Acknowledgements

Huge thanks to Heather McCallum, the Managing Director at Yale and commissioning editor, for publishing this book and for her enthusiasm and support. My sincere thanks to Marika Lysandrou and Rachael Lonsdale at Yale for their meticulous edits, patience and work on the manuscript that has enhanced the story, along with my copy editor Eve Leckey. I am equally grateful to my agent Andrew Lownie for his immense support throughout. My profound thanks to two very special veteran secret listeners, Eric Mark and the late Fritz Lustig (1919−2018), without whom this book could not have been written. We embarked on a journey that led to the three of us appearing live on the BBC’s Th e One Show in January 2013. I was able to interview Fritz’s wife, Susan, many times before she passed away in 2013. I also interviewed secret listeners Peter Hart and Paul Douglas. My thanks to veteran former intelligence offi cer, Cynthia Turner (née Crew), now residing in Australia, for her memories. Th is book could not have been written without the help over several years of the grandchildren of Colonel Th omas Joseph Kendrick (Secret Intelligence Service spymaster and commanding offi cer): my sincere thanks to his granddaughter Barbara Lloyd and her brother, the late Ken Walsh. Much appreciation, too, to Kendrick’s great-granddaughters Anne Marie Th orpe and Christina Sutch. Huge thanks to Derek Nudd (grandson of Commander Burton Cope) for providing information from his own naval intelligence research and sharing his transcripts of

x ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS the diary of naval interrogator Bernard Trench. Also to Anne Walton (daughter of Samuel Denys Felkin). My gratitude to the following people for providing information and photographs: Lesley Allocca and son Michael Allocca, Dudley Lambert Bennett and son Otto Bennett, Andrew Benson, Richard Benson, David Birnbaum, Professor Hugo de Burgh, Robert Chester, Richard Deveson, Tom Deveson, Liz Driscoll, Andrea Evers, Arthur Fleiss, Dr John Francken, Adam Ganz, Barbara Horwitz, Caroline Jestin, Jennifer Jestin and Loftus Jestin, Andrew Leach, Helen Lederer, Peter Leslie, Roger Lloyd-Pack, the late Robin Lustig, Stephen Lustig, Melanie McFadyean, Stella MacKinnon, Alasdair Macleod, Anne Mark, Miriam Mark, Roger Marshall, Nigel Morgan, Ernest Newhouse, Peter Oppenheimer, Veronica Pettifer, Jessica Pulay, John Ross, Trixy Tilsiter, Sir Michael Tugendhat, Tom Tugendhat, Mimia Umney-Gray, David Wilson. My thanks to Alexia Dobinson who has typed up original reports and interviews. A huge amount of support has been given by Mark Birdsall and Deborah McDonald of Eye Spy Intelligence Magazine – my thanks to them, and also to Iain Standen (CEO of Bletchley Park), Sarah Paterson and Kay Heather at the , Mark Scoble, Nigel Parker, Dick Smith, Neil Fearn, Mark Lubienski, David King, Steve Mallinson, Peter Quinn; Phil Tomaselli for his expertise from MI5, Secret Intelligence Services and Foreign Offi ce sources; Fred Judge and Joyce Hutton at the Military Intelligence Museum (Chicksands); Tom Drysdale, archivist at HM Tower of ; and Colonel John Starling and Norman Brown of the Royal Pioneer Corps Association. Th is research has led to a special friendship with producer Rebecca Hayman, whom Fritz Lustig and I fi rst met during the fi lming for the documentary, Spying on Hitler’s Army (Channel 4 and PBS). Most poignantly, it was Rebecca who recorded Fritz Lustig’s last public inter- view, with Sir David Jason in the grounds of (, ) in 2017, for the TV series David Jason’s Secret Service. Having written the wartime history of MI9/MI19’s bugging opera- tion and the biography of Th omas Kendrick (Spymaster), I became involved in the campaign in 2015 to save Trent Park as a museum to the

xi ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS secret listeners, and subsequently as deputy chair and a trustee of the Trent Park Museum Trust. Th e trust is indebted to Mr Tony Pidgley (Chairman of Berkeley Homes) and his Board who have generously given over the ground fl oor and basement of the mansion for this purpose. Th anks to my dedicated family for their loyal and practical support over the years. A special commendation goes to my eldest son who accompanied me on several trips to the National Archives in 2010. He worked methodically and carefully through the transcripts of conversa- tions from Trent Park, Latimer House and Wilton Park. I have been incredibly privileged and honoured to have worked on this story for two documentaries with Sir David Jason OBE, for ITV’s Britain’s Secret Homes (fi lmed at Latimer House in Buckinghamshire), and Channel 4’s David Jason’s Secret Service (October Films, 2017). Sir David is inspirational, enjoys a good discussion on spies, and has huge respect for the men and women who worked at the M Room sites. His particular hero is the wartime spymaster himself: Th omas Joseph Kendrick. Th e favourite drink of Kendrick’s colleagues – especially the Naval Intelligence team – was the exotic cocktail ‘pink gin’. So, may we raise a glass of pink gin to the nation’s hitherto unsung hero, Th omas Kendrick, as we picture him on the terrace of one of his secret sites with Ian Fleming’s own spies of the Naval Intelligence . . .

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