R. H. Bruce Lockhart

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Sir R. H. Bruce Lockhart
Under Secretary of State for Political Warfare Executive[2]
In office
1941–1945
Personal details
Born(1887-09-02)2 September 1887
Died27 February 1970(1970-02-27) (aged 82)
Spouse(s)
Jean Bruce Haslewood
(m. 1913)
(1892-1983)
 Frances Mary Beck 
(m. 1948)
(1913-1992)

Sir Robert Hamilton Bruce Lockhart,

Bolshevik Revolution. He left the country after he was accused of having led a failed plot to assassinate Vladimir Lenin, the so-called Ambassadors' plot, a charge which he always denied. Later research suggests that the "Lockhart Plot" was a sting operation orchestrated by Felix Dzerzhinsky with the goal of discrediting the British and French governments. [3][4]

Background

He was born in

Boswell of Auchinleck. In Memoirs of a British Agent, he wrote, "There is no drop of English blood in my veins." He attended Fettes College, in Edinburgh.[5]

His family were mostly schoolmasters, but his younger brother, Sir Robert McGregor MacDonald Lockhart, became an Indian Army general. On 15 August 1947, the day British India was partitioned into two independent Dominions of India and Pakistan, he was appointed as the last Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army. His brother John Bruce Lockhart was the headmaster of Sedbergh School, and his nephews Rab Bruce Lockhart and Logie Bruce Lockhart went on to become headmasters of Loretto and Gresham's.[6] His great-nephew, Simon Bruce-Lockhart, was the headmaster of Glenlyon Norfolk School.[7]

Career

Malaya

At 21, Lockhart went out to

Sungei Ujong, the most important of the Nine States of Negeri Sembilan, whose palace was at Ampangan.[8]

First Moscow posting

Lockhart successfully passed the examination for the British

Bolshevik Revolution later that year.[10] Lockhart states, "I left St. Petersburg just as the Kerensky-Korniloff duel was starting. I arrived in London six weeks before the Bolshevik revolution."[11]

At the time of his arrival in Russia in 1912, people had heard that a great footballer named Lockhart from Cambridge was arriving, and he was invited to turn out for Morozov a textile factory team that played their games 30 miles east of Moscow. The manager of the cotton mill was from Lancashire, England. Lockhart played for most of the 1912 season, and his team won the Moscow league championship that year. The gold medal that he won is in the collection of the National Library of Scotland.[12] The great player, however, was Bruce's brother, John, who had played rugby union for Scotland, and by his own admission, Bruce barely deserved his place in the team and played simply for the love of the sport.[1]

Return to Moscow

In January 1918, at the behest of the British Prime Minister

Secret Intelligence Service, having been given £648 worth of diamonds to fund the creation of an agent network in Russia.[citation needed] Moura Budberg
, the wife of a high-ranking Czarist diplomat, Count Johann von Benckendorff, became his mistress.

When the wartime foreign correspondent

Trotsky's secretary, Evgenia Petrovna Shelepina, with whom Ransome had fallen in love, to leave Russia in 1919; she married Ransome in 1924.[1]

Arrest and imprisonment

In 1918, Lockhart and British agent

Maksim Maksimovich Litvinov
, the Bolshevik government's representative in London, who had been arrested for engaging in propaganda activities.

Lockhart was tried

Lockhart wrote about his experiences in Malaya and Russia in his 1932 autobiography, Memoirs of a British Agent, which became a best seller, and whose chapters on the Revolution were turned into the 1934 film,

Warner Brothers
.

Finance

In November 1919, Lockhart was appointed commercial secretary of the British legation in Prague. In late 1922, with the personal debts he ran up exceeding his official salary and feeling the need for change, he resigned from the Foreign Service to accept a position in Prague with the Anglo-Czechoslovakian Bank, on whose creation he had worked. In 1925, Lockhart moved to a job with the Anglo-International Bank, based in London but specializing in central European affairs. By 1928, however, again indebted and bored, he sought a new career in journalism. Lockhart turned his experiences in central Europe during these years into his second volume of autobiography, Retreat from Glory (1934).

Journalism

After leaving the world of finance, Lockhart joined Lord Beaverbook's Evening Standard.[18] He served as the editor of the paper's Londoner's Diary column and became known for his hard-drinking and semi-debauched lifestyle. It enhanced his reputation that, despite having been caught by the Russians and exchanged for a Soviet agent, he remained on unusually cordial terms with the Soviet Embassy in London, from whom he received an annual gift of caviar.[19] He also helped to organise Beaverbrook's Empire Free Trade Crusade campaign.[20] In the 1930s, Lockhart began to release a number of books, which were successful enough to allow him to take up writing as a full-time career in 1937.[18]

Later life

During the

Second World War, Lockhart returned to government service. He became director-general of the Political Warfare Executive, co-ordinating all British propaganda against the Axis powers. He was also for a time the British liaison officer to the Czechoslovak government-in-exile under President Edvard Beneš. Lockhart recounted his activities from the Munich Crisis to VJ-Day in another volume of autobiography, Comes the Reckoning (1947). After the war, he resumed writing, lecturing and broadcasting and made a weekly BBC Radio broadcast to Czechoslovakia for over ten years.[citation needed
]

Personal life

In 1913, Lockhart married firstly Jean Adelaide Haslewood Turner of Brisbane, Australia, and they had a son, the author Robin Bruce Lockhart, who wrote the book Ace of Spies (1967) – about his father's friend, the agent Sidney Reilly – from which the television serial Reilly, Ace of Spies (1983) was later produced.

He divorced his first wife Jean in 1938 citing her adultery with Loudon McNeill McClean.

In 1948, Lockhart married his second wife Frances Mary Beck.

His diaries, published after his death, reveal that he struggled for most of his life with alcoholism.[21]

Death and legacy

Lockhart died on 27 February 1970, at the age of 82, and left property valued at £2054. His address at death was Brookside, Ditchling, Sussex.[22]

The 1983 British television series Reilly, Ace of Spies, was based on a book by his son. Lockhart was portrayed by actor Ian Charleson in the series.

Honours

Books

  • Memoirs of a British Agent (Putnam, London, 1932). American edition: British Agent (Putnam, New York, 1933)
  • Retreat from Glory (Putnam, London, 1934)
  • Return to Malaya (Putnam, London, 1936)
  • My Scottish Youth (Putnam, London, 1937)
  • Guns or Butter: War Countries and Peace Countries of Europe Revisited (Putnam, London, 1938)
  • A Son of Scotland (Putnam, London, 1938)
  • Comes the Reckoning (Putnam, London, 1947)
  • My Rod, My Comfort (Putnam, London, 1949)
  • The Marines Were There: the Story of the Royal Marines in the Second World War (Putnam, London, 1950)
  • Scotch: the Whisky of Scotland in Fact and Story (Putnam, London, 1951)
  • My Europe (Putnam, London, 1952)
  • What Happened to the Czechs? (Batchworth Press, London, 1953)
  • Your England (Putnam, London, 1955)
  • Jan Masaryk, a Personal Memoir (Putnam, London, 1956)
  • Friends, Foes, and Foreigners (Putnam, London, 1957)
  • The Two Revolutions: an Eyewitness Study of Russia, 1917 (Bodley Head, London, 1967)
  • The Diaries of Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart. Volume One: 1915-1938 (Macmillan, London, 1973)
  • The Diaries of Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart. Volume Two: 1939-1965 (Macmillan, London, 1980)
  • My Scottish Youth (B&W Publishing, Edinburgh 1993)

See also

References

  1. ^
  2. ^ Taylor, P.M. (ed.), 2005. Allied Propaganda in WWII: The Complete Record of the Political Warfare Executive (FO 898)
  3. Journal of Modern History
    43.3 (1971): 413–439.
  4. ^ John W. Long, "Plot and counter-plot in revolutionary Russia: Chronicling the Bruce Lockhart conspiracy, 1918." Intelligence and National Security 10.1 (1995): 122-143.
  5. .
  6. ^ Jamie Bruce Lockhart & Alan Macfarlane, Dragon Days (2013) (full text online at cam.ac.uk), p. 11
  7. ^ Derek Bingham, The ECIS International Schools Directory 2009/10 (2009), p. 470
  8. ^ Bruce Lockhart, R. H., Return to Malaya (London: Putnam), 1936, pp. 4–5, 195, 211 & 230
  9. ^ Smirkin, John. "Robert Bruce Lockhart". Spartacus Educational. Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  10. ^ The Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular Year Book for 1921 (94th Publication ed.). London: Harrison & Sons. 1921. p. 430.
  11. ^ Lockhart, R. H. Bruce (1932). Memoirs of a British Agent: Being An Account of the Author's Early Life in Many Lands and of His Official Mission to Moscow in 1918. London: Putnam. pp. 191–192.
  12. ^ Moffat, Colin (8 March 2006). "BBC SPORT: "O'Connor not first Scot in Moscow"". BBC News. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  13. ^ Casciani, Dominic (1 March 2005). "How MI5 watched children's author". BBC News. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  14. ^ Thomson, Mike (19 March 2011). "Did Britain try to assassinate Lenin?". BBC News. Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  15. ^ a b Robert Service, Spies and Commissars: Bolshevik Russia and the West. London: Macmillan, 2011; pg. 164.
  16. ^ Service, Spies and Commissars, pp. 164-165.
  17. ^ Service, Spies and Commissars, pg. 165.
  18. ^
    doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34578 – via Oxford University Press. (Subscription or UK public library membership
    required.)
  19. ^ Roger Wilkes, Scandal: A Scurrilous History of Gossip (2002), p. 162
  20. ISBN 9780394568799.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  21. ^ Phillip Knightley, The Second Oldest Profession (New York: Norton, 1986), p. 73
  22. ^ "Bruce-Lockhart sir Robert Hamilton" in Probate Index for 1970, online at probatesearch.service.gov.uk/Calendar, accessed 12 April 2019
  23. ^ Notice of 1943 award to Robert Hamilton Bruce Lockhart of knighthood as Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George.
  24. ^ The London Gazette, Issue 35841.

External links