I have received an enquiry (see below) from an author Joshua Levine who informed me that he is very interested in researching Tomas Harris and wants to write a book about the men behind the double agents in world war II, specifically Operation FORTITUDE. (Tomas Harris who was the MI5 controller in charge of agent GARBO (Juan Pujol) planned operation Fortitude with Garbo). Joshua has very similar interests to Christopher Maton (see earlier post), who is currently writing  a screenplay about Tomas Harris. I have put them in touch with eachother. If anyone has information that they would like to share with Joshua Levine or Christopher Maton or even Andreu Jaume in Mallorca who is also writing a book about Tomas Harris then please contact me using this Contact Form and I will be very happy to help.


My name is Joshua Levine and I am an author. Having found your very impressive website, I decided to contact you as I have begun work on a book about Operation FORTITUDE for the publisher Harper Collins. My previous books include ‘On a Wing and a Prayer’ (about the Royal Flying Corps) and ‘Beauty and Atrocity’ (about the Northern Ireland Troubles), as well as various Forgotten Voices oral histories.

It feels like a stroke of good luck finding your website. I have read Christopher Maton’s post, and I agree completely with him, that in many existing books on FORTITUDE, that there has not been enough focus on Tomas Harris, and and not enough stress on the sheer human drama of the events. The reason for this is fairly clear when one immerses oneself in the relevant archive material.  Much of it – for example in the PRO and the the IWM – concerns strategies and tactics, lists of imaginary troops movements, double agents’ wireless messages, but doesn’t paint a picture of the individuals concerned or the atmosphere in which they worked. (There are exceptions, of course – for example the Liddell diaries, and the odd vivid interrogation from a KV file.)

As a result, It seems to me that too much emphasis has come to be placed on the double agents themselves, and not enough on those running them. Men like Harris and Hugh Astor. These were the men who had to do the work, inhabiting their agents’ personas, avoiding the single error that could put the entire system in jeopardy, and serving up a complex deception plan in small pieces. The agents themselves were sometimes just the means of doing so.

It is for this reason that I would like to meet people who knew Tomas Harris (and the other handlers) and who can tell me what their lives and their jobs really consisted of. I have only just begun this search, and to kick it off, I will be meeting Christopher Mills, the son of Cyril Mills later this week. And now, having found your website, I would love to know whether you could point me in the direction of anybody who knew Tomas, and who could paint a picture of him. Or, for that matter, a picture of wartime life in MI5. It would be very interesting to get in touch with Christopher Maton to share thoughts and ideas. I might have a few for him! Please feel free to forward this email to him.

Anyway, congratulations on the website, and I very much look forward to hearing from you.

Joshua Levine

Post written by: Anita Harris

This newspaper Article tells the story of Tomas Harris during the Second World War, especially his relationship with Pujol and how he created Garbo. The Article was written by Andreu Jaume, published in the Spanish newspaper El Pais,  19th January 2010.   Andreu kindly sent me this article for publishing on this website.  To view the original Spanish version <-  please click…

TRIBUNE

ANDREU JAUME

Garbo Portrait

Edmond Roch premieres’ Garbo, the spy, “a documentary on Joan Pujol, agent of British secret services. Along with Tommy Harris, created a fictitious web of 27 agents to deceive the Germans

In Garbo, the Spy, the recently released documentary by Edmon Roch on Joan Pujol, alias Garbo, a Catalan recruited by British intelligence as a double agent, whose task was decisive to feed false intelligence to the Nazis about the Normandy invasion, is cited, and very casually, the name of the person who was the case officer in MI5: Tomás Harris (1908-1964). Perhaps the adventure of Pujol is too complex (there are still pages of shadow in his biography, many characters in blurred image of his life) to synthesize it in just 90 minutes. The result is certainly an admirable effort and a stimulating contribution to the genre and the dissemination of one of the most spectacular episodes in the history of espionage, but it is a pity that the image of Harris, inseparable from that of Pujol, has not had the prominence it deserves.

It is true, moreover, that the life of case officer of Garbo give, by its unusual versatility, for another documentary monograph. English, Spanish from his mother side, Tommy Harris was a painter, art-dealer, compulsive collector, millionaire, art scholar specializing in Spanish —his name is in the Prado as one ofthe main donors to the museum—, and legendary host spy ware. At 14 he began studying painting and sculpture at the Slade School of Art in London, where he agreed with Sir William Coldstream and Claude Rogers and studied under Professor Henry Tonks. After a stay in Rome dedicated to sculpture in London followed the footsteps of his father as a gallerist and dealer in antiques. From the thirties to late forties, Harris led the Spanish Art Gallery, one of the most prestigious galleries in England, a showcase of the best classical painting, not just Spanish but also Italian and Flemish. Roger Fry, for example, gladly discovered El Greco in those rooms. And the formidable Gongora portrait painted by Velazquez, to name just one of countless masterpieces he owned, was exhibited in the galleries of Harris, who ended up selling it to the Boston Museum, where it still is.

When war broke out, Harris was recruited by the secret services, first as host of a school for spies called Brickendonbury Hall, in north London, where he met one of his closest and more controversial friends: Kim Philby, the third member Cambridge Circle, the sophisticated Soviet moles in the service of Her Majesty. When the school closed, Harris joined MI5, particularly in the counterintelligence department. Through his deep knowledge of Spanish culture and society he quickly became one of the most valued and respected members of The Circus, as the service was known among his staff. His work was crucial, for example, to break the spy network that Franco was trying to organize in England, but surely the moment of glory came when his superiors appointed him official of Garbo, the most delicate strategy of diversion in the twentieth century.

Together, Harris and Pujol created a fictitious web of 27 agents scattered all over England who allegedly provided to Garbo confidential information about the movements of the allies on the island, which in turn Arabel —Pujol’s nickname for the German— filtered to the Abwher, Hitler’s secret service, through its German links in Madrid. They managed to convince the Nazis that the Allied landing would take place in the Pas de Calais rather than Normandy —what was called Operation Fortitude. There is no doubt, as Roch’s documentary explains in detail, of Pujol’s talent for storytelling, deceit, improvisation and risk, but it is also true that without Harris, Garbo would have not reaped the extraordinary success that is recognized today.

Pujol, unlike what is often assumed, was never in the offices of MI5 and only later learned exactly what was going on and what was the ultimate meaning of their work. Harris became his shadow and the choreographer of the phenomenal real farce that ended up deciding the course of the war. In an apartment in Jermyn Street, Harris and Pujol, assisted by a secretary, Sarah Bishop, imagined and directed, like Prospero and Ariel, the lives of the spectral agents, their profiles, their movements, their mishaps, sometimes even his sudden death. Among his creatures there were Welsh Nationalists, a waiter in Gibraltar, confidents in the Ministry of Information. Harris, who had access to top security sources, selected, dosed and then reflected the information that Pujol handled and distributed, while the D-Day approached. His powers of persuasion proved so unbeatable that even two days after the allies landed on the beaches of Normandy on 6 June 1944, the Germans still believed that the decisive attack would occur at Calais.

After the war, Pujol, for safety reasons, had to go and start a new life and Harris, which basically was always an illusionist, a magician in the shadows of the stage, saw to that. Pujol made with him a long journey that took them first to New York and Washington, where J. Edgar Hoover, the FBI feared dictator, invited them to dinner to meet the duo who had revolutionized the intelligence services and whose methods he wanted to know first hand. From there they went to Venezuela, where Pujol decided to settle with the new identity that Harris had given him: teacher and art specialist. Harris returned to England to spread the news that Pujol had died of malaria in Angola, a theory which was believed until 1984, when the writer Nigel West discovered the whereabouts of Pujol.

For his part, Tomas Harris, exhausted by the stresses of war, decided to sell his business in London and devote himself entirely to his own painting. King George VI had named him Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) and even General Eisenhower had wanted to thank him personally for his contribution to victory. For his retirement he chose Camp de Mar, a beautiful bay in Majorca, where he bought and refurbished a house that became his residence and art studio. There he worked feverishly: prints, oil paintings, lithographs, sculpture, ceramics, stained-glass and tapestry designs. Also swelled his collections of furniture, sarcophagi, Reinassance jewelry, XVI tissues, paintings and engravings, mainly by Goya, Durer and Rembrandt. He came to collect the world’s largest private collection of the graphic work of Goya, now in the British Museum under the name of The Tomas Harris Collection. The passion for Goya’s prints led him to write at the very end of his life, an impressive catalog raisonné: Goya engravings and litographs (Oxford, Bruno Cassirer, 1964), reference still inescapable.

Tomas Harris died in a traffic accident in January 1964. Since then his name faded away and only revived when he was wrongly accused in the eighties, of belonging to the network of Soviet spies, because of his close friendship with leading members of the circle of Cambridge: Guy Burgess, Philby and Anthony Blunt. But that’s another story that deserves yet another documentary. In regard to his relationship with Joan Pujol, there is a hitherto unpublished detail that reveals his personality and his peculiar sense of humour better than anything. When he returned to Venezuela, after making Pujol disappear, he brought with him a few canvases in which he had been working and showd them in an exhibition held at the Museum of Modern Art in Madrid, the first in Spain, opened in June 1947. Among Caribbean landscapes and still-lifes, visitors could see a portrait of a man in white and green. The painting was untitled ‘Portrait of Joan’. There he was, for anyone who wanted to see him.

Andreu Jaume is publisher of Lumen

Note from Anita Harris :  Read more : The book,  ’Garbo’ – written by Juan Pujol (Garbo) and Nigel West

Post written by: Anita Harris

Click the following links below to view all I know to date about Tomas Harris. I am discovering new details all the time, and I will continue to write new posts to the Anita Harris Website.  Here are just some of the links on the Anita Harris Family Website, check there regulary for new posts.

Subscribe to receive emails from this website AND from the Anita Harris Family Website when new posts are published.

Posted Articles on the Anita Harris Family Website are listed below:-

  • Tomas Harris and the History of the Spanish Art Gallery, London
  • Tomas Harris – Art, collections and engravings in England, Spain and Australia
  • The Tomas Harris Goya Print Collection at the British Museum in London
  • Tomas Harris – was a Scholar, a famous Artist, and an MI5 officer  
  • Sir Anthony Blunt writes about Tomas Harris, the Artist and MI5 officer.
  • TOMAS HARRIS from MI5. GARBO his Spy (Double Agent), MI6/SIS , World War II..
  • GARBO – Juan Pujol Garcia (1912-1988)
  • Tomas Harris (1908 – 1964) All I know so far about Tomas Harris
  • Anthony Blunt – Book Notes
  • LIONEL HARRIS (1862-1943) and his large Family
  • Sir Anthony Blunt writes about Tomas Harris, the Artist and MI5 officer.
  • Links available from Sidebar on the Anita Harris Family Website (these links will be added to this site shortly).

  • Anthony Blunt – Art Historian
  • Anthony Blunt – Wikipedia
  • BBC News – Garbo, Spaniard behind D-Day
  • Cambridge Five – Soviet Spies – Wikipedia
  • Desmond Bristow – MI6 – Wikipedia
  • Donald Maclean – Wikipedia, soviet Spy, Cambridge Five
  • GARBO – The Garbo Network
  • GARBO – Timesonline Article – All about Garbo + D-day
  • GARBO – Wikipedia
  • Garbo: The Spy Who Saved D-Day (Book Excerpts)
  • Guy Burgess – Wikipedia
  • Nigel Glendinning : Tomas Harris author of Goya: Engravings and Lithographs
  • British Museum Exhibition of the Tomas Harris Inheritance Collection
  • PDF Brochure – Andratx segon Harris – 2009 Exhibition
  • Tomas Harris – 2009 Exhibition Brochure in Andratx, Mallorca
  • Tomas Harris – Art gallery on this website
  • Tomas Harris – Mallorcan Landscape
  • Tomas Harris – Wikipedia
  • Kim Philby – Wikipedia
  • MI5 – Agent Garbo
  • MI5 World War II
  • MI6/SIS – Secret Intelligence Service
  • Tomas Harris – Wikipedia
  • What is D-Day ?
  • Post written by: Website Administrator

    Tomas Harris links on the World Wide Web

    Andratx segon Harris – 2009

    Anthony Blunt – Art Historian

    Anthony Blunt – Wikipedia

    BBC News – Garbo Double Spy behind D-Day

    British Museum - Tomas Harris Inheritance Collection

    Cambridge Five – Soviet Spies – Wikipedia

    Desmond Bristow – MI6 – Wikipedia

    Donald Maclean – Wikipedia, Soviet Spy

    GARBO – MI5  Agent

    GARBO – The Garbo Network

    GARBO – Timesonline -  All about Garbo & D-day

    GARBO – Wikipedia

    GARBO - The Spy Who Saved D-Day

    Guy Burgess – Wikipedia

    Kim Philby – Wikipedia

    MI5 World War II

    MI6/SIS – Secret Intelligence Service

    Tomas Harris – Gallery on www.AnitaHarrisFamily.co.uk

    Tomas Harris – 2009 Exhibition, Andratx, Mallorca

    Tomas Harris  – Author – Goya: Engravings and Lithographs

    Tomas Harris – Family Tree

    Tomas Harris – Mallorcan Landscape

    Tomas Harris – Mallorca Newspaper Articles

    Tomas Harris –  Prnts – Sotheby’s Catalogue 23/3/1965 

    Tomas Harris – Wikipedia

    What was D-Day ?

    Post written by: Website Administrator