Papers of Captain Thomas Edward Maurice McKitterick relating to his service in the Intelligence Corps in the Eastern Mediterranean 1942-45

  • This material is held at
  • Reference
      GB 12 MS Add. 8683
  • Dates of Creation
      1942-1945
  • Language of Material
      English .
  • Physical Description
      2 archive box(es)

Scope and Content

Papers of Captain Thomas Edward Maurice McKitterick relating to his service in the Intelligence Corps in the Eastern Mediterranean 1942-45

Administrative / Biographical History

At the outbreak of war in September 1939, Thomas McKitterick was an extra-mural lecturer in International Relations, in the University of Wales. When permitted so to do by a change in the schedule of reserved occupations, he enlisted with the Royal Fusiliers in August 1940, and, being a fluent linguist, was in March the next year commissioned Lieutenant in the newly-formed Intelligence Corps. After brief periods of attachment to the Matlock training centre and to MI9 in London, McKitterick was posted to MI12 (Middle East) where, through having listed Greek as his eighth-strongest foreign language, he was appointed a censorship officer in Haifa with particular responsibility for scrutinising the large quantity of Greek correspondence generated in the city. While disliking the posting, and repeatedly requesting a transfer, McKitterick became, almost despite himself, fluent in the language and, increasingly, an expert on the politics of Greece, a nation then still under German occupation.

Eventually, the Army came to make use of these hard-won skills. In January 1944, McKitterick was attached to Cretan Section Force 133 Special Operations Executive (SOE), responsible for the selection of Allied agents to operate on the island. Thereafter, following a spell as an intelligence officer with the Political Information Centre Middle East (PICME) in Cairo, he spent some unhappy weeks at the end of 1944 in liberated Athens, as head of the city section of PIC. Unfortunately, his junior rank and the hostility of British political officers, including Harold Caccia, the future Lord Caccia, made his task impossible, and he was transferred to other intelligence duties.

Arrangement

Add MS 8683 divides into two principal sections. The first is made up of personal papers relating to McKitterick's career 1942-45, and includes requests for transfer, administrative problems with his pay, and some of his confidential reports on individuals considered for special missions. The second comprises a run of the PICME-produced 'Balkan Political Intelligence Notes' and its successor the 'Balkan Political Review'. Running from June 1943 to February 1945, these regular briefings for military and political personnel give an interesting insight into changing British perceptions of the forces and characters that shaped the politics of Greece, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Albania and Turkey during the final defeat of Fascism in south-eastern Europe.

Access Information

Unless restrictions apply, the collection is open for consultation by researchers using the Manuscripts Reading Room at Cambridge University Library. For further details on conditions governing access please contact mss@lib.cam.ac.uk. Information about opening hours and obtaining a Cambridge University Library reader's ticket is available from the Library's website (www.lib.cam.ac.uk).

Acquisition Information

These papers relating to the wartime service of Thomas McKitterick in the Intelligence Corps were presented to Cambridge University Library in 1987 by his son, Mr David McKitterick, Librarian of Trinity College, Cambridge.

Other Finding Aids

A catalogue of the collection can be found on ArchiveSearch.