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Churchill's Iceman_The True Story of Geoffrey Pyke_Genius, Fugitive, Spy

Page 47

by Henry Hemming


  405 ‘Communist Russia has not yet’: GP, ‘Russell’, c. 1936

  Pyke Hunt, Part 6

  407 ‘We’ll be back’: Andrew Boyle, Climate of Treason (London: Hutchinson), 1980, p. 403

  407 4,605 documents: Miranda Carter, Blunt (London: Pan), 2002, p. 268

  408 Blunt sweeps flat: Ibid., p. 346

  410 ‘ABO’ more significant to moscow: This was the opinion of the KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky. Steven Merritt Miner, Stalin’s Holy War: Religion, Nationalism, and Alliance Politics, 1941–5 (London: University of North Carolina Press), 2003, p. 278

  410 ‘the NKVD’s most remarkable’: Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky, KGB (London: Hodder & Stoughton), 1990, p. 265

  410 Smollett exaggerates Soviet concerns: Steven Merritt Miner, Stalin’s Holy War: Religion, Nationalism, and Alliance Politics, 1941–45 (London: University of North Carolina Press), 2003, pp. 246–247

  411 Smollett maintains USSR is weak: Anthony Glees, The Secrets of the Service (London: Jonathan Cape), 1987, p. 197

  411 ‘the Ministry of Information’: Christopher Andrew, The Mitrokhin Archive (London: Allen Lane), 1999, p. 158

  411 ‘red haze’: Hyde, I Believed, p. 123

  411 ‘propaganda beyond price’: Miner, Stalin’s Holy War, p. 272

  411 Smollett initially reports to Philby: Some have suggested that Smollett was recruited by Philby during the mid-1930s – Chapman Pincher, Their Trade Is Treachery (London: Sidgwick & Jackson), 1981, p. 114. Gordievsky and Andrew think he moved to London in 1933 ‘probably at Maly’s instigation, as an idealistic young NKVD illegal agent working under journalistic cover for a Viennese newspaper’. Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky, KGB (London: Hodder & Stoughton), 1990, p. 334

  411–2 ‘the embarrassing friend’: Gordon Corera, The Art of Betrayal (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson), 2011, p. 19

  412 Burgess told to drop Smollett: MADCHEN, file no. 83792, vol. 1, p. 216, quoted in Nigel West and Oleg Tsarev, The Crown Jewels (London: HarperCollins), 1998, p. 157

  412 ‘cooperation with the Russians’: KV 2/3040/128a

  413 GP and Astor connection: Richard Cockett, David Astor and the Observer (London: Andre Deutsch), 1991, p. 102

  413 ‘strong impression’: George Orwell, ‘Orwell’s List’, FO 1110/189/PR11/1135G

  413 ‘Everything must wear a disguise’: John le Carré, A Perfect Spy (Penguin), Kindle version, page 69

  414 ‘economic miracle’: Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Soviet Communism: A New Civilization? (London: Longmans), 1935 (a book later described by A. G. P. Taylor as ‘despite severe competition, the most preposterous ever written about Soviet Russia’)

  414 possible American Communist Party link: This is based on conversations and correspondence with the historian Michael Weatherburn in early 2014, as well as Michael Weatherburn, ‘Motorcycles, Mattresses, and Microscopes’, 10 October 2012

  414 ‘Received one packet’: The signature is that of Margaret Stewart and was found alongside papers dating from 1938

  415 ‘all that I require’: GP Diary, January 1937

  415 socialism using British political machine: Bernard Shaw, Labour Monthly, 1921

  416 ‘with caution and jealousy’: GP Notebook, 14 August 1941

  416 ‘a body of people’: Ibid., ‘July 20 to July 31, 1941’

  416 GP flies to Paris: Contact might have come about through Pyke’s friend Konni Zilliacus MP, later described by Jürgen Kuczynski as ‘somebody we turned to for various ends’. – ‘Protokoll der Befragung des Genossen Professor Jürgen Kuczynski am 20.7.1953’, in SAPMO-BArch, DY 30/IV 2/4/123, Bl. 180–205; or perhaps through Pyke’s friend Harold Laski, a colleague of Kuczynski’s father Rene

  416 ‘I made a report’: Jürgen Kuczynski to Hermann Matern, 22 September 1950, SAPMO-BArch, DY 30 / IV 2/4/113, p. 73 (a copy is among the Kuczynski papers held at Zentrale Landesbibliothek Berlin, Kuc8–2-M13)

  417 ‘I learn more from these’: GP Diary, 25 August 1939

  417 ‘Hitler and Chamberlain were both’: GP Unpublished MSS, 1 May 1941

  417 £500 from Myers: GP Notebook, c. August 1939

  418 ‘I had for many years’: Ibid., 27 August 1941

  418 ‘the real war’: GP Diary, ‘War Aims’, 12 October 1939, p.18

  419 ‘as remote from us’: Peter Conradi, A Very English Hero (Bloomsbury), 2012, Kindle Edition, p. 270

  419 ‘It is everyone’s duty’: GP Diary, ‘War Aims’, 12 October 1939, p.18

  420 GP plans to recruit communist translators: 30 October 1939 – ‘My dear Kuczynski, I return to the subject which I mentioned to you at our last meeting of help in a) marking for translation, and b) translating from foreign languages. I am very anxious to secure the help of your friends because at the moment I am getting help from people whose outlook is rather more to the right, and I shall be compelled to rely on people of this sort inevitably, if I cannot get help from people of your sort. I wonder therefore if you could find time to take the matter up with some of your friends?’ GP to Jürgen Kuczynski, 1 November 1939: ‘I did not make myself quite clear about the translators. I know that many of your friends cannot translate into decent English, but what I want is folk who can mark the significant articles in papers, which we can then get translated by those who can translate but have no political background.’ Kuc2–1-P1402-P1413_0010.

  420 GP’s conversation with Watson: Robert Vansittart to Leo Amery, 19 July 1940

  420 ‘every sign of being’: GP Diary, 16 October 1939

  421 ‘excellent reason for’: GP to Leo Amery, 3 May 1940

  422 ‘giving him all his stunt’: ‘Extract from Y.2127 re PYKE Geoffrey’, 15 September 1942, KV 2/3039/76b

  422 ‘his terror at the thought’: Craig, Memoirs of a Thirties Dissident

  423 ‘British subjects to do’: KV 2/3364/51b

  423 ‘stood close to the English’: Jürgen Kuczynski to Hermann Matern, 22 September 1950, SAPMO-BArch, DY 30 / IV 2/4/113, p. 73 (a copy is among the Kuczynski papers held at Zentrale Landesbibliothek Berlin, Kuc8–2-M13)

  424 ‘confidential contact’: Corera, The Art of Betrayal, p. 262

  424 ‘from factories and the Forces’: Hyde, I Believed, p. 145

  424 ‘to push the Communist’: ‘Extract from censors comment mentioning PYKE, Fritz Heine to R. Katz’, 14 November 1942, KV 2/3039/84b

  425 radical military ideas: GP, ‘Commentary on Proposal for the Occupation of Selected German-occupied Islands in the Mediterranean by Bluff’, 18 November 1943

  427 ‘I am primarily’: GP to Ray Murphy, 7 October 1946

  Epilogue, or, How to Think Like a Genius

  429 ‘one of the most radical’: Anne Marie Rafferty, The Politics of Nursing Knowledge (London: Routledge), 1996, p. 157

  429 bicycle-power companies: Electric Pedals: http://electricpedals.com/about-us/ and for the laptop: http://www.alternative-energy-news.info/pedal-powered-laptops-afghanistan/ both accessed on 24 November 2013

  429 pedal-powered bar: http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2011/05/pedal-powered-farms-and-factories.html accessed on 11 March 2014

  429 ‘have been put to good’: Mark, From Small Organic Molecules, p. 101

  429–30 Weasel tracked carries: Ten Weasels were used by a team of Canadian soldiers prospecting for minerals in Canada’s North-western Territories, ‘Exercise Musk-Ox’, Manchester Guardian, 22 April 1946; South Pole – Perutz, I Wish I’d Made You Angry Earlier, p. 87

  430–1 ‘out of all proportion’: Mark Dudek, Architecture of Schools (Oxford: Architectural Press), 2000, p. 22

  431 ‘one of the factors’: van der Eyken and Turner, Adventures in Education, p. 18

  431 ‘played a key role’: Laura Cameron, ‘Science, Nature, and Hatred: “Finding Out” at the Malting House Garden School, 1924–29’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, Vol. 24, No. 6, 2006, pp. 851–872

  431 study of enormous value: Adrian Wooldridge, Measuring the Mind: Education and Psychology i
n England, c. 1860-c.1990 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 1994, p. 121

  431 ‘a serious sociological study’: GP to Louis Mountbatten, 30 July 1943

  431–2 ‘What made Pyke so’: Time, 8 March 1948

  432 ‘the social and purposive’: GP to Kingsley Martin, 10 March 1946

  432–3 ‘It is easier to solve’: GP to Jon Kimche, 14 January 1945

  433 ‘My technique’: GP to Louis Mountbatten, ‘Cow thesis’, 16 April 1942

  433 ‘The correct formulation’: GP to Palmer Putnam, US National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the OSRD, Division 12, Project Records 1940–45, OD-65

  433–4 ‘One of my ideas’: GP to Louis Mountbatten, ‘Comments on Captain of Koeppenick’, 30 June 1942

  434 ‘We cannot tell where’: GP, ‘Notes for Talk to Combined Operations Training School’, 21 January 1947

  434 ‘not a question of ability’: GP to Louis Mountbatten, ‘Comments on Captain of Koeppenick’, 30 June 1942

  435 ‘would rather wage’: Notes on Certain Phases of the Development of Weasel (with excerpts from the Project Log), 13 July 42, US National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the OSRD, NC-138, Entry 1, Office of the Chairman, NDRC, and the Office of the Director, OSRD: General Records, 1940–1947, Box 55

  435 ‘heartily kicked’: GP to Louis Mountbatten, 26 April 1942

  435 ‘the sport of shooting’: GP to Michael Foot, 5 September 1945

  437 ‘even if you had’: Donald Tyerman to GP, 23 February 1948

  439 ‘I have to behave’: GP to David Pyke, 1 February 1947

  SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Archives

  Archives of the Trades Union Congress, London

  Bundesarchiv, Berlin

  Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge

  Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library

  Cambridge University Library, Cambridge

  Eton College Library, Eton

  Institute of Education, University of London

  King’s College Modern Archives Centre, Cambridge

  National Archives, Kew

  National Archives, Washington DC

  National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa

  Nuffield College Library, Oxford

  University of Leeds

  University of Southampton

  Unpublished Sources

  Geoffrey Pyke Archive

  Patrick Smith, unpublished account

  Peter Raleigh, ‘Germany’, unpublished memoirs

  Deborah Carter, unpublished reminisces

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