The Real Miss Moneypenny: The Forgotten Women of British Intelligence
By (Author) Claire Hubbard-Hall
Orion Publishing Co
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
21st January 2025
24th October 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Espionage and secret services
Military intelligence
Second World War
Gender studies: women and girls
327.120820941
Hardback
352
Width 154mm, Height 238mm, Spine 36mm
580g
Since the inception of the Secret Service Bureau back in 1909, women have worked at the very heart of British secret intelligence - yet their contributions have been all but written out of history. Now, drawing on private and previously-classified documents, leading historian Claire Hubbard-Hall brings their gripping true stories to life.
From encoding orders and decrypting enemy messages to penning propaganda and infiltrating organisations, the women of British intelligence played a pivotal role in both the First and Second World Wars. Prepare to meet the true custodians of Britain's military secrets, from Kathleen Pettigrew, personal assistant to the Chief of MI6 Stewart Menzies, who late in life declared 'I was Miss Moneypenny, but with more power', to Jane Archer, the very first female MI5 officer who raised suspicions about the Soviet spy Kim Philby long before he was officially unmasked and Winifred Spink, the first female officer ever sent to Russia in 1916. In The Real Miss Moneypenny, Hubbard-Hall rescues these silenced voices and those of many other fascinating women from obscurity to provide a definitive account of women's contributions to the history of the intelligence services.Claire Hubbard-Hall is a writer and historian who specialises in the history of secret intelligence. She has held lecturing posts in several British universities and is an honorary Associate Professor of Intelligence History. She has contributed to television documentaries and written for popular history magazines. Miss Moneypenny is her first book. She is based in Lincolnshire, UK.