- Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon
Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon (Tommy Hambledon) is the fictional protagonist of many spy novels written by the British author "
Manning Coles " (actually the two-person writing team of Adelaide Frances Oke Manning and Cyril Henry Coles) from 1940 through 1963. Tommy was a teacher in a British boarding school in his first appearance in "Drink to Yesterday " and, during school vacations, a spy inGermany for theForeign Office . At the end of this book, which takes place inWorld War I , he disappears at sea and is presumed dead. He reappears as the hero of the next book, "Pray Silence " (known in the US by the title "Toast to Tomorrow "), which begins in the 1920s. He is an amnesiac in Germany who gradually works his way up in the fledglingNazi Party until, in 1933, he becomesHitler 's Chief of Police. He then recovers his memory and thereafter battles to defeat Hitler and his plans. At the end of the book he fakes his own death in Danzig (Hitler himself reads the oration at his 'funeral') and stows away with Reck on an English cargo ship bound for Cardiff. On their return to England he and Reck are faced with the problem of a series of unexplained sinkings of ships not long out of harbour in Portsmouth in "They Tell No Tales ".In "
Green Hazard " the Gestapo mistake him for Professor Ulseth, inventor of a new and extremely powerful high explosive, and kidnap him. He then finds himself once again in Berlin where he has to fool his 'hosts' into believing that he actually knows something about chemistry whilst praying that they will fail to recognise a former colleague. AfterWorld War II , he continued his career in the Foreign Office and helped defeat a number ofCommunist plots. In these later adventures, he was frequently aided by a semi-comic team ofmodel-makers from theClerkenwell Road inLondon ,Forgan and Campbell who first appear in "A Brother for Hugh". In this and some other of Manning Coles' subsequent novels Hambledon actually occupies quite a minor role - in "The Man in the Green Hat " he hardly appears at all in the first half of the book.Cyril Coles himself was an avid model maker and was, at the time of his death, building a train set from scratch for his young grandson. Like so many other things in the background of Hambledon, the similarity with Cyril Coles's life is close.
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