Bernard Frederick Trench

Captain Bernard Frederick Trench (17 July 1880 – 10 October 1967) was a British soldier and famous spy who was caught and convicted by the German authorities just a few years before World War I. In 1913 he was released as a present to Ernest Augustus the Duke of Brunswick when Augustus married the German Kaiser's daughter, Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia. Trench was a grandson of Lord Ashtown and a descendant of Archbishop Trench.

Captain Trench was arrested and went to trial with another man, Lieutenant Vivian H. Brandon R.N., who had been arrested a few days earlier. Trench had other accomplices on his mission to scout out information about the military installations on the island of Borkum but he was the only person arrested from his spy ring. He was an agent of the infamous spy master and future first director of what would become the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), also known as MI6, Mansfield Smith-Cumming. Trench's codename was COUNTERSCRAP.

Trench and Brandon's trial took place at the Leipzig Supreme Court in the so-called Great Court of the Reichsgericht on 22 December 1910. Convicted of espionage they were both sentenced to a term of four years.

During his imprisonment Trench hung himself from the ceiling by his neck but he didn't die. In letters he claimed that he didn't intend to commit suicide or escape. Trench's letters did condemn Captain Lux (a French officer) who did escape from the fortress during Trench's imprisonment. Trench complained that the lax security at the fort was possible due to a promise from the prisoners not to attempt to break out.

Captain Trench and another British subject caught spying, Captain Bertrand Stewart, were pardoned and released by the German Kaiser as a present to Ernest Augustus the Duke of Brunswick when Augustus married the Kaiser's daughter, Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia. (They married on 24 May 1913).

He fought in World War II and married Mary Audrey Taylor, daughter of Reverend Robert Fetzer Taylor, on 8 September 1943.