Abstract
This investigation and my ability to describe alien office structure is due more to chance than prior intention as it arose out of a difficult examination of the life of Thomas Pitt, second Lord Camelford (1775–1804). Lacking direct sources about him, I turned to an examination of his friends and associates and gradually a pattern emerged: an international network of secret agents. But who directed them, and from where? For a time the answer eluded me, and I was not helped by the statement in the guide to the public record office, that no alien office correspondence remains. In fact there is a considerable quantity, but with the exception of H.O. 5, which is entirely alien office, it is scattered in other H.O. classes as well as various F.O., W.O., and A.D.M. classes. But the late Alfred Cobban provided a lead and he had clearly recognized 1792 as a turning point in secret service. Others who have written before on this subject limited themselves to an examination of one of William Wickham's principal agents, Dandré, no doubt chiefly because at the time they wrote, much material that I have been able to consult was not then available to the public; i.e. a large part of the Wickham collection; the Talbot papers and the residue of Lord Grenville's papers.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference69 articles.
1. Windham William to Wickham William , 7 08 1795, on the subject of providing funds in Lyon: ‘I wish to suggest to you, whether a n expedient may not be resorted to, of which I have found the use on other occasion, of employing Hammersley's circular notes. They are so well known, as to be payable in almost any place, without it being known to the persons who issue them, for what place, and still less for which persons they are intended’ H.R.O. 38M49/1/1/58/1
2. Wickham's William ‘secret account’ with Baboin Romain 1799–1801
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