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Agent Jack

Page 33

by Robert Hutton


  here space to intern only 18,000: Gillman (1980).

  here ‘Farce’: KV 4/185.

  here ‘Large numbers of enemy aliens’: KV 4/185.

  here ‘every person within the fortress’: Gillman (1980).

  here ‘The paltriest kitchen maid’: FO 371 25189.

  here One of those men was Eric Roberts: The Red Book: Membership list of Captain Ramsay’s Right Club (1939).

  here ‘Anderson began by saying’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘Collar the lot’: Gillman (1980).

  here By July, 753 BUF members: Andrew (2009).

  here ‘Why this policy was never carried out’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘Unden Order’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘appear to have prepared a kind of Black List’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘Dealt with letter from lady’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘Ostensibly these are said to be let out’: KV 6/50.

  here ‘too far-fetched even for Hitler’: CAB 120/468.

  here ‘the police have found pieces’: HW 15/43/59.

  here ‘I do not think there is a case’: KV 2/680.

  here ‘After their trial, Miss X’: Andrew (2009).

  here ‘down at Windsor’: KV 4/187.

  here ‘I appreciate it may be thought’: KV 2/680.

  here ‘the more disreputable riff-raff’: KV 2/680.

  here Wormwood Scrubs . . . was hit: Andrew (2009).

  here ‘Wasn’t it marvellous?’: KV 2/899.

  here The supposed German agent: KV 2/898 and Hemming (2017).

  here ‘He told me all about the Briscoe case’: KV 4/187.

  here Nathaniel Mayer Victor Rothschild: Hannah Rothschild, The Baroness (2012).

  here When Victor was born: H. Rothschild (2012).

  here She was also considered quite daring: H. Rothschild (2012).

  here a servant was told to walk backwards: H. Rothschild (2012).

  here ‘simultaneously spoilt and regimented’: Victor Rothschild, Meditations of a Broomstick (1977).

  here Victor’s earliest memory: V. Rothschild (1977).

  here Cambridge-to-London record: Kenneth Rose, Elusive Rothschild (2001).

  here ‘I don’t like failing at jobs I do’: BBC, ‘The Politics of Thinking’ (1984).

  here an invitation to the White House: Rose (2001).

  here Sir Harold Hartley: E. J. Bowen, rev. K. D. Watson, ‘Hartley, Sir Harold Brewer (1878–1972)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).

  here Hartley recognised that Rothschild’s mind: Rose (2001).

  here ‘I never thought he cared’: Alan Hodgkin, Chance and Design (1994).

  here Queen Victoria expressly rejected: Rose (2001).

  here ‘If I ever have a son’: Miriam Rothschild, Dear Lord Rothschild (1983).

  here Jewish jokes had disappeared: George Orwell, ‘Antisemitism in Britain’, Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters, Vol. III (1968).

  here ‘I am Lord Rothschild’: Rose (2001).

  here the Waterloo story was a lie: Brian Cathcart, The News From Waterloo (2015).

  here ‘He is quite ruthless’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘I am surprised that somebody’: KV4 186.

  here ‘He thought that we should first try’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘The only problem with this story’: Brian Garfield, The Meinertzhagen Mystery (2007).

  here ‘banned from the British Museum’: Garfield (2007).

  here ‘When one takes a bomb … to pieces’: BBC Desert Island Discs interview 7 July 1984.

  here The first bomb Rothschild tackled: Rose (2001).

  here ‘It was difficult to get hold of’: Victor Rothschild, Random Variables (1984).

  here ‘obvious pleasure’: V. Rothschild, Meditations of a Broomstick (1977).

  here ‘intricate surgical operation’: V. Rothschild, Meditations of a Broomstick (1977).

  here ‘although professedly an English firm’: KV2 3313.

  here ‘obtained direct or indirect access’: KV2 3313.

  here ‘all German subjects’: Hansjürgen Koehler, Inside the Gestapo (1940).

  here Encouraged by her husband: STV News, ‘WWII Spycatchers Revealed After 70 years’ (2009).

  here Liddell passed this information: FBI, ‘Spies Caught, Spies Lost, Lessons Learned’ (2007), and Peter Duffy, Double Agent (2014).

  here ‘In every armament factory in America’: Duffy (2014).

  here ‘The accused showed’: KV 2/3313.

  here In 1939, it had 26,000 employees abroad: Wilfried Feldenkirchen, Siemens 1918–1945 (1999).

  here ‘far from pro-Nazi’: KV 2/3313.

  here a nest of spies: KV 2/2782.

  here ‘funds beyond his salary’: KV 2/2782.

  here ‘outspokenly anti-British’: KV 2/3313.

  here ‘but the rubber factory’: Koehler (1940).

  here ‘An organisation like Siemens’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘grossly inaccurate’: Roberts family archive.

  here In 1900, at the start of a new century: Carl’s story, and Walter and Dorothy’s, are in KV 2/540.

  here A month after Britain declared war: Gillman (1980).

  here Along with 25,000 other civilians: Dr Oliver Wilkinson, ‘Review of Prisoners of Britain: German Civilian and Combatant Internees During the First World War’, Reviews in History (2013).

  here ‘circular arguments’: Gillman (1980).

  here ‘People were still walking around’: This and subsequent quotes from the letters are from KV 2/540.

  here The Home Office Warrant system: Andrew (2009), and Calder Walton, Empire of Secrets (2013).

  here ‘The reasons that persons join correspondence clubs’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘would be keeping extremely quiet’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘a series of boys’: Goronwy Rees, ‘A Chapter of Accidents’, cited in Rose (2001).

  here ‘How easily in these darkened streets’: Rose (2001).

  here ‘In the part of London where I work’: This and subsequent quotes from the letters are from KV 2/3800.

  here ‘alarm and despondency’: Leo McKinstry, Operation Sealion (2014).

  here ‘pots of jam, syrup, etc’: KV 4/123.

  here The first to arrive: McKinstry (2014).

  here ‘They were singularly badly directed’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘a poor fish’: KV 4/187.

  here ‘Strong has a great regard’: KV 4/186.

  here ‘I began by explaining’: KV 4/188.

  here ‘Good evening, John’: HO 45/22382.

  here He fought desperately: KV 4/188.

  here ‘mighty risks’: KV 2/945.

  here ‘Churchill and his rotten gang’: KV 2/3319.

  here ‘A chap like me’: KV 2/3319.

  here ‘Civilians and military personal’: KV 2/3319.

  here At various points during the war: Nigel West and Oleg Tsarev, Triplex: Secrets from the Cambridge Spies (2009).

  here ‘Jock had a habit’: KV 4/191.

  here ‘I cannot afford to take any risks’: KV 2/3321.

  here A passing policeman: J. C. Masterman, The Double Cross System (1995).

  here ‘some searching questions’: KV 4/188.

  here Carl Brahe: Christened Frederick Charles, but known as Carl to his family.

  here ‘We didn’t think the British public’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘attractive appearance’: KV 2/2677.

  here ‘composed solely of women’: KV 2/2677.

  here ‘said to have committed himself’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘A woman of this type’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘At a convenient moment’: KV 4/189.

  here ‘It seems that certain of them already know’: KV 4/189.

  here ‘some innocuous object like the Union Jack’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘the fools entrusted with the formation’: KV 2/540.

  here ‘Swiss Bank Corporation’: KV 4/189.

  here ‘German Secret Service’:
KV 2/3800.

  here The line between observer and provocateur: KV 4/188.

  here ‘took exception to the agent provocateur’: KV 4/188.

  here ‘Intelligence matters were usually of such complexity’: KV 4/472 4/3/1950.

  here ‘the PM might speak to the Home Secretary’: KV 4/191 16 March 1943.

  here ‘was exactly the technique’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘the organisation has certain somewhat melodramatic ideas’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘Gleave would, in time of invasion’: KV 2/2677.

  here ‘a sexual pervert’: KV 2/793.

  here ‘go there and scrub the floors’: KV 2/3874 and KV 2/3799.

  here the craft had wing floats: KV 2/3799.

  here ‘willing to hide German agents’: KV 2/3799.

  here ‘Marita explained’: KV 2/3800.

  here In the US, the FBI: Peter Duffy, Double Agent (2014).

  here ‘Look at Marita’: This and subsequent quotes are from KV 2/3874.

  here ‘She feels secure’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘It has been found impossible’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘No official or other single individual’: KV 4/227 Maxwell Knight, ‘History of the operations of MS during the war 1939–45’.

  here ‘I still pin my faith’: Roberts family archive.

  here ‘remains violently anti-Semitic’: KV 2/2677.

  here ‘There are few, if any’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘all, without exception, listen in’: KV 2/2677.

  here ‘The papers that day’: Sunday Express 30/8/42.

  here ‘The Daily Mirror carried a light story’: Daily Mirror 29/8/42.

  here ‘We have been having a long discussion’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘I hear you are more or less’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘a Jewish war of revenge’: Richard Griffiths, Patriotism Perverted (1998).

  here ‘Britain may look a little shop-worn’: US War Department, Instructions for American Servicemen in Britain (1942).

  here ‘The whole of the Rothschild family’: BBC Desert Island Discs interview (1984).

  here The leading initial critic: KV 4/190.

  here Time and again: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘We certainly do not’: KV 2/3799.

  here ‘I have rarely heard’: KV 6/119.

  here ‘experiments were going on’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘the whole question in its proper perspective’: KV 4/190.

  here ‘We must I think’: This and subsequent quotes from the diary are from KV 4/190.

  here ‘would be willing to do anything’: KV 6/118.

  here ‘very high up and drawing a huge salary’: Garfield (2007).

  here There had been one, Jane Archer: Andrew (2009).

  here ‘a matter of expediency’: KV 6/118.

  here ‘a washout’: KV 2/3874.

  here As raids over Germany increased: http://www.rafinfo.org.uk/bcww2losses/.

  here ‘the man who broke the bloody beam’: R. V. Jones, Most Secret War (1978).

  here ‘I told Kohout that he was not to consider’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘Kohout has hit upon something’: Jones (1978).

  here ‘Roberts gave his reply: “Yes”’: KV 4/190.

  here ‘Robbie, you have the art’: Roberts family archive.

  here ‘necessary or desirable’: KV 4/191.

  here He proposed blackmailing the organisation: KV 2/3873. The file doesn’t specify the exact nature of Bernard’s blackmail demand, but it is clear that he had threatened exposure of the Fifth Column.

  here ‘showed an excellent capacity’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘She keeps on telling me how funny it is’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘They were watching the RAF’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘I looked in vain’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘It was a very successful raid’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘very simple advice’: and following quotes are from KV 2/2487.

  here ‘She swore that Britain would get it back’: and following quotes are from KV 2/2487.

  here ‘is now working wholeheartedly’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘Herzig looks honest and decent’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘she’s very keen’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘more or less backed out’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘dirty traitor’: KV 2/3874 p. 349.

  here ‘Marita remarked that she sometimes wondered’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘I’m compelled to be quite frank’: KV 2/3874.

  here ‘Kohout proudly produced a revolver’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘anything for a litre of wine’: (Macintyre).

  here ‘She really ought to be locked up’: KV 4/191.

  here Men had been forced out of work: Andrew Martin Mitchell, ‘Fascism in East Anglia’ (1999).

  here ‘I could see our privileges’: Mitchell (1999).

  here ‘The fascist idea’: (Mitchell).

  here Creasy persuaded Mosley: Stephen Dorril, Blackshirt (2006).

  here A local journalist wrote confidentially: KV 2/4021.

  here Hitler was ‘a good man’: KV 2/4021.

  here ‘The happiness, the contentment’: Mitchell (1999).

  here ‘National Socialist atmosphere’: KV 2/4021.

  here Perigoe mentioned the Creasys: KV 2/4021.

  here ‘pretty immoral’: KV 2/4022.

  here ‘I fear that this report does not’: KV 2/4022.

  here Kohout visited the Creasys again: KV 2/4022.

  here ‘HIS MAJESTY WLADYSLAW THE FIFTH’: KV2/4022.

  here she’d been ‘rather silly’: KV 2/4022.

  here ‘It should be considered’: KV 2/4022.

  here ‘I call upon God’: Peter Stubley, Calendar of Crime (2014).

  here In 1941, the US Army Air Force: Juliet Gardiner, Wartime (2004).

  here viewed as ‘dangerous people’: KV 2/4022.

  here ‘The recent Allied successes’: and following quotes are from KV 2/3800.

  here ‘Careless Talk Costs Lives’: KV 2/3874.

  here In May 1943, Sir David Petrie: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘exact experimental results’: KV 2/3873.

  here ‘whose genius at this type of work’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘there is nothing to which exception’: KV 4/192.

  here ‘On a Tuesday evening’: KV 4/193.

  here ‘We do not consider that Jack’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘proved to be an egg shell of a man’: Roberts family archive.

  here ‘When looking at the devastation’: KV 2/3800.

  here Hilda Leech meanwhile: KV 6/119.

  here ‘Some Austrian woman’: KV 4/193.

  here ‘Sokl said that whatever the outcome’: KV 2/3800.

  here That left one bomb unaccounted for: KV 4/193.

  here ‘It is a crate in three compartments’: V. Rothschild, Meditations of a Broomstick (1977).

  here a ‘nursing home’ for ‘miserable seamen’: Rothschild letter to Duff Cooper, quoted in Rose (2001).

  here ‘At one moment it looked’: KV 4/193.

  here The pair had to be eased apart: Rose (2001).

  here ‘is almost always interpreted’: Rothschild letter to Duff Cooper, quoted in Rose (2001).

  here ‘She had heard from a friend’: KV 2/3801.

  here ‘whatever political opinions were held’: KV 2/3801.

  here ‘We spend most of our time’: Rothschild letter to Duff Cooper, quoted in Rose (2001).

  here ‘headquarters which are in the country’: KV 4/195.

  here ‘It looks a little’: KV 4/195 Dec. 20, 1944.

  here On 15 April 1945: Alexander van Straubenzee, ‘The Gate of Hell’, Daily Telegraph (2005).

  here In the following month: US Holocaust Museum.

  here ‘This may be rather difficult’: KV 4/466.

  here ‘On the face of it, Kohout’s tentative proposals’: KV 6/118.

  here ‘A prosecution is out of the question’: KV 2/3800.<
br />
  here ‘staggering tour de force’: KV 2/3800.

  here ‘It must be clearly understood’: KV 4/227.

  here ‘directly or indirectly in contact’: Curry (1999).

  here ‘destroy or replace by scrambled extracts’: KV 6/67.

  here ‘There is no doubt’: KV 4/190.

  here By 1949, when he spoke to Roberts: KV 4/471.

  here At that stage the inquiry: Tom Bower, The Perfect English Spy (1995).

  here ‘devastating’: V. Rothschild, Random Variables (1984).

  here ‘I lost confidence’: BBC, ‘The Politics of Thinking’ (1984).

  here ‘part charlatan, part fantasist’: Letter to the author.

  here ‘lots of men in brown felt hats’: Hemming (2017).

  here It gained brief notoriety: Rob Baker, Beautiful Idiots and Brilliant Lunatics (2015).

  Also by Robert Hutton

  Romps, Tots and Boffins: The Strange Language of News

  Would They Lie to You?

  How to Spin Friends and Manipulate People

  Copyright

  First published in Great Britain in 2018 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson

  an imprint of The Orion Publishing Group Ltd

  Carmelite House, 50 Victoria Embankment

  London EC4Y 0DZ

  An Hachette UK Company

  Copyright © Robert Hutton 2018

  The moral right of Robert Hutton to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  ISBN (hardback) 978 1 4746 0511 3

  ISBN (trade paperback) 978 1 4746 0512 0

  ISBN (audio) 978 1 4091 6918 5

  ISBN (ebook) 978 1 4746 0514 4

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  www.orionbooks.co.uk

 

 

 


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