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Mata Hari: Alleged Spy for Germany British Intelligence Files & Newspaper Articles - Download

Mata Hari: Alleged Spy for Germany British Intelligence Files & Newspaper Articles

229 pages of MI5 British intelligence files, photographs, newspaper articles, and history covering Margaretha "Margreet" Geertruida Zelle MacLeod, also known as Mata Hari, who was accused of spying for Germany during World War I.

Mata Hari, legal name Margaretha Geertruida Zelle MacLeod (August 7, 1876 – October 15, 1917), was a Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan. While in the custody of French officials, a French military court convicted her of spying for Germany. She was executed by firing squad on October 15, 1917.

During the time of Mata Hari's alleged espionage activities, she was interrogated twice by the British Secret Service (MI5). She first attracted British attention in December 1915, when she was arrested at the Folkstone English port while she was attempting to board a boat. After her interrogation, MI5 could find no evidence against her, so she was released.

She settled in The Hague and an informant later claimed she was being paid by the German Embassy. MI5's informant in The Hague, codenamed "T", reported: "Mata Hari is a demi-mondaine who is in relation with highly placed people and during her sojourn in France she made the acquaintance of many French and Belgian officers. She is suspected of having been to France on an important mission for the Germans."

In November 1916, British authorities removed Hari from a steamer at Falmouth port when she was enroute to Holland from Spain, believing she was another German spy, Clara Bendix. She was again interrogated by MI5 and admitted to being recruited by a Belgian officer to work for his country's intelligence service. She also said the French consul in Vigo, Spain, asked her to spy on Russian forces in Austria. There was insufficient evidence to hold her and she was released.

A MI5 report sent from Paris to London after her execution stated, “She never made a full confession nor can I find, either from the dossier, or from my conversations with Lafenestre, that she ever gave anyone as her accompice. She was a ‘femme forte’ and she worked alone.” Mata Hari's MI5 files notes that there was never any evidence that she passed on anything of military importance.


British Intelligence MI5 Report

The 139 page file contains documents dating from February 1916 to July 1931. They include reports, memorandum, newspaper articles, transcript of interrogations conducted by British agents, and biographical information.


American Newspapers

44 complete pages of American newspapers containing articles about Mata Hari. The accuracy of the information contained in these articles may be hard to determine. However, they do accurately reflect the formation of the Mata Hari legend. The articles date from June 1904 to July 1922. The newspapers include: New York Tribune, New York Evening World, Philadelphia Public Ledger, Richmond Times-Dispatch, Washington Herald, Washington Times, and more.


Eyewitness Account of Execution

The text of the reporting by British reporter Henry Wales for the International News Service. Wales reported that she was not bound and refused a blindfold. Wales wrote that after the volley of shots rang out, "Slowly, inertly, she settled to her knees, her head up always, and without the slightest change of expression on her face. For the fraction of a second it seemed she tottered there, on her knees, gazing directly at those who had taken her life. Then she fell backward, bending at the waist, with her legs doubled up beneath her". A non-commissioned officer then walked up to her body, pulled out his revolver, and shot her in the head to make sure she was dead.


Photographs

30 photographs from her modeling and dancing career, photos taken by French officials at the time of her arrest and again before her execution.


Basil Thomson Excerpt

An excerpt from Thomson’s book “Queer People” about English homeland security during World War I. Chapter 15 covers female spies during World War I. As a British intelligence officer he once interrogated Mata Hari.


About Mata Hari

She was born Margaretha Gertruida Zelle in Leeuwarden, Netherlands, on August 7, 1876, to a prosperous Dutch shopkeeper, who later went bankrupt, and a Javanese mother. At 18 years of age she married Campbell Macleod, a Dutch Army officer. MacLeod is reported to have been an abusive husband. The couple moved to Dutch East Indies, Java Island, after the Dutch military assigned him to command a battalion stationed there.

While in the Dutch East Indies she studied exotic temple dances and called herself "Mata Hari" which means "Eye of the Dawn." After returning to the Netherlands in 1902, she left her husband and a divorce was finalized in 1906. She moved to Paris and became an exotic dancer and courtesan for wealthy clients. Her dancing lead Mata Hari to celebrity status and she moved among the highest social circles of Europe.

In 1915, Hari returned to Paris to see a wounded Russian officer she was involved with. French officials became suspicious of her and she was detained for questioning. She denied being a German spy. She countered with an offer to become a secret agent for France. Her offer was accepted by French army captain Georges Ladoux and she was sent to German occupied Belgium, with a list of six undercover agent contacts. She was transferred to Spain, a neutral country during World War I, where she was paid by the French government to form liaisons with German naval and military attachés.

According to French authorities her spy activities began in 1916, two years after the beginning of World War I. It is purported that she was recruited by German intelligence while performing as a dancer in Berlin. The French became suspicious when they discovered Hari had lovers on both sides of the war. The French claimed to have discovered that German Army officers were also paying her. According to French officials toward the end of 1916, Berlin advised two German attachés in Madrid that they were paying too much for the information from Hari (Agent H-21). They decided to expose her as a spy by sending her back to Paris with a check payable by a French bank for 5,000 francs. An incriminating message regarding Hari was sent from Berlin and intercepted by the French secret service; the French claimed the Germans had planned that the message would be intercepted. After returning to Paris she was arrested February 12, 1917 and charged with being a German double agent. The evidence used to sustain the charge was the uncashed 5,000 franc check drawn on the bank specified in the intercepted German message.

During her trial the French military claimed that 50,000 lives were lost when French transports were torpedoed in the Mediterranean with information about sailings they claimed she supplied.

Hari was tried and found guilty by a French tribunal of committing espionage from 1916 to 1917. Despite her desperate claims of innocence, she was condemned to death. On October 15, 1917, she was shot dead by firing squad.










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