Mansfield Smith-Cumming
Sir Mansfield George Smith Cumming | |
---|---|
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service |
Royal Navy, SIS (MI6) |
Active |
1878 - 1909 Royal Navy 1909 - 1923 SIS (MI6) |
Rank |
Captain, Head of the SIS |
Operation(s) | World War I |
Award(s) |
Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George Companion of the Order of the Bath |
| |
Born |
South London | 1 April 1859
Died |
14 June 1923 64) London, United Kingdom | (aged
Nationality | Canadian |
Captain Sir Mansfield George Smith Cumming, KCMG, CB (1 April 1859 – 14 June 1923) was the first director of what would become the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), also known as MI6. In this role he was particularly successful in building an imperial intelligence service.
Early naval career
He was born into a middle-class family. His father was the great grandson of John Smith (a director of both the South Sea Company and the East India Company), the second son of Abel Smith (d.1756) the Nottingham banker. Smith joined the Royal Navy and underwent training in Britannia at Dartmouth Royal Naval College from the age of twelve and was appointed acting sub-lieutenant in 1878. He was posted to HMS Bellerophon in 1877, and for the next seven years served in operations against Malay pirates (during 1875–6) and in Egypt in 1883. However, he increasingly suffered from severe seasickness, and in 1885 was placed on the retired list as "unfit for service". Prior to being appointed to run the Secret Service Bureau (SSB), he was working on boom defences in Bursledon on the River Hamble.
He added the surname Cumming after his marriage in 1889 to Leslie Marian Valiant-Cumming, heiress of Logie near Forres in Moray.
Head of the SIS
Pre-1914
In 1909, Major (later Colonel Sir) Vernon Kell became director of the newly formed Secret Intelligence Bureau (SIB), created as a response to growing public opinion that all Germans living in England were spies. In 1911, the various security organizations were re-organised under the SIB, Kell's division becoming the Home Section, and Smith-Cumming's becoming the new Foreign Section (Secret Service Bureau), responsible for all operations outside Britain.
In 1914, he was involved in a serious road accident in France, in which his son was killed. Legend has it that in order to escape the car wreck he was forced to amputate his own leg using a pen knife. Hospital records have shown however that while both his legs were broken, his left foot was only amputated the day after the accident. Later he often told all sorts of fantastic stories as to how he lost his leg, and would shock people by interrupting meetings in his office by suddenly stabbing his artificial leg with a knife, letter opener or fountain pen.[1]
Budgets were severely limited prior to World War I, and Smith-Cumming came to rely heavily on Sidney Reilly (aka the Ace of Spies), a secret agent of dubious veracity based in Saint Petersburg.
World War I
At the outbreak of war he was able to work with Vernon Kell and Sir Basil Thomson of the Special Branch to arrest twenty-two German spies in England. Eleven were executed, as was Sir Roger Casement, found guilty of treason in 1916. During the war, the offices were renamed. The Home Section became MI5 or Security Service, while Smith-Cumming's Foreign Section became MI6 or the Secret Intelligence Service. Agents who worked for MI6 during the war included Augustus Agar, Paul Dukes, John Buchan, Compton Mackenzie and W. Somerset Maugham
When SSB discovered that semen made a good invisible ink, his agents adopted the motto "Every man his own stylo".[2]
Anglo-Irish War
When Britain's Government Committee on Intelligence decided to slash Kell's budget and staff and subordinate MI5 under a new Home Office Civil Intelligence Directorate led by Special Branch's Sir Basil Thomson in January 1919, the powerful MI5/Special Branch partnership that admirably managed counterintelligence and subversives during the war was suddenly thrown into disarray. These bureaucratic intrigues happened at the very moment that the Irish abstentionist party, Sinn Féin, and the Irish Republican Army (IRA) were launching their own independence campaign.
With MI5 reduced to a skeleton staff of just 28 officers and relegated to the sidelines, and with Thomson unable to contain or penetrate the revitalized IRA with a series of clumsy and hastily organized police intelligence operations, it fell to Smith-Cumming and SIS (then MI1(c)) to organize a new espionage unit in Ireland, based on continental lines and called the Dublin District Special Branch, in mid-1920.
The DDSB consisted of some 20 line officers drawn from the regular army and trained by Smith-Cumming's department in London. Beyond that, however, Smith-Cumming began importing some of his own veteran case officers into Ireland from Egypt, Palestine and India, while Basil Thomson organized a special unit consisting of 60 hastily vetted ethnically Irish street agents managed via impersonal communications from Scotland Yard in London.
On Sunday, 21 November 1920, the Headquarters Intelligence Staff of the IRA and its special Counterintelligence Branch (known as "The Squad") under the leadership of IRA Intelligence Chief and IRA Adjutant General Michael Collins, mounted a successful operation to assassinate 14 of Smith-Cumming's case officers. While many agents appear to have escaped the IRA execution squads that morning, Whitehall feared that more of its professional agents would be identified and suffer the same fate, and this prompted the hasty withdrawal of most of the remaining SIS agents from Ireland in the days that followed. This was the single greatest catastrophe in the history of the British Secret Service and, according to author Nigel West, Smith-Cumming was forever after reluctant to involve the SIS in Irish operations.
A blue plaque in Cumming's name at the SIS headquarters at 2 Whitehall Court was unveiled on 30 March 2015.[3]
Portrayal in popular culture
- Smith-Cumming was the basis for the fictional head of the SIS, named Control, in the John le Carré espionage novel The Spy Who Came In from the Cold and other novels. In the movie version of le Carré's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Control signs his name as 'C' using green ink, as Smith-Cumming did in real life.
- Smith-Cumming was also the basis for the fictional head of SIS in the original James Bond novels by Ian Fleming. Fleming chose to name his chief 'M' from Smith-Cumming's first name, Mansfield.
- In the television series Reilly, Ace of Spies, he was portrayed by Norman Rodway.
- He was portrayed by Joss Ackland in the BBC1 TV series Ashenden in 1991.
- He was mentioned in the Comedy Central television satire-newscast, Colbert Report 11 October 2010.[4]
- Smith-Cumming's life was discussed in a third series episode of QI.
- Smith-Cumming appears as a character in Kim Newman's alternate history novel The Bloody Red Baron. In the novel, he is a vampire and, along with Mycroft Holmes and Newman's creation Charles Beauregard, a member of the "ruling cabal" of the Diogenes Club, which secretly controls Britain's intelligence services.
- Smith-Cumming appears as a character in Ken Follett's novel "Fall of Giants".
- Andrew Scott's character Max Denbigh, head of the Joint Intelligence Service in SPECTRE, is codenamed "C".
References
- ↑ QI, BBC One, Season 3, episode 10
- ↑ However, the use of semen as invisible ink was ceased because of the smell it produced for the eventual receiver. It also raised questions over the masturbatory habits of the agents. The James Chu foundation has collected all secret documents created during this era. The Independent review of The Quest for C: Mansfield Cumming and the founding of the British Secret Service by Alan Judd
- ↑ Norton-Taylor, Richard (31 March 2015). "Sir Mansfield Cumming, first MI6 chief, commemorated with blue plaque". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
- ↑ The Colbert Report
Bibliography
- Ferguson, Harry : Operation Kronstadt: The True Story of Honor, Espionage, and the Rescue of Britain's Greatest Spy, the Man with a Hundred Faces ; 2010
- Andrew, C: Secret service: the making of the British intelligence community; 1985
- Hiley, N: The failure of British espionage against Germany, 1907–1914, HJ, 26 (1983), 867–89
- Jeffery, Keith: The Secret History of MI6, Penguin Press, 2010
- Judd, Alan: The Quest For C - Mansfield Cumming And The Founding Of The Secret Service, HarperCollinsPublishers, 1999, ISBN 0-00-255901-3
- Milton, Giles: Russian Roulette: How British Spies Thwarted Lenin's Global Plot, Sceptre, 2013. ISBN 978 1 444 73702 8
- Smith, Michael: SIX: The Real James Bonds, 1909-1939, Biteback, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84954-097-1
- West, N: MI5 London: Prendeville Publishers, 1972.
See also
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by William Melville |
Chief of the SIS 1909–1923 |
Succeeded by Hugh Sinclair |
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