52. Amtorg was a joint Soviet-US trading company.
53. Arcos (Anglo-Russian Co-operative Society) was established by Leonid Krasin in 1921 to encourage joint enterprises with British companies. It was raided by Special Branch in 1927 who found evidence that it was being used as a front for Soviet espionage.
54. Edward Wise was a member of the British government’s negotiating team that met with Krasin’s Trade Delegation (Secret Service, Christopher Andrew, p.262ff).
55. Leslie Urquhart was one of a small number of British businessmen who endeavoured to negotiate trade deals with Arcos.
56. Reilly’s approach to business.
57. During 1925, industrial unrest increased following Winston Churchill’s first budget in April, which heralded Britain’s return to the Gold Standard. This added greatly to the cost of exports and caused the mine-owners to announce wage cuts on 30 June. On 10 July the TUC General Council agreed to support the Miners Federation and declared a national embargo on the movement of coal. Prime Minister Baldwin judged that the time was not right for a national confrontation with the TUC and on 31 July – Red Friday – climbed down. The government offered the mining industry a subsidy of £23 million to stave off wage cuts.
58. Lieutenant Alexandr Alexeevich Abaza, a former Tsarist naval officer and White Russian.
59. Philip Faymonville had been in Russia during 1918/20 and was US Military Attaché in Tokyo in 1925.
60. See note 1.
61. Ibid.
62. This photograph appears on page 223 of this book. When the overcoat was later examined, a small Union Jack was found sewn into its lining. The Union Jack is now on display at the FSB Museum, Moscow, and was seen by the author on 26 August 2002, during a visit to FSB Headquarters.
63. This was more than likely necessary due to the fact that he had been officially dead since 28 September. Only the small circle of OGPU officers involved in the Trust operation knew otherwise.
64. Secret Assignment, Edward Gazur, p.519.
65. Ibid.
66. OGPU File no. 249856. See also, Deadly Illusions, J. Costello and O. Tsarer, p.22.
67. By 1921 Hill, like Reilly and many others, found that due to budget constraints he had no future with SIS. Now unemployed he was reduced to living in a caravan in Sussex with his wife. He eventually found work in theatre management (‘SOE’s man in Moscow’ by Martin Kitchen, Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 12, No. 3, July 1997, p.96.
68. Kim Philby was one of Hill’s pupils at Brickendonbury Hall in Hertfordshire, a sabotage training school in 1940 (‘SOE’s man in Moscow’ by Michael Kitchen, p.96).
69. Britain’s Master Spy – The Adventures of Sidney Reilly, pp.285–88.
70. In a letter to Capt. William Isaacs, dated 17 November 1931, Margaret Reilly states, ‘My firm belief is that Reilly is still alive in Russia working for England against Bolshevism’ ( Reilly Papers CX 2616).
71. Reilly: The First Man, Robin Bruce Lockhart, p.28ff.
72. Master Spy, Edward Van Der Rhoer, p.231ff.
73. ‘Sidney Reilly’s Lubyanka Diary’ by Richard Spence.
74. Reilly: The First Man contains sixteen chapters. Chapters six–fifteen contain few references to Reilly, concentrating in the main on general East-West espionage issues.
75. Ace of Spies (1992 edition), p.188.
76. Letter to the author from Robin Bruce Lockhart, dated 9 January 2000.
77. CXM 159, 29 March 1918 ( Reilly Papers CX 2616).
78. Report by Agent L.S. Perkins (US Bureau of Investigation), dated 3 April 1917 describes Reilly as of ‘oriental appearance’.
79. Report by Kenneth Linge, BA, MSc, FBBIPP of DABS Forensic Ltd, 27 December 2001.
80. Ace of Spies, preface.
81. The Messenger of the Sacred Heart, Caryll Houselander, p.59.
APPENDIX ONE – THE GADFLY
1. Ace of Spies, Robin Bruce Lockhart, p.27.
2. The American edition of The Gadfly was published by Henry Holt and Company, New York, in April 1897. The British edition was published in September 1897 by William Heinemann. They were identical apart from their respective covers. The British edition also contained an additional appendix of fourteen press reviews.
3. The Gadfly by E.L. Voynich (Heinemann 1897, p.341ff).
4. A collection of reviews and articles about The Gadfly are to be found in the Boole Family Collection, presented to Lincolnshire County Archives by Gabrielle Boole in July 1985.
5. ‘The Gadfly and the Spy’ by Tibor Szamuely, The Spectator, 17 May 1968, p.665.
6. BBC World Service, Russian Language Programme, broadcast 7.00 p.m. 9 June 1968
7. ‘George Boole, His Life and Work’ by Desmond MacHale, p.273.
8. Ibid., p.274.
9. E.L. Voynich, Evgenia Taratuta, Moscow, 1970.
10. ‘Who Admired Pavka Korchagin?’ by Boris Polevoi and Evgenia Taratuta (Izvestia, No. 11, 12 June 1968, p.3).
11. Giuseppe Mazzini (1805–72) founded the Young Italy movement in 1831, which was dedicated to achieving a united, republican Italian state.
12. From the Papers of Hugh Millar.
13. Letters from W. Field Robertson to George Hill, dated 6 and 9 September 1935 (Box 6, Robert Bruce Lockhart Collection at the Hoover Institution Archive, Stanford, California).
14. US Immigration Service, Passenger Arrival List Index Cards, Volumes 6332–14197 (1919–1941).
15. Letter from Edward Spears to Robin Bruce Lockhart, dated 2 January 1967 (Box 6, Robert Bruce Lockhart Collection, Hoover Institution Archive, Stanford, California).
16. An Interrupted Friendship, E.L. Voynich (Macmillan, 1910), p.139ff.
APPENDIX TWO – MISTAKEN IDENTITY
1. Sidney Reilly – The True Story, Michael Kettle, p.16.
2. Ibid., p.15.
3. Ibid., p.16.
4. Ibid., p.16.
5. Ibid., p.17.
6. Ace of Spies, Robin Bruce Lockhart, p.182.
7. Mining the Challenge – 150 Years of the Royal School of Mines, Anne Barrett, p.1, and Imperial College by Richard G. Williams and Anne Barrett, p.10.
8. City of Cambridge Directory 1906.
9. Minute Book of the Trinity College Boat Club, 14 October 1905 (Trinity College Library).
10. Entry 271, Register of Deaths in the Sub-district of Epsom and Ewell in the Registration District of Surrey Eastern in the County of Surrey, 13 June 1952.
11. Aline Reilly – interview with the author on 2 September 2000; Noel Reilly – interview with the author on 22 September 2000.
12. Indian Army List 1918/1920; Indian Army Reserve List (PRO); Thackers’ India Office Biographical Index (India Office Records – British Library).
13. Baptismal Records for Dehra Dun, Volume 376, Folio 9 (India Office Records – British Library).
14. Entry 111, Register of Deaths in the Sub-district of Hornsey in the Registration District of Edmonton in the County of Middlesex, 18 September 1945.
APPENDIX THREE – THE FACTORY FIREMAN
1. Spies, Jay Robert Nash (M. Evans & Company, New York, 1997), p.412.
2. Ace of Spies, Robin Bruce Lockhart, p.36ff; Reilly: The First Man, Robin Bruce Lockhart, p.5. Curiously, when a revised edition of Ace of Spies was published in 1992, the reference to Krupps story was unaltered.
3. In Troy Kennedy-Martin’s 1983 Thames Television adaption, Reilly: Ace of Spies, the Blohm & Voss shipyard in Hamburg is substituted for the Krupps plant in Essen, and Reilly’s alias is changed from Hahn to Fricker.
4. Master Spy, Edward Van Der Rhoer, p.ix ff.
Читать дальше