Robert Smallbones,, was a British diplomat and humanitarian who arranged the issue of visas to persecuted Jewish people in Germany before the Second World War and visited concentration camps to demand the release of prisoners. He was posthumously awarded the medal of a British Hero of the Holocaust in 2013.
He was promoted after the successful posting to Zagreb and appointed Consul-General at Frankfurt am Main in Germany in 1932 just before the Nazi Party gained power. Smallbones held his position through the difficult pre-war years and in September 1939, at the outbreak of World War II, he was evacuated with all British diplomatic staff. After Kristallnacht he worked to assist persecuted Jewish people, gaining them travel visas, which would enable them to leave Nazi Germany by exploiting any opportunities the system allowed and some which it did not. He was remembered in the Jewish Chronicle as "the diplomat who faced down the Gestapo", for visiting concentration camps to demand the release of Jewish people. He allowed his daughter Irene to horse-whip Gestapo agents arresting Jews and provided refuge for hundreds of Jewish people in his official residence. Frustrated at the refusal of the United States to issue visas to the Jews, he masterminded and oversaw what became known as the "Smallbones Scheme" to extend the British efforts to evacuate the Jews from Germany; and in October 1939 the British Government calculated that he had saved 48,000 people and had been in the process of issuing papers to 50,000 more when war broke out. In a letter dated 1938, Smallbones claimed that "The explanation for this outbreak of sadistic cruelty may be that sexual perversion, in particular homo-sexuality, are very prevalent in Germany." His activities assisting Jewish people were carefully documented by the Gestapo and he is named in The Black Book, a list of prominent British residents to be arrested upon the successful invasion of Britain by Nazi Germany in 1940. The Black Book was a product of the SSEinsatzgruppen, compiled by SS-Oberführer Walter Schellenberg, and contained the names of 2,820 people—British subjects and European exiles—living in Britain, who were to be immediately arrested upon the success of Unternehmen Seelöwe, the invasion, occupation, and annexation of Great Britain to the Third Reich. The book states which German authority each arrested person was to be handed to and Smallbones was required by Department IVE4 of the Gestapo. Smallbones was posthumously awarded the medal of a British Hero of the Holocaust.
Wartime years
The Smallbones family sailed from London aboard the passenger liner on 20 December 1939 bound for Brazil. From 11 January 1940 until he retired in 1945 he was Consul-General at Sao Paulo in Brazil. Smallbones was appointed a Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George on 2 June 1943 for his service as Consul-General at Sao Paulo. After his retirement in 1945 Smallbones and his wife settled in Brazil and occasionally visited England aboard.
Family life
He married Inga Gjertson of Kinn, Norway and they had a son and a daughter. Their son Lieutenant Robert Peter Smallbones, General List, died on 17 May 1941 in Egypt serving with the Eighth Army; he is buried at CairoWar Cemetery. Smallbones died on 29 May 1976 in São Paulo, Brazil.
Honours and awards
Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George in June 1943 as Consul-General in Sao Paulo.