The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (67 page)

Read The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville Online

Authors: Mulley. Clare

Tags: #World War II, #Spies, #History

Macmillan, Harold

Maczek, General

Mallaby, Dick

Manchester Guardian

Mankowska, Klementyna

Manning, Olivia

Maquis (resistance fighters)

Marcellini

Marks, Leo

Marsac, André

Marusarz, Helena

Marusarz, Janek

Marusarz, Stanisław

Marynka (Polish café), Brompton Road, London

Massingham, British base in Algiers

Masson, Madeleine

Matecki, Lt Colonel Józef

Mauthausen concentration camp, Austria

McCormick, Donald

MI5

Michailov, George

microfilm, smuggling of

Mikołajczyk, Stanisław

Military Cross, British

Ministry of Information, UK

‘Miracle at the Vistula’

Mitchell, Sir Philip

Młodzieszyn, Poland

Molotov, Vyacheslav

Monopoli, Italy

Montgomery, Field Marshal

Morocco

Moss (née Tarnowska), Zofia

Moss, Bill Stanley

Moss, Christine Isabelle Tarnowska

Muldowney, Dennis George

Muldowney, Jack

Musketeers (Polish underground resistance network)

Muszkowska, Izabela

Nairobi, Kenya

Nasta, Livia ‘Pussi’

National Council, Polish

New Australia

News Chronicle

Nicholas I, Tsar

Nicolle, Hanka

NKVD

North Africa
see also under individual nation name

Nurowska, Maria

O’Malley, Kate

O’Malley, Patrick

O’Malley, Sir Owen

aides CG’s escape from Budapest into Yugoslavia

Andrzej Kowerski’s fling with daughter, reaction to

British Ambassador to the Polish Republic, becomes

Budapest, life in wartime

CG enlists help with petitioning SOE for new missions

CG, first meets

CG, love for

CG’s British passport and

CG’s post-war life and

Jerzy Gizycki and

Katyn Massacre and

Sikorski and

Warsaw Rising and

O’Regan, Patrick (Paddy)

Official Secrets Act

Ognisko (Polish Health Club), Exhibition Road

Okulicki, General Leopold

Oriental Legion 19th Army

Ossendowski, Anton

Ottoman Empire

‘Overlord’, Operation

Palestine

Panel to Protect the Memory of Christine Granville

‘Paquebot’ mission

Paris-Soir

Patch, General

Paul, Prince

Pawley, Margaret

Pawlikowska, Aniela

Pearl Harbour attack 1941

Perkins, Harold

Pester Lloyd

Peter II, King

Pheasantry, King’s Road, London

Philby, Kim

Picture Post

Piłsudski, Marshal Józef

Ploie
ş
ti oilfields, Romania

Poland

Britain, relations with during WWII

CG childhood in

CG in pre-war

CG in wartime

CG’s abortive attempts to cross into wartime

Commonwealth

Communist, post-war

effect of war upon

German invasion of 1939

German occupation of 1939–45

government-in-exile, WWII

Lublin administration

Soviet Union and

Warsaw Rising 1944

see also under individual area, city or town name

Polish Air Force Association, London

Polish Air Force Club, Earls Court, London

Polish aircrews, WWII

Polish Association of Former Soviet Political

Prisoners

Polish Cipher Bureau, Warsaw

Polish Foreign Office

Polish High Command

Polish Horse Artillery Division

Polish intelligence/resistance/underground

attitude towards CG within

CG provides British with intelligence on

Musketeers
see
Musketeers

Polish Intelligence Service (official intelligence)

Second Bureau
see
Second Bureau tensions between British intelligence and

ZWZ
see
ZWZ

Warsaw Rising and
see
Warsaw Rising

Polish News

Polish Red Army

Polish Red Cross

Polish Relief Society

Polish Republic

Polish Resettlement Corps

Polish 6th Bureau

Polish II Corps

Polish Underground Army, The

Polofsky, Olga

Poniatowski, Stanisław August

Popiel, Ludwig

Portal, Sir Charles

Porter, Ivor

Porter, Peter

Potsdam conference 1946

Przezdziecka, Countess

Przezdziecka, Teresa

Punishment, Operation

Purvis, Robert

Raczkowska, Zofia

Radziminski, Józef

RAF

Ramat David, Palestine

Ravensbrück concentration camp, Germany

Red Army

Red Cross

Reform Club, London

Renoir, Claude

Retinger, Józef

Rey, Jean

Rey, Sylviane

Riols, Noreen

Romania

Rommel, General

Roosevelt, Franklin D.

Roper, John

Ruahine

Rudziejewski, Stanisław

Russia

Allies, joins

Berlin, enters 1945

British relations with, WWII

CG gathers evidence of forthcoming German invasion of

CG’s death, possible involvement in

First World War

German invasion of Poland and 1939

German invasion of 1941

Germany, non-aggression pact with 1939–41

Katyn massacre (1940)

‘Miracle of the Vistula’

Poland, enters 1945

Poland, occupies 1945

Poland, peace treaty with 1921

Poland, Russian-occupied zone of, WWII

Poland, treatment of, WWII

Poland, war with 1919

Polish POWs, grants amnesty to, WWII

Skarbek family and

Stanlingrad, battle of 1943–4

Tehran conference 1943

Warsaw Rising 1944 and

White Russia

Yalta conference 1945

Saint-Jorioz, France

Saint-Julien-en-Vercors, France

Saint-Martin, France

Sansom, Odette

Schenck, Albert

Second Bureau (Polish intelligence)

Selbourne, Lord

Serbia

Service du Travail Obligatoire (STO)

Seyne-les-Alpes, France

Shaw Savill Line

Shelbourne Hotel, London

Sikorski, General

Sikorski, Zofia

Sillitoe, Sir Percy

Singer, Kurt

Skarbek family

Skarbek, Andrzej (brother)

Skarbek, Andrzej (cousin)

Skarbek, Count Fryderyck Florian (ancestor)

Skarbek, Countess Victoria (ancestor)

Skarbek, Irena (sister-in-law)

Skarbek, Jan (cousin)

Skarbek, Jerzy (father)

Skarbek, Krystyna
see
Granville, Christine

Skarbek (née Tyszjiewicz), Mary
ś
(wife of cousin)

Skarbek, Shelagh (wife of cousin)

Skarbek, Stanisław (cousin)

Skarbek (née Goldfeder), Stefania (mother)

Skarbek, Teresa Krystyna (niece)

Slessor, John

Slovakia

Smiley, David

Smolenski, Jósef

SNCF

Sofia, Bulgaria

Sokolow, Florian

Sokolow, Nahoum

Sorenson, Christian (‘Chasuble’)

Sosnkowski, General Kazimierz

South Africa

Soviet Union
see
Russia

Special Forces Club

Special Operations Executive (SOE)

Agent Training Manual

Andrzej Kowerski, recruits

attempts to find CG employment

Balkan Section

basic training programme

birth of

Cairo base/operation

Cammaerts and

CG passes intelligence on Polish to

Coding

danger posed to agents throughout Europe

disbanded

dispenses with CG’s services

distributed post-war funds to families and widows of those who aided wartime resistance

F (French) Section

fails to win the respect or support of RAF

France, wartime operations in
see
France

Gradowski, recruit

Gubbins promoted to head

Harrison and

Jerzy Gizycki and

Military Operations

Moss and

NKVD, passes CG’s information to

parachute training

pay CG

personal file, CG’s

Poland, operations in
see
Poland

Polish intelligence attitude towards CG and

Polish Section

post-war treatment of CG

reemploys CG

Sikorski and

tensions between Polish intelligence and

women in

Yugoslav Section

Yugoslavia coup and

see also
British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)

‘Spindle’ resistance/intelligence circuit

Sproule, Paddy

SS

Stalin, Joseph

Stalingrad, Battle of

Stawell, Major-General William ‘Billy’ Arthur Macdonald

Storrs, Peter

Straight, Whitney

Suez Canal

Sweet-Escott, Bickham

Sykes, Captain Eric

Syria

Tamplin, Colonel Guy

Tamplin, Nina

Tarnowska, Zofia
see
Moss, Zofia

Tarnowski, Andrzej

Tarnowski, Stas

Tatar, General

Tatra mountains

Tavernier, Gilbert

Taylor, George

Tehran Conference 1943

Telegraph Agency Express

Threlfall, Colonel Henry

Times, The

Tobruk, siege of 1941

Toplink, Operation 1944

Torch, Operation 1942

Tournissa, Captain Jean (‘Paquebot’)

Truszkowski, Richard

Trzepnica, Poland

Turkey

Ukraine

Ultra intelligence

Vansittart, Sir Robert

Vassieux-en-Vercors, France

Vercors plateau, France

battle of 1944

Vichy

Virtuti Militari (Polish military honour)

Voigt, Frederick

‘Volksdeutsche’ (ethnic Germans living in Poland)

‘WAAF (Women’s Auxiliary Air Force)

Waem, Max

Waffen SS

Wakely, Dorothy

Wallace, Majorie

War Office

Ward, John

Ward, Michael

Warsaw

CG birth in

CG childhood in

CG in pre-war

CG in wartime

CG marries first husband in

CG marries second husband in

clearance of ghetto

Communist government in

falls to Germans

First World War and

German repression in wartime

Jews, repression of in wartime

‘Miracle at the Vistula’ and

Polish resistance/underground in

Rising 1944

Soviet Army enters

war losses

Warsaw Press

Wehrmacht

West Africa
see also under individual nation name

White Eagle Club (Klub Białego Orła), London

White Russians

Whitehorn, Katherine

Wiart, General Sir Adrian Carton de

Wilkinson, Peter

Winchester Castle
(passenger liner)

Witherington, Pearl

Witkowski, Stefan

Yalta conference 1945

Yugoslavia

Z Organisation (British intelligence network)

Zakopane, Poland

Zbyszewski, Karol

Zelazowa Wola (CG family estate), Poland

Zelenski, Tadeusz ‘Boy’

Zeller, Colonel Henri

ZWZ (Polish underground resistance network)

ALSO BY CLARE MULLEY

The Woman Who Saved the Children

In Praise of
The Spy Who Loved

“Compulsively readable … [Clare Mulley] has written a thrilling book, and paid overdue homage to a difficult woman who seized life with both hands.”


The Sunday Telegraph
(UK)

“Brings alive a glamorous, swashbuckling heroine”


The Sunday Times
(UK)

“Engrossing … Details the high-voltage life of one of Britain’s most remarkable female spies … Fascinating.”


The Mail on Sunday
(UK)

“[A] splendid book … Christine Granville remains as alive, well, and compelling as ever: a figure of radiant magnetism, ruthless determination, and a courage that—as several of them attested—could make a strong man shudder.”


The Telegraph
(UK) (5 stars out of 5)

“Drawing on an unprecedented range of sources, Clare Mulley’s
The Spy Who Loved
is a fine account of Christine Granville’s extraordinary war, told with skill and care.”


Literary Review
(UK)

“A fine and soberly thrilling addition to the literature of the undercover war … This book, massively researched and excitingly told, brings an extraordinary heroine back to life.”


Daily Mail
(UK)

“This is a meticulously researched but also highly readable account of [Granville’s] heroic but unfulfilled and deeply tragic life, without any attempt at gloss. It is one of the most exciting books I’ve read this year.”


The Spectator
(UK)

“Book of the Week.”


The Week

“Mulley has a novelist’s eye for detail.… In this clear, highly satisfying biography, Mulley fleshes out her subject and brings her back to life.”


The Jewish Chronicle

THE SPY WHO LOVED
. Copyright © 2012 by Clare Mulley. All rights reserved. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

The picture acknowledgments
here
constitute an extension of this copyright page.

www.stmartins.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Mulley, Clare.

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