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M

Page 38

by Henry Hemming


  ‘M/1’ see Pollard, Graham

  ‘M/2’ see Maund, Mona

  ‘M/3’ see Dickson, Jimmy

  ‘M/4’ 109, 146, 230–31

  ‘M/5’ (Glaswegian gun examiner) 42–3, 90, 127, 136, 144, 146, 181, 208

  ‘M/7’ see Hancock-Nunn, Vivian

  ‘M/8’ see Driberg, Tom

  ‘M/12’ see Gray, Olga

  ‘M/A’ 252

  ‘Macaroni, Mr’ see Del Monte, Duke

  Macartney, Wilfred 67, 191

  McCall, Joseph 40–41, 42, 47

  McClure, George 296

  MacDonald, James Ramsay 31, 36, 67–8, 132, 173

  Mackie, Marjorie (‘M/Y’) 242, 293, 337; infiltrates Right Club 242, 243, 244, 246–7; interested in spiritualism 256; gathers information on Anna Wolkoff 247, 248, 249, 254–6, 257–8, 260, 267, 276–8, 282, 285, and Tyler Kent 262, 273, 282, 285; hears of Right Club sympathisers in the police 282; testifies at Wolkoff—Kent trial 296; M proud of 296; life after MI5 339

  Maclean, Donald 128, 179, 318, 319, 320–21

  McMeakin, Elsie 100

  MacNab, Angus 224, 298–9

  Mail on Sunday 342

  Maisky, Ivan 237

  Makgill, Sir Donald (‘Don’) 20, 25–6, 27, 28, 31, 42, 50, 51, 139–40

  Makgill, Sir George 18, 19, 68; relationship with Desmond Morton 49–50; sets up intelligence agency 20–21, 22, 50, 71 (see Makgill Organisation); meeting with M (1923) 7–10, 17; and British Fascisti 22–3, 26, 75; horrified by Labour government 31–2; impressed by Max 31; organises Economic League–’K’ coalition 32–3; death 59

  Makgill Organisation 20–21, 22, 25–6, 27, 36, 41 –2, 44, 50, 51, 53, 59, 97–8, 245

  Maly, Theodor (‘Mr Peters’) 178, 179, 180, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 203, 219

  Manchester Evening News 159

  Manchester Guardian 207

  Mandeville-Roe, E. Geoffrey (‘M/R’) 117, 118, 139, 193–4, 195, 196, 222, 293, 339

  Marina, Princess of Kent 248

  Martin, Edith 100

  Mass Observation 231

  Masters, Anthony 342; The Man Who Was M 331

  Matthews, Leo Harrison 334–5

  Matthias, Ludwig 265, 266, 272, 279

  Maud, Princess of Fife (Lady Carnegie) 247

  Maude, John, KC 340

  Maugham, William Somerset 137; Ashenden: Or the British Agent 78

  Maund, Captain 217

  Maund, Mona (‘M/2’) 104, 109, 130, 146, 214–19, 256, 319, 337, 339

  Maxwell, Sir Alexander 239, 288

  Maxwell Knight Memorial Fund 336

  Maxwell Knight Young Naturalists’ Library 336

  May, Alan Nunn 318

  Mayne, Ferdy 114

  ‘M/B’ 252

  ‘M/C’ 241, 319

  ‘M/D’ 252

  Medical Supply Association 292

  Melville, william 78

  Menezes, Rogerio 309

  Menzies, Ian 221, 334

  Menzies, Stewart 221

  Meredith, Frederick 109

  ‘M/F’ see Roberts, Eric

  ‘M/H’ see Kurtz, Harold

  ‘M/I’ see Munck, Hélène de

  MI5 xiii, 240–41; employs Mussolini (1917) 24; heads/Director Generals see Kell, Sir Vernon, Petrie, Sir David, Sillitoe, Percy; and Makgill Organisation 20; former officers 47; relaxed about K 48, 51; suspicious of British Fascists 48; postwar cuts and staff reduction 50; and ARCOS raid (1927) 66; arrests Soviet agents in Special Branch 67; unprofessional intelligence gathering 73; relations with MI6 and Special Branch 74–5, 76; renamed the Security Service xiii, 76–7; tasked with investigating Communist movement 76–7, 87, 129, 138, 149–50, 164, 172, 213–14; and Invergordon Mutiny (1931) 86–7; headquarters (‘The Office’) on Cromwell Road 88–9, 97, 127, 198, 200; information regarding Communist Party ‘strictly limited’ 89–90; naming of agents 100; and Glading/Woolwich Arsenal case 119, 120, 121, 149, 181, 183, 190–91, 203–4; Jimmy Dickson as agent (see entry) 125–6, 127; attitude to Fascist movement 136–9, 152, 153, 157, 161, 171–2, 196; watchers’ methods ‘very unscientific’ 183–4; wages 211; demands internment without trial 196–7; fails to arrest Melita Norwood 217–19; changes in recruitment 314; and German espionage 220, 224, 265; ‘Double Cross’ deception 230, 303; battles with Home Office over mass internment 238–41, 274, 275–6, 278–9, 288–93, 300–2; and wartime ‘spy fever’ 271; official histories 313, 319; and ‘Cambridge Spies’ and further Soviet espionage 313–16, 318, 319; and Zionist terrorists 317; bugs Communist Party headquarters 318; and Driberg 321–3; and Security Service Act (1989) 337; and the ‘Waldegrave Initiative’ 337; former agent appeals against murder conviction 168; see also ‘M Section’

  MI6 xiii, 71, 241; and Zinoviev Letter 36; head (‘C’) 78, see Sinclair, Sir Hugh, see also Menzies, Stewart; Production section run by Desmond Morton (see entry) 49; suggests MI5’s staff be reduced 50; and ARCOS raid 66; shares Makgill’s agents 50–51; and arrest of Soviet agents in Special Branch 67; and use of Max and his agent network 68–70, 72–4; ‘outright warfare’ with Special Branch 74–6; and ‘Treaty of Westminster’ 76–7, 88, 126; and Glading 119; undercover agents 221, 224, 247, 339; and M’s encroachment on Belgian territory 273, 300; and Soviet moles 316, 323, 324

  Military Censorship 246, 249, 256

  Miller, Joan 256–7, 276, 277, 296

  Minehead: Madame Miranda (beauty salon) 160

  miners/Miners’ Federation 56, 57

  Ministry of Labour 126

  Mirren, Dame Helen 267

  Mitcham, Surrey 10; Mitcham Common 11, 61

  Mitchell, Harold, MP 247

  Mitford, Unity 134, 247

  Mitford sisters see Guinness, Diana; Mitford, Unity

  ‘M/J’ see Joyce, William

  ‘M/M’ 252

  Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact (1939) 228, 229, 230, 231

  Montagu, Ivor 327–8

  Morning Post 24

  Morris, Desmond 328, 336

  Morton, Desmond 49, 50–52, 53, 66–70, 72–5, 76, 77, 291–2, 293, 300

  Mosley, Sir Oswald 132–3, 144; with Mussolini in Rome 117, 135, 136; launches new Fascist party (see British Union of Fascists) 117, 118; impressed by Joyce 133, 134, 135; supported by Lord Rothermere 139; performs at Fascist rally in Olympia (1934) 151; strengthens relationships with Mussolini and Hitler 154, 157, 161, 162, 170, 171; British public turns against 171; delivers inflammatory speeches 172; forces Joyce out of BUF 200; ‘our time is approaching’ 259; appeals to ‘patriotism’ of BUF members 288; and Captain Ramsay 285, 289; imprisoned 290; appears as character witness for Anna Wolkoff 296–7; unable to relaunch postwar political career 293

  ‘M/R’ see Mandeville-Roe, E. G.

  ‘M/S’ see Sykes, Claud

  ‘M/T’ see Tesch, Kathleen

  Muggeridge, Malcolm 263

  Munck, Hélène de 252–4, 256–8, 262, 268–70, 272–3, 285, 293, 296, 300, 337, 339

  Munday, Charles 204, 217–18; trial 208–9, 210

  Munich Crisis (1938) 223, 224, 228–9

  Munzenberg, Willi 105, 106

  Mussolini, Benito 24, 60, 75; and Mosley 117, 135; and funding of British Union of Fascists 139, 140, 154, 162, 171; supported by BUF 170; meets Mandeville-Roe 194; and Ribbentrop 258; and Del Monte 278

  ‘M/Y’ see Mackie, Marjorie

  National Archives 337

  National Fascisti 59

  ‘National’ Government 83

  National Zeitung 196

  Natural History Museum 88, 336

  Naturalist, The (BBC radio) 326, 327

  Naturalists’ Notebook (BBC radio) 326

  Nature Parliament (BBC radio) 326

  Nazi Party 117, 133, 134, 137–8, 157, 173, 223, 256, 271–2, 281, 300; in London 196, 229–30; see also Hitler, Adolf

  New York Times 207

  News Chronicle 220

  Nicholas II, Tsar 248, 253

  Nieuwenhuys, Jean 255–6, 273

  NKVD (People�
�s Commissariat for Internal Affairs) 178–82, 185, 186, 187–9, 191, 203, 218–19, 272, 315, 321

  Noakes, S. H. 308

  Nordic League 232

  Norwood, Melita 217–19

  Nuremberg, Germany: ‘Day of Victory’ celebrations (1933) 134; Trials 340

  Observer 24

  ‘Office, The’ 88–9, 171, 238, 340; M refuses to run ‘M Section’ from 97, 127, 198, 200, 317; attitudes to M 118, 130, 177, 244, 318, 319; and Anna Wolkoff 247, 255; and Soviet moles 314, 316, 323–4

  Official Secrets Act 136, 297, 315, 318, 323

  Original Dixieland Jazz Band 14

  Orwell, George 210

  Overseas Club, London 174–5

  Parker, Andrew 93

  Peace Pledge Union 238, 306

  Pearson, Inspector Joseph 2–3, 284

  Pepys, Mark see Cottenham, Earl of

  Petrie, Sir David 304

  Philby, Kim 128, 179, 187, 188, 210, 313

  Pilcher, Toby 278

  Pincher, Chapman 323

  Poland 228, 229, 240, 246, 300

  police, the: on strike 19; and K’s raid on Glasgow Communist Party headquarters 40–41, 47; and ARCOS raid 66–7; pass and receive MI5 intelligence 90, 100, 193; enter Daily Worker offices 128; and Fascist movement 136, 138, 276, 301; and intelligence operations 191–2; and Glading’s arrest 205, 209, 217; allow Joyce to escape to Germany 232; wartime arrests 309; infiltrated by Right Club sympathisers 282; see also Special Branch

  Pollard, A. F. 102, 103

  Pollard, Graham 99–103, 109, 127, 128–9, 169, 181; An Enquiry into the Nature of Certain Nineteenth Century Pamphlets (with Carter) 145–6

  Pollard, Kathleen see Beauchamp, Kathleen

  Pollitt, Harry 38–9, 41, 47, 141–3, 146, 149, 163, 164–5, 169, 180

  Pontecorvo, Bruno 318

  Popov, Dusko (‘TRICYCLE’) 230

  post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) 168, 342–3

  Poston, Guy 305, 332

  Pritt, Denis, KC 209, 210

  PTSD see post-traumatic stress disorder

  Putlitz, Wolfgang zu 220

  Pyle, Dolly 83, 84, 85

  Quennell, Peter: The Marble Foot 102–3

  Radley, Ellen 194

  Radley Forensic Document Laboratory 194

  Rag Tiger (record) 14

  Ramsay, Hon. Captain Archibald Maule, MP (‘Jock’) 242–4, 247, 254, 259, 272, 273, 285, 289, 290, 296

  Ramsay, Mrs 243, 246, 254

  Redesdale, David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron 247

  Retallick, Rita 156–7, 167

  Ribbentrop, Joachm ‘von’ 137, 228, 258

  Riddell, Enid 277

  Right Club 242–3, 244, 246, 247, 248, 252, 254, 256, 258, 259, 260, 262, 267, 270, 273, 276, 277, 282, 289, 338; Red Book 285, 286, 289

  Roberts, Eric (‘Jack King’; ‘M/F’): childhood 151–2; self-improvement 151; recruited by M 44–5, 293; first assignment 45; relationship with M 45–6; infiltrates British Communist Party 151; and Ivor Montagu 327; reactivated by M 151, 152, 193; honeymoons in Nazi Germany 152; infiltrates British Union of Fascists 152–8, 159, 160–61, 162, 196, 224; reports on Edith Tudor-Hart 184; infiltrates the Right Club 242; suspects Anthony Blunt 315; infiltrates right-wing groups as Gestapo officer 43–4, 299–300; suffers PTSD 342; becomes MI5 officer 340–41; emigrates to Canada 341; on Olga Gray; on Joyce 200, 201; MI5 files released 43–4

  Roberts, Maxwell 341

  Roesel, Dr Gottfried 196

  Roosevelt, President Franklin D. 186, 297; correspondence with Churchill compromised 2, 265, 266, 272, 277–8, 295, 297, 338

  Rothermere, Harold Harmsworth, 1st Viscount 139

  Rothschild, Victor 114

  Runyon, Damon 114

  St James’s Park Underground Station 70, 73

  Saklatvala, Shapurji, MP 31, 32, 35

  Saville, Victor: The W. Plan 83

  Schlesinger, James 93

  Schubatow, Prince 261

  Scott, Peter 326, 330, 336

  Scott, Sir Robert Russell 136

  Scrimgeour, Alex 171

  séances 199–200

  Seaton, Reginald 175—6

  Secret Service Bureau 240–41

  Secret Service Committee 75, 76, 118, 127

  Security Service 76–7

  Security Service Act (1989) 337

  Selsey, Rosamund 200

  Shakespeare, William: Macbeth 305

  Shields, Jimmy 127–8

  Sillitoe, Percy 317

  Simons, Stanley 212

  Simpson, Wallis 248

  Sinclair, Sir Hugh (‘C’) 68–9, 75, 76, 78, 118

  Sisman, Adam: John Le Carré 319

  Sloane Street (No. 38) 96–7, 156, 198

  Smith, Harry 314–15

  Smith, William ‘Crickett’ 147

  Snowden, Edward 266

  SOE see Special Operations Executive

  Soviet Union 19, 20, 23, 49, 66, 87, 172, 228, 230, 238, 243, 303, 337; ambassadors 45, 237; defectors 67, 90; and ARCOS raid 66–7; diplomatic relations restored 67–8; espionage/agents 66, 67, 68, 109, 130, 164–5, 168, 185, 191–2, 217–19, 316, 328, see also ‘Cambridge Spies’; Glading, Percy; Kent, Tyler; Wolkoff, Anna; front organisations 121–3; London safe house 183, 184; Navy 185–6; first atomic bomb test 318; see also Comintern; Friends of the Soviet Union; NKVD; Stalin, Joseph

  Spanish Civil War (1936–8) 180, 220, 240

  Special Branch, Metropolitan Police 51; makes payments to agents 47, 51; infiltrated by Soviet spies 67; instructed to scale back operations against British Communist Party 67–8; bypassed by Desmond Morton 68, 72; and Max’s lunches with Lt-Colonel Carter 72–4, 77, 333; ‘outright warfare’ with MI6 74–5; and the ‘Treaty of Westminster’ 76–7; wrecks recruitment of Communist Party informants 108; and Glading 119, 120, 205; and Fascist movement 136, 172, 301; reports that Max warned Joyce of imminent arrest 244; and Kent–Wolkoff arrests 1–3, 267, 268, 270, 282–6, 296; and mass internment 276, 278; against use of agents provocateurs 299

  Special Operations Executive (SOE) 309, 334

  Speyer, Sir Edgar 18

  spiritualism 199, 256–7, 339

  Springball, Douglas 315

  Stalin, Joseph 149, 150, 185–6, 228, 229, 231

  ‘Stalin’s Terror’ 188

  Stapleton, Irma 308

  ‘Stephens, Mr and Mrs’ see Borovoy, Mikhail

  Stern Gang (Zionist group) 317

  Stirling, Aubrey 89

  Straits Times 159

  Sunday Times 320–21

  Suschitzky, Wolf 327

  Sussex Agricultural Express 42

  Sykes, Claud (‘M/S’) 195–6, 293, 339

  Tangye, Derek 316

  Teagarden, Jack 311

  Tesch, Kathleen (‘M/T’) 225–7, 293, 337, 339

  Tesch, Leonard Robert 225, 226

  Thames House: The Office 198

  Thistlethwaite, Dick 97–8

  Thomas, Joe 165

  Thompson, E. P. 323

  Time magazine 206, 207

  Times, The 24, 32, 34, 102, 146

  ‘Tony’ see Blunt, Anthony

  Trades Union Congress 57, 136

  trade unions 19, 20, 27, 28, 146, 319

  Treachery Act (1940) 290

  ‘Treaty of Westminster’ 76, 88, 126

  Trenchard, Hugh Trenchard, 1st Viscount 136

  Trevor-Roper, Hugh 316

  ‘TRICYCLE’ see Popov, Dusko

  ‘Trilby’ see Ewer, William

  Truth (periodical) 159

  Tucker, Mr Justice 297, 311

  Tudor-Hart, Edith 156–7, 184, 187–8, 327

  Tudor-Hart, Miss H. B. 156

  Tythegston Court, Wales 9, 10, 61

  unemployment 19, 69, 83, 132, 139

  United Services Club 69

  Vernon, Wilfred 109

  Victoria Tutorial College, London 116

  Vivian, Valentine 217

  Vogue (magazine) 248

  ‘Waldegrave Initiative’ 33
7

  Wall Street Crash (1929) 69

  Wandsworth prison 311

  War Book 196–7, 239, 293

  Washington Post 206

  Waugh, Evelyn 103

  Week in Westminster, The (BBC radio) 321

  Weidenfeld & Nicolson (publishers) 322

  Wellington, Arthur Wellesley, 5th Duke of 247

  West, Nigel 315; Mask 164; MI5 305

  Western Morning News 177

  Westminster Bank 44, 151, 154, 160, 161, 171

  Whaddon, Buckinghamshire 226

  Wheatley, Dennis 199, 222, 229

  Wheen, Francis: Tom Driberg 321, 322

  White, Dick 177

  White, John Baker 8, 17, 20, 74–5, 90

  Whiteman, Paul 13

  Whomack, George 191, 204; trial 208–9, 210

  Wilhelmshaven Mutiny, Germany (1918) 87

  Willetts, Paul: Rendez-vous at the Russian Tea Rooms 282, 283

  Williams, Albert: trial 208–9, 210

  Willingdon, Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of, Viceroy of India 173

  Willington School, Putney 16, 27, 52

  Winter, Sir Ormonde 52

  Wintringham, Tom 128

  Withypool, Devon: Royal Oak Hotel 61–2, 69, 115, 118, 160

  Wodehouse, P. G. 171

  Wolkoff, Alexander 260

  Wolkoff, Anna ‘de’ 247–8; angry at collapse of her business 248; introduced to Mrs Mackie 248; puts up posters undermining the war effort 248; boasts she can get uncensored messages out of the country 249; under surveillance by Mrs Mackie 254–5, 256; and Hélène de Munck 252, 253, 257–8; applies to Kell for a job at MI5 255; meets Kell and M 260–62; connection with Tyler Kent 262, 266–7, 272–3; given envelope for Joyce by J. McGuirk Hughes 268–70, 297, 300, 306; linked with Kent by M 273–4; obtains information from Churchill–Roosevelt correspondence 277–8; arrested 279–80, 282, 283, 284, 285, 287, 291; trial 295, 296–8, 339; sentenced 297

  Wolkoff, Admiral Nikolai 248, 249, 252, 253, 268

  Wollic, Sir William 175

  Woman’s Hour (BBC radio) 326

  Woolf, Virginia 229

  Woolwich Arsenal 120, 130–31, 149, 180, 181; ‘spy ring’ 185, 191, 204, 206, 208–9, 213, 338

  Worcester, HMS 9, 12, 115

  Workers Press Commission 101

  Working Class Movement Library, Manchester 215

  Younger, Bill 229, 241, 305

  Zinoviev Letter 36, 50

  Zoological Society of London 327–8

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