Read M Online

Authors: Andrew Cook

Tags: #M15’S First Spymaster

M (39 page)

BOOK: M
9.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

3    Sir Robert Anderson, ibid.

4    Sir Robert Anderson, ibid.

5    Quoted in Christopher Andrew,
Secret Service: the Making of the British Intelligence Community,
Heinemann 1985, p.17.

6    A memo marked ‘secret' from Sir Robert Anderson dated 6 May 1882. ‘My belief… is very strong that should these events avail to induce the Parliamentary leaders of the LL to abandon their irreconcilable attitude, they will rapidly produce a complete breach between the LL party and the Fenians. The result of course will be a revival of Fenianism pure and simple before the close of the year, and a demand probably for special powers to enable the Govt. to deal with it.'

7    Christy Campbell,
Fenian Fire,
Harper Collins 2002.

8    As told by Littlechild to a reporter from
Cassell's Saturday Journal,
quoted in Stewart P. Evans and Paul Gainey,
The Lodger,
Century 1995.

9    Bodleian Library Special Collections and Western MS, 4 April 1883.

10  
The Times
12 May 1883 p.14 col. b and
The Times,
Thursday 14 June 1883 p.3 col. a

11  Entry 111, Register of Deaths in the Registration District of West Ham in the County of Essex, 3 July 1883, Margaret Gertie Melville.

12  Christy Campbell, ibid., pp.129-132.

13  Letter from Jenkinson to Earl Spencer, 3 April 1884. Spencer Papers, BL.

14  Sir Robert Anderson, ibid.

15  Sir W. Vernon Harcourt to Sir Henry Ponsonby, 21 November 1883. Bodleian Library Harcourt Collection, WVH691.

16  26 February 1884 TNA HO 144/133. Square brackets indicate gaps where the original has been destroyed.

17  R.C. Clipperton, HM Consul, to Lord Granville, dated Philadelphia 3 March 1884. TNA FO 5/1928.

18  Letter from HM Consul 3 March 1884, ibid.

19  R.C. Clipperton, HM Consul, to Sackville West at the Legation in Washington, dated Philadelphia 4 March 1884. TNA FO 5/1928.

20  Edward Jenkinson to Earl Spencer 12 April 1884. Spencer Papers, BL.

21  Memo of 6 March 1884 from Jenkinson TNA HO 144/721.

22  Memo from Jenkinson, ibid.

23  Littlechild's account of the incident is on p.185 of Stewart P. Evans and Paul Gainey,
The Lodger,
Century 1995.

24  Edward Jenkinson to Sir William Vernon Harcourt, 2 June 1884. Bodleian, Harcourt Collection.

25  Edward Jenkinson to Earl Spencer 15 December 1884. Spencer Papers, BL.

26  Edward Jenkinson to Earl Spencer 15 December 1884. Spencer Papers, BL.

27  5 May 1894 report from the police in Cherbourg, to M. le Sous-Préfet in response to a query about the presence of British police there.

Chapter 3: Plot and Counterplot

1    Sir A. Liddell to his counterpart at FO, Whitehall 4 March 1884. TNA FO 5/1928.

2    Christy Campbell,
Fenian Fire,
Harper Collins 2002. See also TNA MEPO 3/3070 ‘Police at Ports' which shows that Moser was assisted by Sergeant (later Superintendent) Frank Forest.

3    Consul General Bernal to FO, Le Havre 17 Dec 1884.

4    Lord Sackville West to Sir Julian Pauncefote, 8 April 1885, TNA FO5/1931.

5    In a memo dated 9 March 1886 Jenkinson acknowledged that there were, from the RIC, ‘nine men and an officer' in London when Cross came into office in the summer of 1885. TNA HO144/721.

6    In theory, there were to be forty-five Scotland Yard men around the ports and twenty-nine RIC men. Those CID men who reported to Williamson were listed with a W after their names and those who reported direct to Gosselin had a G. Melville reported to Williamson, who in turn was supposed to report to Gosselin anyway, TNA HO 144/133/A34848B, Jenkinson memorandum of 11 March 1884; also TNA MEPO 3/3070, Police at Ports.

7    21 May 1885, Edward Jenkinson to Earl Spencer. Spencer Papers, BL.

8    Christy Campbell,
Fenian Fire,
Harper Collins 2002 pp.157 and 167 concerning Burkham.

9    Minute of interview of 17 June 1885, TNA HO 144.721.

10  Memorandum, E. Jenkinson 22 June 1885, TNA HO 144.721.

11  Letter from Sir William Vernon Harcourt to James Monro, 22 June 1885, TNA HO 144.721.

12  Note from J. Monro 4 July 1885, TNA HO 144.721.

13  Campbell, ibid., see refs to Carroll-Tevis and Casey.

14  Campbell, ibid., p.177 concerning General Millen.

15  Memo from Edward Jenkinson, 26 September 1885, p.16, TNA 30/6/62.

16  BL MSS Add Gladstone Papers 44493 p.177.

17  Note on Relations between Mr Jenkinson and Metropolitan Police in connection with Fenian conspiracies, &c. Monro 28 May 1886, TNA HO 144/721.

18  Memo, Lushington to Childers, 14 March 1886, TNA HO 144/721.

19  Monro 28 May 1886, ibid.

20  Monro 28 May 1886, ibid.

21  Monro to Sir Charles Warren, Commissioner of Police, 24 September 1886, TNA HO 144/721.

22  Francis Elliot to FO, 10 July 1886, TNA FO 146/2844.

23  HM Consul Le Havre to FO, 26 July 1886, TNA FO 5/1975.

24  Campbell, ibid. see refs. to Maharajah Duleep Singh, Tevis.

25  HM Consul Le Havre to FO, 2 October 1886, TNA FO 5/1975.

26  Cypher communication from Sir R. Monier St Petersburg 4 August 1886.

27  Campbell, ibid., p.201.

28  Matthews to Jenkinson, 11 December 1886, TNA HO 144/157.

Chapter 4: A Very Dangerous Game

1    FO to Captain Surplice, HM Consul at Boulogne, 14 June 1887.

2    Monro report to Matthews marked ‘Secret' 4 November 1887, TNA HO 144/1537.

3    Monro report, ibid.

4    Monro report, ibid.

5    Campbell, ibid., p.251.

6    Memo from Monro headed ‘secret', 4 November 1887, TNA HO144/1537.

7    This arises from Monro's remark (see final Monro quotation below) that Melville had at this time been ‘formerly stationed' at Le Havre and that the Home Office as Monro said ‘have an agent in Paris' who was Melville. It was Melville who called at the embassy.

8    See for instance Philip Magnus,
King Edward VII,
John Murray 1964. There were occasional assassination threats and a Tory Government, at least, was particularly conscious of threats to political stability from royal blackmail, financial scandal, and all the other traps lying in wait for a prince out for a good time. The Ambassador in Paris was reasonably well informed about what was going on in HRH's life.

9    Campbell, ibid.

10  James Monro, April 1903.

11  Campbell, ibid.

12  James Monro, ibid.

13  James Monro, ibid. This account he could only have received from Melville.

14  George Dilnot,
The Story of Scotland Yard,
Geoffrey Bles 1930.

15  Christy Campbell,
Fenian Fire,
Harper Collins 2002, p.294.

16  
The Pall Mall Gazette,
‘The Criminals and Police of London: A Report of an Unofficial Commission', Tuesday 9 October 1888.

17  
The Pall Mall Gazette,
ibid.

18  
The Pall Mall Gazette,
ibid.

19  Quoted by George Dilnot, ibid., from Sir Robert Anderson KCB,
The Lighter Side of my Official Life,
Hodder and Stoughton 1910.

20  The full story of Tumblety's arrest and flight, together with a copy of the Littlechild letter, is to be found in Stewart P. Evans and Paul Gainey,
The Lodger,
Century 1995.

21  Evans and Gainey, ibid., p.184.

22  Angust McLaren,
A prescription for murder: the Victorian serial killings of Dr Thomas Neill Cream,
University of Chicago Press 1993.

23  Evans and Gainey, ibid., p.xi.

24  Evans and Gainey, ibid., favour 22 Batty Street, off Commercial Road, as the site of his lodging.

25  Pearson to Home Under-Secretary, 20 November 1888, TNA HO 144/208/A49500M, sub. 3 (quoted by Bernard Porter).

26  Melville's eldest son, William, gave a number of talks on Radio Station 2YA, New Zealand, commencing 24 August 1937. Melville's involvement in the Ripper episode was one of his anecdotes.

27  Quoted in Evans and Gainey, ibid., p.xii.

28  See report from Montreal in the
St Louis Republican
of 22 December 1888, quoted by Evans and Gainey, ibid. p. 227.

29  Quoted in Evans and Gainey, ibid., p.225.

30  Evans and Gainey, ibid., p.228
et seq.

31  Evans and Gainey, ibid.

Chapter 5: War on Terror

1    Michael Davitt,
Notes of an Amateur Detective,
Trinity College Dublin Library, TCD MS 9551.

2    Barry Hollingsworth,
The Society of Friends of Russian Freedom: English Liberals and Russian Socialists, 1890-1917,
Oxford Slavonic Papers n.s. vol 3 (1970).

3    Correspondence between Foreign Office, Home Office and Anderson, 14 January to 4 February 1890. HO 45/9816/B7734, subs 1-2 (cited by Porter).

4    Hollingsworth, ibid.

5    S. Stepniak,
The Dynamite Scares and Anarchy
in New Review vol. 6 (1892) p.533.

6    John Sweeney,
At Scotland Yard,
1904.

7    Gosselin to Anderson, 12 January 1890, the story re-told that day in Anderson's letter to Balfour (Secretary of State for Ireland), PRO 30/60/13/2.

8    Bernard Porter,
The Origins of the Vigilant State,
Weidenfeld and Nicholson 1987.

9    Bernard Porter, ibid.

10  Bernard Porter, ibid., pp.105-106.

11  TNA FO 45/677.

12  Her maiden name was Allen.

13  Entry 88, Register of Marriages in the Registration District of the Isle of Wight, 8 August 1891.

14  Hsi-Huey Liang,
The Rise of Modern Police and the European State System from Metternich to the Second World War,
Cambridge 1992, and in particular E. Thomas Wood,
Wars on Terror: French and British Responses to the Anarchist Violence of the 1890s,
MPhil dissertation, 2002, Pembroke College, Cambridge.

15  
The Walsall Anarchists: Précis of the Case for the Convicts in Mitigation of Sentence,
Walsall Archives A53582/28. Melville said in court in April 1892 that he had known Coulon for two years.

16  Mathieu Deflem,
Bureaucratization and Social Control: Historical Foundations of International Police Co-operation,
Law and Society Review 34(3): pp.601-40, 2000.

17  ‘It doesn't matter. You are such and such?' – ‘Yes.' – ‘Where do you live?', J.A. Cole,
Prince of Spies; Henri Le Caron,
Faber and Faber 1984.

18  Joseph Conrad,
The Secret Agent,
(Methuen 1907) Folio Society 1999.

19  PhD dissertation by Lindsay Clutterbuck, ‘The Methodology of Police Operations', pp.173
et seq.

20  
The Birmingham News,
Saturday 13 February 1892.

21  TNA HO 144/243/A53582C, Letter of 16 May 1892.

22  
The Walsall Anarchists,
ibid. The spelling of Battola here is incorrect – records show the correct spelling to be Battolla, as used in the main text.

23  TNA FO YS/10259, Memo no. X36450/1, 18 March 1892.

24  From an account (p45) in a supplement to
Freedom
of June 1892.

25  Zéro no.6, London 23 November 1893. Archives de la Préfecture de Police, Paris (APP).See note 22 above about spelling of Battola.

26  Patrick McIntyre in
Reynolds' Newspaper,
14 April 1895.

27  Clutterbuck, ibid.

28  A homosexual brothel having been raided, titled patrons were named; one fled abroad and another sued the editor of a newspaper. The brothel-keeper was allowed to flee.

29  APP 21000-2-A, Zéro no.2 from London 11 February 1892.

30  APP 21000-2-A, Black from London 26 July 1892.

31  APP 2100-2-A, Black from London 6 April 1892.

32  APP 21000-2-A, Zéro no.2 from London 22 August 1892.

33  APP 21000-2-A, Zéro no.2 from London 3 September 1892.

34  APP 21000-2-A, Zero no.2 from London, 4 October 1892.

35  APP 21000-2-A, Zéro no.2 from London 16 November 1892.

36  Archive of the Imperial Russian Secret Police (Okhrana), Box #35 Index #Vc Folder 1 ‘Relations with Scotland Yard', Hoover Institution, Stanford, California

37  
L'Autorité,
12 April 1892.

38  Williamson died at the end of 1889.

39  Typed report, unattributed, dated 3 May 1892, APP.

40  Confidential letter from Anderson at New Scotland Yard to the Under-Secretary of State at the Home Office, 24 May 1892, TNA HO B2840c.

41  Clutterbuck, ibid.: Williamson as quoted in Frederick Bussey,
Irish Conspiracies,
Everitt and Co (London) 1910.

Chapter 6: A Man to be Trusted

1    Article in
Paris,
13 December 1892.

2    Note to M. l'Officier de Paix de la 1 ére brigade dated 21 December 1892, from the Cabinet of the Préfecture's premier bureau. Lists official instructions about London clubs to be watched. APP 21000 2 A.

3    Report of agent R, 31 December 1892. APP 21000 2 A.

4    Patrick McIntyre,
Scotland Yard: its Mysteries and Methods,
in
Reynolds' Newspaper
10 February 1895.

5    Angus McLaren,
A Prescription for Murder: the Victorian Serial Killings of Dr Thomas Neill Cream,
University of Chicago Press 1993.

6    Christy Campbell,
Fenian Fire,
Harper Collins 2002.

7    Campbell, ibid.

8    APP 21000 2 A, from Inspector Moser to M. Goron, London 26 April 1893.

9    From McLaren, ibid. p.112: ‘At the end of the report on Haynes's interview the question was put forward whether Haynes could be relied on. An unidentified officer at Scotland Yard wrote in the margin “no”.' Cites Scotland Yard 19 May 1892, TNA MEPO 3 144; and also J.B. Tunbridge report, 28 May 1892, TNA MEPO 3 144.

BOOK: M
9.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Short Game by J. L. Fynn
What You Really Really Want by Jaclyn Friedman
Fortune in the Stars by Kate Proctor
The Map Maker's Quest by Matthew J. Krengel
Blood Innocents by Thomas H. Cook
Sea Of Grass by Kate Sweeney
Starling by Fiona Paul
The List by Robert Whitlow