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The Château d'Isenbourg raid occurred in 1944 when the French Resistance fighter Sean Devlin stormed the Château d'Isenbourg, the private presidence of SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Eckhardt, and stole back the Aurora racecar he had driven at the 1940 Saarbrucken Grand Prix.

In late 1943, as the French Resistance prepared to expand to the south bank of the Seine, its leader Luc Gaudin planned to use the upcoming 1944 Europa Grand Prix as an opportunity to wipe out the Nazi high command as they watched Paris' commandant Kurt Dierker compete. Vittore Morini sent his racing mentee Sean Devlin to recover his custom Aurora racecar from General Karl Eckhardt's chateau north of Paris, where he kept his private car collection. Devlin stormed the chateau, destroying German tanks, sniper's nests, and other infrastructure while killing dozens of soldiers. Just after Eckhardt and his bodyguard Franziska Meier left the chateau, Devlin blew open its doors, recovered his Aurora, and escaped into the countryside. Champagne-Ardenne's population was inspired to rise up against Nazi rule, and the German presence in the countryside was greatly reduced.

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