- Theodore Hall
Theodore Alvin Hall (
October 20 ,1925 –November 1 ,1999 ) was an Americanphysicist and an atomic spy for the Soviet Union who, during his work onAllied effort to develop the firstatomic bomb s duringWorld War II (theManhattan Project ), gave a detailed description of the "Fat Man "plutonium bomb, and of processes for purifying plutonium, to Soviet intelligence.cite book |last=Albright |first=Joseph |authorlink=Joseph Medill Patterson Albright |coauthors=Marcia Kunstel |title=Bombshell: The Secret Story of America's Unknown American Spy Conspiracy |year=1997 |publisher=Crown Publishing Group |quote= | url=http://www.amazon.com/Bombshell-Secret-Americas-Atomic-Conspiracy/dp/081292861X |isbn=081292861X ]Biography
Theodore Alvin Holtzberg was born in
Far Rockaway ,New York City , but his family soon moved to Washington Heights inUpper Manhattan . While his father struggled to find work during theGreat Depression , he changed both his and Theodore's last name to Hall in an effort to avoid anti-Semitic hiring practices.Hall attended Public School 173 in Washington Heights during the Depression and then
Harvard University . He graduated at the age of 18, and at the age of 19 was recruited to theManhattan Project , where he was the youngest scientist at Los Alamos. While on a vacation back to his hometown, he entered a Soviet consulate in New York City and volunteered to pass information on the bomb project to the Soviet government. After his death, his wife Joan said that he had begun to adopt strong feelings current at the time against the possibility of an emerging, militarized United States with a nuclear monopoly very early in his Los Alamos work.Unbeknownst to Hall,
Klaus Fuchs , a Los Alamos colleague, and others still unidentified were also spying for the USSR; none seem to have known of the others.Lona Cohen acted as Hall's courier. Some of their information provided an independent and confirming source for the others.Hall, with the help of his Harvard friend
Saville Sax , who had openCommunist sympathies, together visitedNew York , where Hall, after some searching, arranged a meeting with a Russian diplomat. He presented a detailed sketch of the "Fat Man" nuclear device to the official, who transmitted the information to theNKVD from New York using aone-time pad cipher . Hall's code-name was MLAD, a Slavic root meaning "young".Until recently, nearly all of the espionage regarding the Los Alamos nuclear weapons program was attributed to
Klaus Fuchs . Hall was questioned by theFBI in 1951, but he wasn't charged. Alan H. Belmont, the number-three man in theFBI , decided that theVenona project would be inadmissible ashearsay evidence and not worth compromising the program.In a written statement published in 1997, he came close to admitting that the accusations against him were true, although obliquely, saying that in the immediate postwar years, he felt strongly that "an American monopoly" on nuclear weapons "was dangerous and should be avoided."
: "To help prevent that monopoly I contemplated a brief encounter with a Soviet agent, just to inform them of the existence of the A-bomb project. I anticipated a very limited contact. With any luck it might easily have turned out that way, but it was not to be."
He repeated this near-confession in an interview for a Cold War documentary on CNN in 1998, saying "I decided to give atomic secrets to the Russians because it seemed to me that it was important that there should be no monopoly, which could turn one nation into a menace and turn it loose on the world as ... as Nazi Germany developed. There seemed to be only one answer to what one should do. The right thing to do was to act to break the American monopoly."
Hall left Los Alamos for the
University of Chicago , where he switched to biology. There he pioneered important techniques in X-ray microanalysis. He went to work at Cambridge University inEngland in 1962. Hall later became active in obtaining signatures for theStockholm Peace Pledge .On
November 1 ,1999 , Theodore Hall died inCambridge, England . He had suffered fromParkinson's disease , although he died of renalcancer at the age of 74.cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Theodore Hall, Prodigy and Atomic Spy, Dies at 74 |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9800E7DE103AF933A25752C1A96F958260 |quote=Theodore Alvin Hall, who was the youngest physicist to work on the atomic bomb project at Los Alamos during World War II and was later identified as a Soviet spy, died on Nov. 1 in Cambridge, England, where he had become a leading, if diffident, pioneer in biological research. He was 74. |publisher=New York Times |date=November 10 ,1999 |accessdate=2008-06-26 ]References
External links
* [http://cryptome.org/fbi-nsa.htm#IV.B FBI Memo Prosecution: Disadvantages (1 February 1956)]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20070607215311/http://www.historyhappens.net/archival/manproject/joanhalldoc/joanhall.htm "A Memoir of Ted Hall" by Joan Hall, his wife]
* [http://lanl.gov/history/wartime/spies.shtml Los Alamos National Laboratory: History: Spies]
* [http://alsos.wlu.edu/qsearch.aspx?browse=people/Hall,+Theodore+(Ted) Annotated bibliography for Theodore Hall from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues]
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