Agent M – The Lives and Spies of
MI5’s Maxwell Knight,
by Henry Hemming (bcls 5 Pioneer Blvd., Westampton, N.J. 08060)
“Maxwell
Knight was perhaps the greatest spymaster in history, rumored to be the
real-life inspiration for the James Bond character ‘M.’”
“Max did
not imagine that his work for MI6 and MI5 would ever become public knowledge.
Nor did he think that his moniker, ‘M,’ would come to be associated all over
the world with a pipe-smoking British spymaster.”
“In late
1962 Max may have visited one of the cinemas in Camberey to see the first James
Bond film, Dr. No. The audience would
have been mostly teenage boys, all in love with the idea of being a spy – as Max
had been at their age. Within the first ten minutes of the film, Bond’s
spymaster, ‘M,’ appeared on the screen. Although Max would have known about
this character from Fleming’s books, which had begun to be published ten years
earlier, the legend of the James Bond ‘M’ only really took off once the films
came out.”
“Fleming
never revealed who had inspired this character. Yet, in manner, M was clearly
based on Fleming’s former boss, Admiral John Godfrey, who had been director of
naval intelligence. But Godfrey was never called ‘M.’ The name of this
character was most likely a nod to Max. He and Fleming may have met each other
either professionally during the war, or socially through Ian Menzies.
Otherwise, Fleming would have heard of the MI5 spymaster. Max had been known as
‘M’ within MI5 and beyond since 1931. He ran ‘M’ Section. His agents all had
codenames such as ‘M/1’ and ‘M/A.’ He signed all of his correspondence as ‘M’
and had dealings with individuals and organizations throughout the world.
Although there was one other figure in wartime British Intelligence who was
briefly known as ‘M’ – Major-General Sir Colin Gubbins, the head of SOE
(Special Operations Executive) – by the time Fleming began to write his James
Bond novels the man with the greatest claim to the moniker ‘M’ in British
intelligence was undoubtedly Maxwell Knight.”
Maxwell
Knight was also a naturalist – who often wandered into the woods on field
trips, so he would have been interested in knowing that the real James Bond was
the Philadelphia ornithologist and author of the book “Birds of the West Indies,” from whom Fleming acknowledged
appropriating the name for his 007 agent.
The real
James Bond also attended Cambridge, and was a member of the Pitt Club, as was
notorious double-agent Guy Burgess. Bond was also associated with CIA bagman
Philadelpia philanthropist Cummins Catherwood, whose CIA connections were
exposted in The Invisible Government
(Wise and Ross).
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