Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved
In times of peace or war, Washington, D.C. is the spy capital of the world. The original spymaster, George Washington, whose home was in nearby Mt. Vernon, started it all when he had false information planted in British pouches and used disappearing ink to instruct his agents.

Since then, the capital has been a hotbed of espionage, chock full of all the targets of any self-respecting spy—the CIA, the FBI, the Pentagon, NSA, and more. Diplomats, politicians, generals, scholars, secretaries and clerks, mistresses and wives have lied, contrived, connived, denied, cheated, blackmailed, seduced and betrayed each other here, right up to the current war on terrorism.

Pamela Kessler, a former Washington Post reporter and an expert on the local espionage scene, takes readers on a guided tour through D.C. and nearby Virginia and Maryland to more than 70 drop-sites, safe-houses, graveyards, mansions, museums, secure government offices and restaurant rendezvous where the spy game has been played. Kessler reveals the tales behind each featured site and offers more than 60 photographs of secret agents and the hangouts where they lived, worked, loved and sometimes died gruesome deaths.

Lurk through Maryland, sneak through Virginia, and hide in Washington as you visit such places as:

- Hotel George—the Washington hotel where the only Soviet general to survive Stalin’s blood purge of Red Army officers died a mysterious death.
- Mailbox at the corner of 37th and R Streets N.W.—where Aldrich Ames, who worked for the KGB while serving as the CIA’s chief of Soviet counterintelligence, signaled his handler he was ready to make a drop.
- The Exchange—the D.C. restaurant where KGB mole Karl Koecher and his wife Hana met with a swinging couples group for exchange of wives and government secrets.
- Foxstone Park—where “Doctor Death” Robert Hanssen dropped his last documents, just before his fellow FBI agents arrested him.
- The Georgetown mansion where “Wild Bill” Donovan, founder of the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, held secret meetings during World War II.
- Au Pied de Cochon—the Georgetown café where Soviet defector Vitaly Yurchenko had his last meal before redefecting.
- The Northwest Washington home where Soviet spy Kim Philby lived while serving as First Secretary of the British Embassy.
- FBI Headquarters—a preview of the redesigned tour that attracts half a million visitors a year
- National Cryptologic Museum—a former motel in Fort Meade, Maryland, where visitors now can learn the history of American signals intelligence and cryptology and find the largest public collection of Enigma machines.
- The Willard Hotel—where Lafayette C. Baker, the infamous counterespionage officer in the Civil War, was recruited
- Congressional Country Club—the training place in Potomac, Maryland, for OSS agents to be parachuted behind enemy lines in World War II.

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Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved
In times of peace or war, Washington, D.C. is the spy capital of the world. The original spymaster, George Washington, whose home was in nearby Mt. Vernon, started it all when he had false information planted in British pouches and used disappearing ink to instruct his agents.

Since then, the capital has been a hotbed of espionage, chock full of all the targets of any self-respecting spy—the CIA, the FBI, the Pentagon, NSA, and more. Diplomats, politicians, generals, scholars, secretaries and clerks, mistresses and wives have lied, contrived, connived, denied, cheated, blackmailed, seduced and betrayed each other here, right up to the current war on terrorism.

Pamela Kessler, a former Washington Post reporter and an expert on the local espionage scene, takes readers on a guided tour through D.C. and nearby Virginia and Maryland to more than 70 drop-sites, safe-houses, graveyards, mansions, museums, secure government offices and restaurant rendezvous where the spy game has been played. Kessler reveals the tales behind each featured site and offers more than 60 photographs of secret agents and the hangouts where they lived, worked, loved and sometimes died gruesome deaths.

Lurk through Maryland, sneak through Virginia, and hide in Washington as you visit such places as:

- Hotel George—the Washington hotel where the only Soviet general to survive Stalin’s blood purge of Red Army officers died a mysterious death.
- Mailbox at the corner of 37th and R Streets N.W.—where Aldrich Ames, who worked for the KGB while serving as the CIA’s chief of Soviet counterintelligence, signaled his handler he was ready to make a drop.
- The Exchange—the D.C. restaurant where KGB mole Karl Koecher and his wife Hana met with a swinging couples group for exchange of wives and government secrets.
- Foxstone Park—where “Doctor Death” Robert Hanssen dropped his last documents, just before his fellow FBI agents arrested him.
- The Georgetown mansion where “Wild Bill” Donovan, founder of the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, held secret meetings during World War II.
- Au Pied de Cochon—the Georgetown café where Soviet defector Vitaly Yurchenko had his last meal before redefecting.
- The Northwest Washington home where Soviet spy Kim Philby lived while serving as First Secretary of the British Embassy.
- FBI Headquarters—a preview of the redesigned tour that attracts half a million visitors a year
- National Cryptologic Museum—a former motel in Fort Meade, Maryland, where visitors now can learn the history of American signals intelligence and cryptology and find the largest public collection of Enigma machines.
- The Willard Hotel—where Lafayette C. Baker, the infamous counterespionage officer in the Civil War, was recruited
- Congressional Country Club—the training place in Potomac, Maryland, for OSS agents to be parachuted behind enemy lines in World War II.

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Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved

Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved

by Pamela Kessler
Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved

Undercover Washington: Where Famous Spies Lived, Worked and Loved

by Pamela Kessler

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Overview

In times of peace or war, Washington, D.C. is the spy capital of the world. The original spymaster, George Washington, whose home was in nearby Mt. Vernon, started it all when he had false information planted in British pouches and used disappearing ink to instruct his agents.

Since then, the capital has been a hotbed of espionage, chock full of all the targets of any self-respecting spy—the CIA, the FBI, the Pentagon, NSA, and more. Diplomats, politicians, generals, scholars, secretaries and clerks, mistresses and wives have lied, contrived, connived, denied, cheated, blackmailed, seduced and betrayed each other here, right up to the current war on terrorism.

Pamela Kessler, a former Washington Post reporter and an expert on the local espionage scene, takes readers on a guided tour through D.C. and nearby Virginia and Maryland to more than 70 drop-sites, safe-houses, graveyards, mansions, museums, secure government offices and restaurant rendezvous where the spy game has been played. Kessler reveals the tales behind each featured site and offers more than 60 photographs of secret agents and the hangouts where they lived, worked, loved and sometimes died gruesome deaths.

Lurk through Maryland, sneak through Virginia, and hide in Washington as you visit such places as:

- Hotel George—the Washington hotel where the only Soviet general to survive Stalin’s blood purge of Red Army officers died a mysterious death.
- Mailbox at the corner of 37th and R Streets N.W.—where Aldrich Ames, who worked for the KGB while serving as the CIA’s chief of Soviet counterintelligence, signaled his handler he was ready to make a drop.
- The Exchange—the D.C. restaurant where KGB mole Karl Koecher and his wife Hana met with a swinging couples group for exchange of wives and government secrets.
- Foxstone Park—where “Doctor Death” Robert Hanssen dropped his last documents, just before his fellow FBI agents arrested him.
- The Georgetown mansion where “Wild Bill” Donovan, founder of the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, held secret meetings during World War II.
- Au Pied de Cochon—the Georgetown café where Soviet defector Vitaly Yurchenko had his last meal before redefecting.
- The Northwest Washington home where Soviet spy Kim Philby lived while serving as First Secretary of the British Embassy.
- FBI Headquarters—a preview of the redesigned tour that attracts half a million visitors a year
- National Cryptologic Museum—a former motel in Fort Meade, Maryland, where visitors now can learn the history of American signals intelligence and cryptology and find the largest public collection of Enigma machines.
- The Willard Hotel—where Lafayette C. Baker, the infamous counterespionage officer in the Civil War, was recruited
- Congressional Country Club—the training place in Potomac, Maryland, for OSS agents to be parachuted behind enemy lines in World War II.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781931868976
Publisher: Capital Books, Incorporated
Publication date: 04/01/2005
Series: Capital Travels Series
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.41(d)

About the Author

Pamela Kessler, a former Washington Post reporter, has been interviewed about espionage lore on Fox Morning News, the Travel Channel and A&E, and in magazines and newspapers. She lectures frequently on the subject at the National Archives and in local libraries, as well as to such groups as the Association of Former Intelligence Officers, the Old Crows (National Security Agency), and the American Political Science Association. She has an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University in the Writing Seminars. Kessler lives in Potomac, Maryland with her husband, New York Times bestselling author Ronald Kessler.

Table of Contents

Introduction
District of Columbia--Georgetown
A Wilderness of Mirrors
The Big Dump
What’s a Little Spying Among Friends?
Oh So Social
Rendezvous at Georgetown Pharmacy
Pumpkins and Perjury
Under Covers
The Last Supper of Vitaly Yurchenko
Yurchenko the Revisionist
District of Columbia--Downtown
Codebreaker
Watching Abe Lincoln
Intelligence Central
Swinging Spies
The Spy Who Fed the Meter
A Black-Bag Job
Eyes Only
Hoover Ate Here
Rebel Rose
The Defector and the Call Girl
Cloak and Swagger
The Zimmermann Telegram
Open Secrets
The Nest That Hatched the Egg
Have You Driven a U-2 Lately?
Shoot/Don’t Shoot
FBI II
Schmoozing
District of Columbia--Capitol Hill and Environs
And Then There Were None
The Rebel Press Agent
The Secret Room
The Downing File
Out of Sight, Out of Mind
District of Columbia--Around the Mall
The Kremlin, Magic and the On-the-Roof Gang
Clandestine Collectibles
Eye in the Sky
They Never Forget a Spy
District of Columbia--Upper Northwest
Codename MARY
The Dangle
A Local Mata Hari
G-Girl
The Third Man, a Legend
Hoover Slept Here
Spies in the Attic
Maryland
Dead Drops
Club Jed
The Game of Soviet Pursuit
Thee Name It, We Have It
Dog Days at the FBI
SIGINT City
Learning to Love the Bombe
The Fifth Column
The Andersonville of the North
Virginia
The One Who Cracked
In the Line of Duty
The Color PURPLE
Trolling
The First Spymaster
At Sea at a Covert Interrogation Center
Stacking the Deck
The Search for Sasha
Confederate Heroine?
Doctor Death
Jeb Stuart’s Secret Muse
Get Your CIA Mugs Here
Self-Appointed Chinese Emissary
Dueling Defectors
Chez Espionage
Inside the Agency
Spy Recipes
Christian Renault’s Recipes for Angleton
Steamed Mussels
Spycatcher’s Scampi
Chef Guy Bougère’s Poached Salmon for Yurchenko
Tradecraft from Miss Leslie’s New Cookery Book
Sherry Cobbler Roasted Oysters
Advice from The Virginia House-wife
Vinegar of the Four Thieves
Glossary
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