Maundy Gregory

Maundy Gregory

Arthur Maundy Gregory (1 July 1877 – 28 September 1941) was a British theatre producer and political fixer who is best remembered for selling honours for Prime Minister David Lloyd George.[1] He may also have been involved with the Zinoviev Letter, the disappearance of Victor Grayson, and the suspicious death of his platonic companion, Edith Rosse. Gregory claimed to have been a spy for British intelligence.

Contents

Early life

Gregory was born in Southampton, where his father was a clergyman. He attended Banister Court school in Southampton. A classmate was Harold Davidson, the infamous Rector of Stiffkey. He attended Oxford University, but left before graduation. Gregory became a teacher, and later worked as an actor and theatre producer.

Much of the information about Gregory comes from his own papers and curriculum vitae, the truth of which is questionable. According to these sources, Vernon Kell, head of MI5, recruited Gregory in 1909, possibly because of Gregory's connections from London's nightlife. At MI5, Gregory mainly compiled dossiers on suspected foreign spies living in London. Later, Sidney Reilly allegedly recruited Gregory for the recently formed MI6. Gregory referred to his alleged time at MI5 and MI6 when he asserted that he had raised funds for the fight against Bolshevism. Official records verify that Gregory served as a private in the Irish Guards, but do not verify his time at MI5 or MI6. Gregory claimed that at about the same time he claimed he was working for MI5 and MI6, he became acquainted with Basil Thomson. Thomson was the Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard's CID. The relationship between Gregory and Thomson lasted for several years.

Selling honours

Around 1918, Gregory approached the Liberal Party to arrange payments to the party in exchange for peerages. He was actually one of many to do this. David Lloyd George hired him as a broker to gather funding for the United Constitutional Party Lloyd George was planning to form.

At the time, prices for honours ranged from £10,000[2] (£310,000 today) for a knighthood to £40,000 (£1.24 million) for a baronetcy. Later estimates state that Gregory transferred £1-2 million (now £31-62 million) to the Liberal and Conservative parties. He earned around £3 million a year, which he used to buy the Whitechapel Gazette newspaper and considerable real estate, including the Ambassador Club in Soho and the Deepdene Hotel[3] in Surrey. Reportedly, Gregory gathered gossip about the sex lives of contemporary celebrities who stayed at the two properties. The hotel gained the reputation of being "the biggest brothel in southeast England",[1] and Gregory It was also rumored that people at the Ambassador Club sold stolen jewellery. Allegedly, Gregory used this information for blackmail. The Whitechapel Gazette included anti-Bolshevik and antisemitic articles by Basil Thomson writing as "Gellius".[citation needed]

Gregory made many friends who were prominent members of British society, including the Duke of York, later King George VI, and the Earl of Birkenhead. He clashed, however, with the radical left-wing politician Victor Grayson,[2] who had reportedly discovered that Gregory was selling honours, but who refused to denounce him without further proof. Grayson also suspected Gregory of having forged the notorious diaries of Roger Casement.[2] Many writers[by whom?] suspect that Gregory was involved in Grayson's disappearance in 1920, but there is no evidence to support this theory.

There are also claims that Gregory was involved in the Zinoviev Letter affair that influenced the defeat of the Labour Party in the 1924 General Election.[citation needed]

In 1927, the new Unionist government blocked Gregory's honours-selling scheme. He began selling non-British honours, such as noble titles from Serbia and Ukraine, and papal honours[1] and dispensations, such as the knighthood of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre. Among his victims was the Catholic father of actress Mia Farrow, to whom he had promised a marriage annulment.[1] Gregory himself was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Holy Sepulchre.[1]

According to published MI5 files, when Russian diplomat Ivan Korostovets tried to recruit Gregory to work against the Bolsheviks, Gregory used the Anglo-Ukrainian Fellowship as a front to continue his peerage sales and kept all the money for himself.[4]

Gregory also continued to sell British peerages to those who were unaware he could no longer provide them. Those who paid him had no legal recourse; they could neither report him to the authorities nor sue in civil court without themselves being prosecuted under the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925. In 1930, Gregory was sued for £30,000 by the estate of a baronet who had died before receiving a peerage purchased from him.[3] He was forced to return the money.

Edith Rosse

Gregory had been friends with actress Edith Rosse for many years. He leased a house called Vanity Fair to Rosse and her husband in 1920, and moved in with them the following year.[1] After Rosse separated from her husband in 1923, she and Gregory continued to lived under the same roof in a platonic relationship (Gregory was a homosexual[4]). The couple later moved to Abbey Lodge in St John's Wood (it was later converted into recording studios, where the Beatles recorded much of their best work).[2]

In 1932, she turned down his request for a loan, but was persuaded to change her will only a few days before her death.[2] He inherited £18,000. Some suspect Rosse did not die of natural causes, but rather was poisoned by Gregory. After Gregory's fall in the "Honours" Scandal trial, Scotland Yard exhumed Rosse's body to look for postmortem evidence of poison. However, Gregory had seen to it that Rosse's grave was located in very wet ground and was unusually shallow with an unsealed coffin lid [2] It was later alleged that Gregory delayed Rosse's burial until he found a location that frequently flooded because he believed that this would prevent later recovery of evidence. Pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury suspected as much, but was unable to find any useful evidence or trace of poison. The novelist Evelyn Waugh apparently heard of the incident and toyed with the idea of using it in one of his novels.[citation needed] Rosse is buried in All Saints' graveyard by the side of the Thames at Bisham, Berkshire.

Further troubles

In 1932, Gregory tried to sell Lieutenant Commander Billyard Leake a peerage for £12,000. Leake pretended to be interested, but informed the police and Gregory was arrested. Gregory could now threaten to name in court those who had bought peerages. Because he pleaded guilty (possibly persuaded to do so by the Tory Party), Gregory did not have to give evidence in court. He did, however, give interviews to the press trying to prove his innocence.

In 1933, Gregory was convicted under the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925 of selling honours. He was fined £50 and jailed for two months.[4] As of 2007, he remains the only person to have been convicted under this act. The names of those who bought their peerages are still unknown. His case file was moved to the National Archives in 2002.

Later life

He declared bankruptcy in 1933. After he was released, he moved to Paris, where he lived under an assumed name made up of his third and fourth given names on a £2,000 annual pension from sources close to the Conservative Party.[citation needed] British historian Andrew Cook claims that Gregory took his records with him.

After the German occupation of France in 1940, he was captured and sent to a labour camp. Sources reporting Gregory's death conflict. He reportedly died 28 September 1941, either at an internment camp[2] or at the Val de Grace Hospital[3] in Paris.

References in popular fiction

In the 1993 novel Closed Circle by Robert Goddard, the main character, Guy Horton, meets with Gregory. Gregory employs Horton to encourage wealthy businessmen to uses his services to obtain peerages. Goddard writes that Horton "felt an immediate loathing for everything about him - the egg-shell charm, the wafts of cologne, the dandyish dress, the monocle, the rings, the voice; and especially the hungry fish-like eyes."

Sources

  • Andrew Cook - Hawking Peerages (History Today November 2006)

References

Further reading

  • Douglas Brown and E.V.Tullett - The Scalpel of Scotland Yard: the Life of Sir Bernard Spilsbury (New York: E.P. Dutton and Co.Inc.,, 1952)
  • Tom Cullen - Maundy Gregory: Purveyor of Honours (1974) ISBN 0-370-01373-5
  • John Walker - The Queen Has Been Pleased: The British Honours System at Work (1986) ISBN 0-436-56111-5

See also

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Maundy — may refer to: Maundy Thursday – a Christian holiday commemorating the Last Supper Maundy the liturgical foot washing ceremonies that occurs on Maundy Thursday Maundy money – dispensed at the Maundy ceremony by the British Monarch See also Maundy… …   Wikipedia

  • Gregory (surname) — Gregory is a surname, and may refer to:* Adam Gregory * Alyse Gregory * Andre Gregory * Augustus Gregory, Australian explorer * Benji Gregory * , French physicist, CERN Director General * Bob Gregory * Brad Stephan Gregory * Bud Gregory * Celia… …   Wikipedia

  • Victor Grayson — Albert Victor Grayson (born 5 September 1881, disappeared 28 September 1920) was an English socialist politician of the early 20th century. His sudden and still unexplained disappearance in 1920 is widely believed to have been the result of his… …   Wikipedia

  • Basil Thomson — Sir Basil Home Thomson, KCB (21 April 1861 ndash; 26 March 1939) was a British intelligence officer, and colonial administrator, who was director of wartime intelligence during World War I, assistant premier of Tonga, assistant commissioner of… …   Wikipedia

  • Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom — The British honours system is a means of rewarding individuals personal bravery, achievement, or service to the United Kingdom and the British Overseas Territories. The system consists of three types of award: honours, decorations and medals:… …   Wikipedia

  • Dorking — This article is about the market town in Surrey. For other uses, see Dorking (disambiguation). Coordinates: 51°14′02″N 0°19′54″W / 51.2340°N 0.3318°W …   Wikipedia

  • Harold Davidson — Harold Francis Davidson (July 14, 1875 ndash; July 30, 1937), sometimes known as the Prostitute s Padre , was a Church of England priest and was famous as the Rector of Stiffkey . He was defrocked in 1932 for his alleged licentious lifestyle.… …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian titles debate — The Canadian titles debate has been ongoing since the adoption of the Nickle Resolution in 1919. This resolution marked the earliest attempt to establish a Canadian government policy requesting the Sovereign not to grant knighthoods, baronetcies …   Wikipedia

  • Cash for Honours — (also Cash for Peerages, Loans for Honours or Loans for Peerages) is the name given by some in the media to a political scandal in the United Kingdom in 2006 and 2007 concerning the connection between political donations and the award of life… …   Wikipedia

  • Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925 — The Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, passed in 1925 (15 16 Geo. V c. 72) , that makes the sale of peerages or any other honours illegal. It was brought in after the Liberal Party… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”