – 1936–1938
    • Chapter 1 A threatening tide of history: Introduction: the Civil War in Spain
    • Chapter 2 Akra Leuké: The outbreak of war in Alicante
    • Chapter 3 José Antonio ¡presente!: The case of the leader of the Falange, imprisoned in Alicante, and the violence in the Republican zone
    • Chapter 4 Your children will be next: Alicante and the air war
    • Chapter 5 Malditos, malditos, malditos los causantes de tanto dolor …: 25 de Mayo 1938
  • Part Two – 1939
    • Chapter 6 Bullets hurt, corpses stink: The defeat of the Republican Army: the Ebro and Catalonia
    • Chapter 7 An ocean of darkness and death, but an infinite ocean of light and love: Humanitarian aid in Alicante
    • Chapter 8 Cerca del agua perdida del mar: The arrival of Negrín in Alicante after the debacle in Catalonia
    • Chapter 9 Stay out of the range of the artillery fire: Non-Intervention: the effects of British and French foreign policy
    • Chapter 10 The end may justify the means as long as there is something that justifies the end: The role of the Spanish Communist Party
    • Chapter 11 Red sunset: The situation in Alicante
    • Chapter 12 One Munich was not enough: Britain and France recognise Franco
    • Chapter 13 The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it: Differing views on how to end the war
    • Chapter 14 El olvido es peor que los recuerdos: Negrín moves his government to Elda-Petrer (Alicante)
    • Chapter 15 His last ounce of courage: The battle for Cartagena and the Republican Navy
  • Part Three – The End
    • Chapter 16 Usted haga como yo, no se meta en política: The second coup d’état
    • Chapter 17 El destino infortunado de España, derrotada y maltrecha: The flight of the government
    • Chapter 18 Written in the blood of a Spanish soldier: The civil war within the civil war
    • Chapter 19 El abrazo de Vergara: Peace negotiations with the Nationalists
    • Chapter 20 Una gota de pura valentía vale más que un océano cobarde: Evacuation
    • Chapter 21 Wo bleibt Gambara?: The tragedy of the port
    • Chapter 22 And the almond tree shall flourish: Campo de los Almendros
    • Chapter 23 En el yermo de la historia: The Albatera concentration camp
  • Part Four – Aftermath
    • Chapter 24 No ha llegado la paz; ha llegado la victoria
  • Dramatis Personae
  • Glossary
  • Chronological Table
  • Presidents of Government/Prime Ministers of the Republic during the Civil War
  • Epigraphs and chapters
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes
  • Bibliography and sources
  • Plates
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