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M

Page 37

by Henry Hemming


  Conservative Party: and Fascist movement 25, 59, 139; election victories 36, 318; MPs 25, 32, 33, 139, 247, see also Ramsay, Captain Archibald Maule; and spies and spymasters 32, 33, 36, 81, 82–3, 89, 92, 104, 111, 122, 217

  Cook, Arthur 57

  Cooper, John 330

  Cornwell, David see Le Carré, John

  Coster, Howard 144

  Cottenham, Mark Pepys, Earl of 255, 261

  Country Questions (BBC radio) 326

  Countryside (magazine) 336

  Countrywise (BBC television) 327

  Crime Cargo (M’s first novel) 143–4, 159

  Crowley, Aleister 199

  Curry, John 313

  Curtis-Bennett, Sir Henry, KC 47

  Curzon of Kedleston, George Curzon, 1st Marquess 19

  Daily Express 90, 109, 159, 230, 323

  Daily Mail 36, 82, 139, 175, 322

  Daily Mirror 34, 231

  Daily Sketch 296

  Daily Worker 99, 100, 101, 102, 108, 110, 111, 112, 127–8, 164, 292

  Dale, Walter 67

  Danischewsky, Irene 267, 283, 284, 285

  D-Day landings (1944) 310

  De Bono, General Emilio 170

  Defence (General) Regulations 231, 289, 297; 18b(1a) 289–90, 291, 292, 293, 302, 307

  Del Monte, Francesco Marigliano, Duca (‘Mr Macaroni’) 277, 278

  Delhi Intelligence Bureau 157–8

  Dennis, Barry 266

  Desert Island Discs (BBC radio) 326–7

  ‘Destroyers for Bases’ deal 277

  Deutsch, Arnold 178–9, 180, 187, 189, 203, 219

  ‘Dickson, Grierson’ see Dickson, Jimmy

  Dickson, Jimmy (‘M/3’) 123, 125, 158; as thriller writer 125, 229; becomes M’s agent 125–7, 128–9, 146, 305, and friend 126, 158; and Glading 181; asked by M to infiltrate Fascist organisations 195, 196, 198, 224–5; runs agents himself 229; continues to work for M Section 241, 293; reports on British Union of Fascists 276; arrests Anna Wolkoff 283, 287; relationships with female MI5 staff 304; life after leaving MI5 340

  Dolphin Square, London: M Section 198, 229, 241

  Domvile, Admiral Sir Barry 225

  ‘Don’ see Makgill, Donald

  Dorril, Stephen: Blackshirts 139

  ‘Double Cross deception’ 230, 303

  Dr No (film) 334

  Driberg, Tom (‘M/8’) 70, 109–10, 159, 230, 314, 315, 321–3, 339

  Dundee Courier 175

  Ealing Ladies Hockey Club 123, 169

  Economic League 32–3, 47, 90, 249

  Edwards, Robert 81, 83

  Eisenstein, Sergei: Battleship Potemkin 87

  Eliot, Vivienne (née Haigh-Wood) 139

  Ellsberg, Daniel 266

  ‘espionage’ 93

  Evans, Arthur Glyn 100

  Evans, Peggy 100

  Ewer, William (‘Trilby’) 327

  Fascism 60, 75, 117–18, 122, 136, 138, 171, 196, 202, 246, 293, 301, 302, 309–11, 332, 338; see also British Fascisti/British Fascists; British Union of Fascists

  Fellowship of the Services 259–60

  ‘Fifth Column’/’Fifth Columnists’ 240, 241, 258, 271–2, 274, 278, 285, 290, 300–1, 302

  Finney, Jim 50

  Fisher, James 330, 336

  Fisher, Sir Warren 76

  Fleming, Ian 93, 146, 334

  Foot, Michael 38

  Forster, E. M. 233

  Francis-Hawkins, Neil 117, 118, 251–2, 292

  Franco, General Francisco 240

  Freemasons 8, 20, 26, 50, 242, 243, 270

  Friends of the Soviet Union (FSU) 105–9, 112

  Fry, Mr Justice 206

  FSU see Friends of the Soviet Union

  Fuchs, Klaus 318

  Gaertner, Friedl (‘GELATINE’) 221–2, 229–30, 252, 293, 306, 337, 339

  Gario, Gino 193

  Garnett, David ‘Bunny’ 103

  Geary, Charles 259–60

  ‘GELATINE’ see Gaertner, Friedl

  General Elections: 1924 32, 35—6, 50, 249; 1929 67; 1931 83–4; 1935 171; 1945 317; 1951 318

  General Strike (1926) 57–8

  George V 77

  Gestapo, the 137, 138, 272, 281

  Gilligan, Arthur 25

  Gillson, Tony 305

  Ginhoven, Inspector Hubert van 67

  Glading, Percy: ‘a red-hot Communist’ 119–20; sacked from Woolwich Arsenal 120–21; re-educated in Moscow 149–50; becomes National Organiser of the Communist Party 121, and a paid official in Soviet front organisation 121; under surveillance by Olga Gray 121, 123, 130–31; and Dickson 128, 181; organises Olga’s mission to India 141, 142, 146–7, 149; maintains contact with her 165–6, 169; meets Soviet handlers 178, 179; instructed to recruit subagents from Woolwich Arsenal 179–80; asks Olga to run safe house 180–82, 183; watched by MI5 181, 183; meeting with Maly 184, 185; given mission to steal blueprints of Royal Naval guns 185–6, 187, 188–91, 327; arrested 203–5, 217; trial 206, 207–10, 214, 220, 296; sentenced to hard labour 210

  Glading, Rosa 121

  Glasgow Communist Party headquarters: raid 40–41, 42–3, 47, 52

  Gloucester Place (No. 47) 1–3, 273, 282–5

  Godfrey, Admiral John 334

  Goebbels, Joseph 231

  Good Companions (BBC television) 325

  Gowen, Franklin 283, 284, 296

  Graham, Lord Ronald 267–8

  Gray, Charles 81–2, 94

  Gray, Marjorie 208

  Gray, Mrs 81, 84, 123, 131

  Gray, Olga: childhood 81–2; character 81, 82, 83, 84–5, 92; recruited into Secret Service 81, 82–5; interview with M 85, 91, 92–5; and his training 95, 96–9, 107; pay 98; first mission to infiltrate FSU 103, 104, 105–9; offered position with Communist organisations 112, 122; shares office with Glading 119, 121, 123; joins hockey club 123; works full-time for Comintern organisations 123–5; meets Dickson 123, 125; and M’s direction 128–9; edges closer to Glading 130–31; her mission to India 141–3, 146–9, 150; resigns from Communist organisations 163; becomes Pollitt’s secretary at British Communist Party headquarters 163–6; has breakdown 167–8; finishes as MI5 agent 169; remains in contact with Pollitt and Glading 169; agrees to run Glading’s safe house 180–81, 182, 183; meets Soviet handlers 184, 185; and Glading’s first NKVD mission 187, 188–92; and his failed mission and arrest 203, 204–5; as ‘Miss X’ at preliminary hearing 206–8; at Glading’s trial 209–11, 213–14; and life after MI5 211–12, 341–2

  Gray, Richard 205, 208

  Gray’s Inn Road (No. 53) 119, 121, 122, 123, 124, 146

  Greene, Ben 306–8

  Greene, Douglas 125

  Greene, Graham 46, 114, 306; The Third Man 307

  Guards Club, London 7–8

  Gubbins, Major-General Sir Colin 334

  Guinness, Diana (née Mitford, later Mosley) 134

  Hall, Admiral Sir Reginal ‘Blinker’ 32, 47, 249, 261, 296

  Hancock, Thomas 111

  Hancock-Nunn, Eileen see Hewitt, Eileen

  Hancock-Nunn, Vivian: as M’s agent (‘M/7’) 110–12, 127, 128–9, 144, 293; and Pollard 146; on Glading’s lawyers 209–10, 211; joins The Link 224–5; life after MI5 340; his novels 340, 341

  Hankey, Sir Maurice 76

  Hannon, Patrick 25

  Hansen, Georg 67, 191

  Harker, Jasper 211, 218, 219, 275

  Hatchett’s, Piccadilly 72, 110

  Hawke, Mr Justice 210–11

  Healy, Maurice, KC 297

  Hewitt, Edgar, KC 111

  Hewitt, Eileen 111

  Hewitt, Gerald 340

  Himsworth, Norman 314

  Hirst, John 223, 242, 259, 293, 309

  Hiscox, Molly 309

  Hitchcock, Alfred 2; Blackmail 83

  Hitler, Adolf 60, 75, 220; and Mosley/British Union of Fascists 133, 135, 154, 162, 172, 194; admired by Joyce 135, 139; and rearmament 157; and Munich Crisis 223; invites Kathleen Tesch to Berchtesgaden 225–7; and Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact 228,
229, 231; sympathisers in Britain 245, 248, 309; in Warsaw victory parade 246; plans invasion of Britain 281, 290

  Holderness, Sir Ernest 278

  Holland Road (No. 82) 183

  Hollis, Roger 315

  Holmes, Colin 35

  Holt-Wilson, Sir Eric 89, 290, 292

  Home Office: warrants allowing MI5 interception of letters (‘HOWs’) 90; and Isobel Brown 112; asks MI5 for reports on Fascist movement 136, 138–9, 161; and Joyce 231; refuses to authorise mass internment 239–41, 274, 275–6, 278–9;

  finally persuaded 288–90; and arrest of Anna Wolkoff 282; and Ben Greene case 307–8

  Home Office Advisory Committee 298, 302, 308

  Hope, Henry and Mary (later Lord and Lady Rankeillour) 252

  Hughes, J. McGuirk 47, 144, 161, 201, 267–8, 273, 297–8, 299, 300

  ‘Hunger Marches’ 132

  Imperial Fascist League 58–9

  Incitement to Disaffection Act (1934) 129

  Indian Communist Party 147–8, 149

  ‘Innocents’ Clubs’ 105

  International Lenin School 149–50

  International News Service 266

  internment 196—7; mass 239–41, 274, 275–6, 278–9, 288–9, 291–2, 293

  Invergordon Mutiny (1931) 86–7

  IRA 29, 35

  Irgun (Zionist group) 317

  Italia Nostra, L’ (newspaper) 193

  Italo-Abyssinian War, Second 170

  Jane, Sergeant Charles 67

  Johnson, Herschel 279, 280

  Joint Intelligence Committee 274

  Jowitt, Sir william 296

  Joyce, Hazel (née Barr) 16–17, 35, 37, 54–5, 71, 116, 162

  Joyce, James 195

  Joyce, Joan 232, 244

  Joyce, Meg 231

  Joyce, Quentin 232, 244

  Joyce, William: early life 29–30; meets Max at British Fascists 28, 29–30, 126; Max’s complex relationship with 30, 37, 41, 71, 115–16; becomes member of K 30–31, 51, 116–17; wounded at Lambeth Baths rally (1924) 33–5, 116, 135; meets future wife at Cenotaph 36–7; marriage 54; graduates from Birkbeck with a First 70; joins Conservative Party 59, 70; cheats on wife 71; not taken on by Max 71; becomes teacher 116; recruited by Mosley into British Union of Fascists 118, 132, 133; runs ‘I Squad’ 133–4; speaks at BUF events 134, 135; secures British passport 134; leads BUF delegation in Germany 134; abandons academia 134–5; becomes BUF Director of Propaganda 135; his anti-Semitism 135, 161, 173, and admiration for Hitler and Mussolini 135, 162; M’s profiles of 161–2, 173; used as an informant by M 162; given money for BUF by financier 171; speeches become wilder 172–3; Eric Roberts on 200, 201; forced out of BUF and sets up pro-Nazi splinter group 200; taken on as agent by M 201–2; reassessed by M 223–4; warned by M and escapes to Berlin 231, 232–3, 244; broadcasts as Lord Haw-Haw 231–2, 244; and Anna Wolkoff 256, 268–70, 271, 273, 297, 298, 300; arrested in Germany 311; hanged 311–12

  Joynson-Hicks, William 67

  ‘K’ (head of MI5) 78

  ‘K’ (unit) see British Fascisti/british Fascists

  Kell, Sir Vernon: sets up Secret Service Bureau 240–41; as head of MI5 49; on duties of a Security Service 300; introduces Morton and Makgill 49–50; sees Max’s reports 51; makes him an offer 53, 57; and department changes 76–7; relationship with M 89, 91; and Incitement to Disaffection Act 129; gives M a Christmas bonus 129–30; his attitude to British Fascism 136, 138; and Mosley 171; dinners with M 199; swamped by enemy alien tribunals 241; and Anna Wolkoff 255, 260–61; at Home Office meeting on British Fascists 288; dismissed by Churchill 290, 292

  Kendal, Sir Norman 282

  Kennedy, John F., President 264

  Kennedy, Joseph 264, 280, 282, 285, 297–8

  ‘Kent, John’ see Kent, Tyler

  Kent, Tyler 263–4; collects copies of documents 263, 264–6; and Anna Wolkoff and Captain Ramsay 262, 266–7, 272–4, 277; arrested 1–2, 279–80, 282–7, 288–9, 291, 300; trial 295–8, 338; sentenced 297

  Kerrigan, Peter 143–4

  ‘King, Captain’ 85, 91, see Knight, Maxwell

  ‘King, Jack’ see Roberts, Eric

  Kipling, Rudyard: Kim 45

  Knight, Ada (mother) 10, 12, 13, 16, 56

  Knight, Enid (sister) 10, 13, 16, 56, 97, 199, 331

  Knight, Eric (brother) 10, 12, 13, 16

  Knight, Gwladys (née Poole; 1st wife) 55–6, 61–5, 115, 160; death 174–7, 197–8, 200

  Knight, Hugh (father) 10, 12, 97, 145

  Knight, Lois (née Coplestone; 2nd wife) 197–8, 199, 200, 249, 330–31

  Knight, Maxwell (‘M’)

  appearance 7, 95, 159, 197

  awarded OBE 308

  birth and childhood 10-11, 61, 144–5, 335

  and Cambridge spy ring 313–15, 321–2, 338

  character and personality 7, 10, 11, 15, 30, 41, 43, 71, 144, 145, 177, 320, 329; animal lover 10–12, 14–15, 17, 27, 43, 52–3, 56, 61, 89, 94, 95, 96–7, 121–2, 152, 159, 166, 188, 198–9, 249, 310, 328–30, 332, 333; belief in loyalty 59–60, 114; charm 10, 55, 63, 94, 197, 251; club joiner 158–9; craves recognition 63, 144, 333; jazz lover 13–14, 17, 94–5, 97, 129, 159, 311, 326; likes breaking and entering 40, 41, 282, 283, 310; political views 9–10, 17, 28, 37, 41, 59–60, 69, 89, 127, 130, 140, 162, 202, 232–4, 245, 249–50, 293–4, 315, 316, 317–18; sexuality 16–17, 63–5, 200, 331; as smoker 144, 333; speech/voice 95, 197, 329; spiritualist interests 199–200; as spymaster see below

  death and memorial service 336

  and death of his wife 174—7, 198, 200

  early career: on HMS Worcester 12; in Royal Naval Reserve 9, 12–13; at Ministry of Shipping 13, 15; as paint salesman 15, 16; as games master 7, 16, 27, 102

  on Exmoor 59, 61–5, 69–70, 144

  family 9, 10, 12, 13, 15–16, 145

  homes: in Camberley 310, 332, 333, 335; in Putney 13, 14, 16; Royal Oak, Withypool 61–2; 38 Sloane Street 96–7, 156, 198, 249; Tythegston Court, Wales 9, 10

  illnesses: pneumonia 163, 167; angina 332

  and Joyce 28, 29–30, 37, 41, 71, 115–16, 126, 167, 201–2, 244, 311–12; his assessments of 29, 161–2, 173, 223–4; and Joyce’s escape to Germany 232–3, 244

  in ‘Makgill Organisation’ 7–10, 17, 20–21, 41–2, 50–51, 53, 70, 71

  marriages: first 54, 55–6, 64–5, 115, 160; second 197–8, 330–31; third 331–2

  MI5 connections 53, 76–8, 87–91, 144, 317; see also ‘M Section’

  MI6 connections 50–52, 53, 68–70, 72–6

  and Mosley/British Union of Fascists 139–40, 259, 288

  as radio broadcaster 326, 328; on Desert Island Discs 326–7; The Naturalist 326, 327

  salary 52, 69, 97, 330

  and Soviet espionage postwar 313–16, 317–19

  as spymaster (‘M’) 41, 42–3, 45–7, 70, 71, 129, 146, 148, 156, 169, 182, 192, 200, 217, 222–3, 241, 251, 253, 300–1, 304–5, 334, 335, 338–9, 343—4; see ‘M Section’

  as television show host 326, 328, 329; Countrywise 327; Good Companions 325

  undercover in British Fascist movement 22–3, 25–8, 31, 48, 52; at Lambeth Baths rally (1924) 33, 34, 35, 37; and kidnapping of Pollitt 39, 41; raids on Glasgow Communist Party headquarters 40–41, 52; after the General Strike 57–9; leaves BF 117–18

  in wartime: and Home Office refusal to authorise internment 276, 288–9, 291–2, 293; interrogation of Fascists 309—10; works for Special Operation Executive 309; and D-Day landings 310

  as writer 16, 94, 113–15, 143–4, 159, 199, 326, 327, 328, 330, 331

  Knight, Robert (uncle) 12, 15, 53

  Knight, Susi (formerly Barnes; 3rd wife) 331–2

  ‘Knight’s Black Agents’ 305—6, see ‘M Section’

  Koestler, Arthur 122

  Kurtz, Harold 220–21, 222, 293, 306, 307, 309, 340

  Labouchere, Colonel Frank 299

  Labour Monthly 110, 111

  Labour Party 31–2, 36, 38, 67, 70, 117, 317, 319; MPs 38, 117, 135;
see also Driberg, Tom; MacDonald, James Ramsay

  LAI see League Against Imperialism

  Lang, Fritz: Spione 83

  Larkin, Philip: ‘For Sidney Bechet’ 13

  LaRocca, Nick 14

  Lazarus, Jack 33, 135

  League Against Imperialism (LAI) 121, 122, 124, 137, 163

  League of Nations 122, 157

  Leather, Mrs (daily) 249

  Le Carré, John (David Cornwell) 93, 94, 253, 319–20, 324, 327; A Perfect Spy 93, 124, 158, 319, 320; Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 93

  ‘Lend-Lease’ 277

  Lenin, V. I. 105

  Le Queux, William: The Invasion of 1910 240

  Liddell, Guy 136, 137; goes to Nazi Germany 136–8, 228; clashes with Home Office over mass internment 238–40, 241, 274, 275–6; fails to show M’s report on Tyler Kent to Americans 273–4; at Home Office meeting on internment of British Fascists 288–9; on Churchill’s views on internment 291, 292; on stress suffered by agents 168; and Anna Wolkoff’s trial 296; on agents provocateurs 299–300; on MI5 training 304; critical of M Section 304; and release of Ben Greene 307; agrees with M over Soviet espionage 315–16; on the future of intelligence gathering 318

  Link, The 225, 309

  Lintorn-Orman, Blanche 23–4

  Lintorn-Orman, Rotha 23–4, 26–7, 117

  Litvinov, Maxim 45

  Liverpool K section: Pollitt kidnap 38–9, 47

  Lloyd George, David 18

  London International Press 194

  London Zoo 122, 326, 334

  Long, Breckinridge 295

  Look (BBC television) 326

  Loveday, Arthur 247

  Luke, Celia 314, 315

  ‘M’ see Knight, Maxwell

  ‘M Section’: creation of 78, 87–8, 97–8; agents 153, 198; female agents 91, 103–4, 112, 165, 337–8, and see Gaertner, Friedl; Gray, Olga; Mackie, Marjorie; Maund, Mona; Miller, Joan; Munck, Hélène de; Tesch, Kathleen; male agents 90–91, and see Bingham, John; Dickson, Jimmy; Driberg, Tom; Hancock-Nunn, Vivian; Joyce, William; Kurtz, Harold; Le Carré, John; Kurtz, Harold; Mandeville-Roe, E. G.; Pollard, Graham; Roberts, Eric; Sykes, Claud; Younger, Bill; spies arrested see Glading, Percy; Kent, Tyler; Wolkoff, Anna; in wartime 241, 305—6, 316; introduction of basic training 303—4; and Ben Greene 306–8

 

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