Authors: Madoc Roberts
The Double Life of a World War II Spy
Nigel West and Madoc Roberts
For Susan
The authors are indebted to the following people who have helped in the production of this work: Susan Roberts, who has been supportive during every stage of both the research and writing. Graham and Norma White for their unfailing generosity and willingness to make Arthur Owens’ story public. Without them the later stages of S
NOW
’s life would still remain a mystery. We would also like to express our gratitude to Jenny Owens, for sharing her husband’s part in the story, and to Adam Nathanson, for being prepared to reveal his mother Patricia Owens’ role, adding an extra
unexpected
element to her glittering career. Thanks are due to Jean Pascoe née Owens for information about her mother Lily. We also thank Rhys Lloyd and Gareth Evans, for their help with the German language documents; Ceri Price, for contributing his knowledge and research of Gwilym Williams; and Diane Kachmar for sharing her knowledge of Patricia Owens. We are also grateful for the assistance of the National Archives staff at Kew.
BUF | British Union of Fascists |
DMI | Director of Military Intelligence |
GPO | General Post Office |
IRA | Irish Republican Army |
MI5 | British Security Service |
MI6 | British Secret Intelligence Service |
NID | Naval Intelligence Division |
PVDE | Portuguese secret police |
RAE | Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough |
RSLO | Regional Security Liaison Officer |
RSS | Radio Security Service |
SOCONAF | Societé de Consignation et Affrètement |
VCIGS | Vice Chief of the Imperial General Staff |
Bade, Lily | Arthur Owens’ 27-year-old mistress |
B ISCUIT | MI5 codename for Sam McCarthy |
Borreson, Jurgen | Abwehr detainee in Dartmoor prison |
Boyle, Archie | Director of Air Intelligence |
Brooman-White, Dick | MI5 officer |
Brown, Jack | Alias of Walter Dicketts |
Burton, Maurice | Prison officer and amateur radio licence-holder who acted as operator for S NOW |
Buss, Air Commodore | Director of Air Intelligence |
Canaris, Wilhelm | Chief of the Abwehr |
Caroli, Gösta | Abwehr agent codenamed S UMMER by MI5 |
C ELERY | MI5 double agent named Walter Dicketts |
C HARLIE | MI5 double agent named Eschborn |
Davidson, Gen. | Director of Military Intelligence |
Del Pozo, Miguel | Spanish journalist and Abwehr spy, codenamed Pogo by MI5 |
Dicketts, Kaye | Walter Dicketts’ wife |
Dicketts, Walter | Ex-RAF officer and convicted criminal, codenamed C ELERY by MI5 and known to the Abwehr as Captain Jack Brown |
Dierks, Hans | Abwehr officer |
Eschborn | A Manchester photographer codenamed C HARLIE by MI5 |
Ford, Major | MI5’s RSLO in Cardiff |
Foster, Albert | Special Branch superintendent |
G IRAFFE | MI5 codename for Georges Graf, a French double agent |
Graham, Thomas | Alias adopted by Arthur Owens |
G.W. | MI5 double agent named Gwilym Williams |
Gwyer, John | MI5 officer |
Hamilton, Hans | Director of the Owens Battery Company and the Expanded Metal Company |
Hansen, Georg | Abwehr sabotage expert |
Hill, Dr | Scientific Adviser to the Air Ministry |
Hinchley-Cooke, Edward | MI5 officer |
Hussein, Obed | Abwehr courier, later arrested in Eire |
J OHNNY | Abwehr codename for Arthur Owens, also known as 3504 |
Krafft, Mathilde | Abwehr paymaster in England |
Kryger, Lisa | Abwehr agent who had been active in England before the war |
Lahousen, Erwin | Senior Abwehr officer |
Langbein, Alfred | An Abwehr spy in Canada thought by MI5 to be a candidate for L LANLOCH |
L EOHARDT | Abwehr codename for T ATE |
Liddell, Guy | MI5 officer |
L LANLOCH | Abwehr codename for a spy intended to operate in London |
McCarthy, Sam | A petty criminal codenamed B ISCUIT by MI5 |
Marriott, John | MI5 officer |
Masterman, John | MI5 officer |
Owens, Arthur | Welsh chemist, codenamed S NOW by MI5 and J OHNNY by the Abwehr |
Owens, Jean Louise | Daughter of Arthur Owens and Lily Bade |
Owens, Jessie | Wife of Arthur Owens |
Owens, Patricia | Daughter of Arthur and Jessie Owens |
Owens, Robert | Son of Arthur and Jessie Owens |
Pogo | MI5 codename for Miguel del Pozo |
Rantzau, Dr | Alias for Nikolaus Ritter |
Reisen, Hans | Abwehr agent |
Richardson, Lt | Assistant to the VCIGS |
Ritter, Nikolaus | Head of the Hamburg Abwehr |
Robertson, Tommy (‘Tar’) | MI5 officer |
Rolph, William | Former MI5 officer and S NOW ’s business partner. Committed suicide |
Schmidt, Wulf | Abwehr parachutist, codenamed T ATE by MI5 |
Stewart, Samuel | Shipowner considered suspect by MI5 |
Stopford, Richman | MI5 officer |
S UMMER | MI5 codename for Gösta Caroli |
T ATE | MI5 double agent named Wulf Schmidt |
Theakston | MI5 handler for S UMMER |
T RICYCLE | MI5 codename for Dusko Popov, a Yugoslav double agent |
Vesey, John | MI5 interrogator |
White, Dick | MI6 officer |
White, Graham | Son of Arthur Owens and Hilda White |
Whyte, Jock | MI5 officer |
Williams, Gwilym | Retired Swansea police inspector codenamed G.W. by MI5 |
Wilson, Thomas | An alias occasionally adopted by S NOW |
W.W. | Welsh-speaking MI5 nominee replaced by G.W. |
Yule, Col J. F. | MI5 radio expert |
‘H
EIL
H
ITLER
… you bastard!’
Sam McCarthy spat the words out at the pathetic little Nazi spy lying tied up below deck on the trawler
Barbados
. McCarthy’s previous career had been as a small-time crook and conman who dabbled in drugs smuggling, and he was used to meeting some pretty desperate characters, but it seemed to him that he had never met anyone quite so despicable as Arthur Graham Owens, the 41-year-old Welsh battery salesman known to his MI5 handlers as S
NOW
.
It was May 1940 and McCarthy had put his criminal career on hold for the duration of the war, using his skill at hustle and subterfuge on behalf of British intelligence. But the MI5 officers who’d briefed him on ‘Operation LAMP’ and S
NOW
’s treachery had not known the half of it. There wasn’t much McCarthy – codename B
ISCUIT
- hadn’t been prepared to do in his pre-war existence, but befriending this wretched little man had turned his stomach even more than the supposed fishing trip out onto a grey and choppy North Sea.
From the first supposedly chance meeting with S
NOW
in the Marlborough pub in Richmond where, under orders from his masters at MI5, McCarthy had drunkenly allowed himself to be recruited as ‘a German spy’, the
Welshman
had been a constant irritant. During the rail journey up to Grimsby from King’s Cross, S
NOW
spent most of his time making notes of any
airfields
, power stations and military installations they passed. And when he wasn’t doing that, he was showing McCarthy a list of MI5 officers he was planning to hand over to ‘the Doctor’. Among those named was Tommy ‘Tar’ Robertson, the MI5 officer who was running the operation they were taking part in. ‘The Doctor’ would be very pleased to have the photographs, S
NOW
confided to McCarthy, because ‘when our advance guard get here they will know who to get and where to get them.’
The mysterious ‘Doctor’ was in fact a Dr Rantzau, the pseudonym of Major Nikolaus Ritter, the German spymaster running agents into Britain. S
NOW
naively believed that the trip on the
Barbados
was taking him to a mid-sea rendezvous with ‘the Doctor’ during which he would be able to hand over intelligence in return for large sums of cash. In fact, S
NOW
was just there as the bait to lure Rantzau into a trap. Another fishing-boat, painted to look exactly like the
Barbados
, manned by armed Royal Navy ratings and equipped with depth-charges, hand grenades and an anti-aircraft gun, was waiting at the real rendezvous with the German spymaster. It was accompanied by a British submarine, HMS
Salmon
, ready to snatch Rantzau and take him back to England for interrogation, where he would be forced to reveal every detail of the German spy networks in Britain. That was the MI5 plan and if the British sailors were unable to capture Rantzau, their orders were simple – ‘kill him’.
But it was very soon clear to McCarthy that the MI5 plan – codenamed ‘Operation LAMP’ – wasn’t going to work. The trawler carrying ‘the bait’ was soon being followed by a German seaplane, presumably with ‘the Doctor’ on board. The aircraft had RAF markings, but in the wrong place. It was clearly German. The seaplane circled lazily above them, following their nets like a giant seagull, watching their every move. If Rantzau was on board the aircraft, then the navy snatch team must be waiting at the rendezvous for a man who was never going to turn up. What’s more S
NOW
seemed to be expecting the German seaplane, although he had claimed in his conversations with MI5 that he did not know how Rantzau would get to the rendezvous. McCarthy had little choice but to abort ‘Operation LAMP’ and return to port. He tied S
NOW
up and locked him in the captain’s cabin as a precaution, to stop him signalling to the German seaplane, and they headed for Grimsby. Once they got back to England, S
NOW
would be arrested and every other German agent he was associated with rounded up. Not before time, in McCarthy’s view. His own preference would have been for something much more violent. S
NOW
had even had the nerve to accuse him of being a German agent. The man was clearly a lunatic, and a dangerous one at that.
In fact, S
NOW
was a truly complex character. The MI5 officers who were running him could never be entirely sure whether he was working for them or against them. Even his claims to McCarthy that he was working for the Germans rather than MI5 would seem with hindsight to have been more braggadocio than reality and, whatever the truth of his loyalties, it was
ultimately
the British who got what they wanted from him, not the Germans.
What McCarthy did not know when he tied up S
NOW
and dumped him in the captain’s cabin – what he could not know, because even the MI5
officers
running the operation didn’t then know – was that for all his failings as a secret agent, the recklessly unreliable S
NOW
was to go on to become one of the most important British spies of the Second World War. Arthur Graham Owens, aka S
NOW
, was the first member of what would become one of the most successful British intelligence networks of all time, one that would ultimately play a major part in ensuring the Allied victory over the Germans.