Puneet Varma (Editor)

Stephen de Mowbray

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
4 October 2016

Stephen de Mowbray spartacuseducationalcom00mowbraySjpg

Stephen de Mowbray (15 August 1925 – 4 October 2016) was a counterintelligence officer in Britain's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6). He became convinced that the then head of MI5, Sir Roger Hollis, was a Soviet spy.

Contents

Early life

He was born at Lymington on 15 August 1925, the son of Ralph de Mowbray, a surgeon, and was educated at Hordle House School, Milford on Sea, Hampshire (later subsumed into Walhampton School near Lymington) during 1934-1938, followed by Winchester. After serving in the Fleet Air Arm in World War II, he studied for a degree in Politics, Philosophy and Economics (PPE) at New College, Oxford. He was expected to collect a First, but left with a Second (attributed to "exam nerves"). His tutor, the polymath Isaiah Berlin, suggested that he become "a spy" (intelligence officer), because he would find the Foreign Office "too conventional".

Career

In 1950, de Mowbray joined the Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, at first in the Economic Section under George Kennedy Young, later serving variously in Baghdad, Montevideo, and Washington DC. He retired in 1979.

He was a champion of the controversial Soviet defector known as Anatoly Golitsyn.

He married twice, firstly to Tamsin Giles, daughter of yachtsman Laurent Giles, and secondly to banker Patricia White.

References

Stephen de Mowbray Wikipedia