Special Collections Department, University of Virginia Library
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library© 2002 By the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia. All rights reserved.
Funding: Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Ann Marie Plunkett and Assisted by Sharon Defibaugh & Manuscripts Students
There are no restrictions.
See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.
Papers of Sir Fitzroy Maclean, Accession #11487, Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.
This collection was purchased by the University of Virginia Library from Christie, Manson & Woods Ltd., London, England on November 30, 1998.
Fitzroy Hew Royle Maclean was born in 1911 in Cairo, Egypt to Charles Maclean, a major in the British army, and Gladys Royle Maclean. He was raised in Scotland, India, and Italy and attended Eton (1924-28), the University of Marburg in Germany (1929), and Kings' College, Cambridge (1929-32) where he won a senior scholarship and first class honors. He entered the Foreign Office in 1934 and was first posted to Paris, and then to Moscow in 1937 where he served as the Third Secretary in the British Embassy. Stalin's purges were at their height during Maclean's two years in the Soviet Union, and he was present at the state trial of Nikolai Bukharin in 1938. He also made journeys to remote areas of the Soviet Union such as Central Asia and the Caucasus where few if any foreigners had been for many years. In 1939 he returned to London and worked in the Foreign Office on Russian affairs.
When World War II broke out, he wanted to enlist in the military, but as a diplomat was in a "reserved" position and was not allowed to do so. He learned that the only way to be released from the Foreign Office was to declare himself a candidate for Parliament, and so he was returned for the constituency of Lancaster at a by-election in 1941. He joined the Cameron Highlanders regiment in the British army as a private, and then the new Special Air Service (SAS) and served in the Western Desert, where he participated in the raid on Benghazi along with SAS founder David Stirling and Randolph Churchill, and foiled a coup in Persia by kidnapping General Zahidi who had collaborated with the Germans.
In July 1943 Prime Minister Winston Churchill asked Maclean to serve as his personal representative and Brigadier commanding a British Military Mission to Josip Broz Tito, leader of the Communist Partisans in German-occupied Yugoslavia. At this stage of the war, there was a debate in the British government over which Yugoslav resistance group it should support - Tito's Partisans or Draza Mihalovich's Cetniks. In September Maclean was dropped by parachute into Bosnia and met Tito, and subsequently reported to Churchill that the Partisans were the more effective fighting force and would benefit from additional British and American aid. In August 1944, as the Germans prepared to withdraw from Yugoslavia Maclean planned "Operation Ratweek" for the first week of September, a coordinated Allied and Partisan attack on enemy communications which proved quite successful. In the course of his mission, which lasted until 1945, he became a friend and admirer of Tito. In 1947 Maclean was asked to head the Special Refugee Commission which had the sensitive task of screening of tens of thousands of Yugoslav and Ukrainian Displaced Persons, some of whom were alleged to have committed war crimes, in Italy and Austria.
After completing this assignment, Maclean focused on politics, representing Lancaster until 1959 and Bute and North Ayrshire from 1959-1974, and served as Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for War from 1954-1957. He was chairman of the Committee of the North Atlantic Assembly from 1964-1974. Maclean's friendship with Tito and frequent visits to Yugoslavia allowed him to play a key role in Anglo-Yugoslav relations. In the 1960's he purchased a home on the island of Korcula, becoming one of the few foreigners allowed to own property in Yugoslavia. Maclean also maintained a keen interest in the Soviet Union where he traveled extensively and he served as chairman of the Great Britain-USSR Association. He lectured frequently in the United Kingdom and the United States on Yugoslav and Soviet affairs.
Maclean's literary career was launched in 1949 with the publication of Eastern Approaches, a memoir of his experiences as a diplomat and soldier, which was acclaimed by critics and became a best-seller. This was followed in 1957 by a biography of Tito, Disputed Barricade, A Person from England (1958), describing the adventures of English travelers in Central Asia, and in 1958, Back to Bokhara (1959), and a number of books, articles and book reviews on Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union, and other subjects.
A third focal point of his writing was Scotland, and he published A Concise History of Scotland , (1970), The Isles of the Sea , a collection of West Highland folk tales (1985), Bonnie Prince Charlie , (1988) and Highlanders (1995). Along with establishing a reputation as the author of entertaining and informative works that blended his travel experiences and historical research, he turned his attention to radio and television, working on a number of documentary programs including The Road to Samarkand and The Life and Times of Marshal Tito and two major series. Portrait of the Soviet Union and Highlanders .
Maclean was made a baronet in 1957 and a Knight of the Thistle in 1993, and was the recipient of many honors and decorations including the Commander of the British Empire, the Croix de Guerre, the Order of Kutusov, and the Partisan Star, and several honorary degrees.
In 1946 Maclean married a widow with two children, Veronica (Fraser) Phipps, daughter of the 16th Lord Lovat. They had two sons, James and Charles. In 1957 the Macleans purchased Strachur, an estate in Argyllshire in the Scottish Highlands, and later operated a hotel on the estate, the Creggans Inn, which became known for its good food, drink, and hospitality. Maclean continued to be extremely active into his eighties and kept up a busy schedule of writing, lecturing and traveling. He died of a heart attack while swimming at a friend's house in June 1996. In Maclean's later years, there was speculation that he had been the inspiration for Ian Fleming's James Bond.
This collection consists of ca. 28,700 items (93 Hollingers, ca. 39 linear feet), ca.1827-1861, and 1928-1996, the professional and personal papers of Scottish soldier, diplomat, politician, author, and traveler, Sir Fitzroy Hew Maclean (1911-1996) of Dunconnel. It includes correspondence, memoranda, manuscripts, typescripts, newspaper and magazine articles, book reviews, lectures, speeches, photographs, memorabilia, and research material pertaining to his military, diplomatic, political and literary career as well as family and personal affairs.
Maclean is best known for his role during World War II as head of the British military mission to Yugoslavia in which he served as Winston Churchill's personal representative to leader of the Communist Partisans, Josip Broz Tito, his diplomatic service in the Soviet Union in the late 1930's, and as the author of the classic memoir Eastern Approaches (1949) and many other books and articles. After the war, he pursued a political career as a Conservative member of Parliament, and, based on his close relationship with Tito, played a key role in Anglo-Yugoslav affairs. He was also noted for his expertise on the Soviet Union.
A third focal point of his life and career was Scotland: he was a proud member of Clan Maclean and wrote several works on Scottish history, biography, and folklore. The collection contains some material in Serbo-Croatian, German, Italian and French.
The papers are arranged in three main series with various sub-series. Items of particular interest in the First Series, Career and Personal Papers, are described in the following paragraphs devoted to each subseries. In the Diplomatic Subseries are dispatches and memoranda of his trips through Central Asia (including Afghanistan and the ancient cities Bokhara and Samarkand) and the Caucasus, on the situation in Sinkiang (Chinese Turkestan) and on the political stability of the Soviet Union, 1937-1939.
The subseries British Military Mission to Yugoslavia contains Winston Churchill's Minute concerning his Mission to Tito, Autograph Diary (2 pages) re his arrival in Yugoslavia, "Ratweek" Map (oversize), twelve files (labeled Top Secret) including memoranda, correspondence, telegrams, etc concerning military and political affairs such as Allied operations and aid to Tito's Partisans, formation of the Yugoslav government, relief, the visit of Field Marshal Alexander, Supreme Allied Commander to Belgrade, Macedonia, Prospect of South Slav federation, and correspondence with Evelyn Waugh.
The Special Refugee Commission subseries contains correspondence, telegrams, reports, including one submitted to Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, articles, and a draft of a speech on the refugee problems to a parliamentary committee.
Political correspondence includes papers concerning the Lancaster by-election of 1941, the general election of 1945, and correspondence with Winston Churchill, Harold Macmillan, Anthony Eden, Alec Douglas- Home, Peter Carrington, Harold Wilson, Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Robert Kennedy, John Lindsay, Henry Jackson, and Averell Harriman ; a memorandum to Field Marshal Alexander of Tunis concerning irregular warfare; and correspondence and memoranda related to a parliamentary delegation to Romania in 1973.
Material in the VIP Subseries includes: letters and notes from members of the Royal Family including Prince Charles, Princess Margaret, Elizabeth the Queen Mother; Clementine Churchill and Mary Churchill Soames; and a thank you note from Lauren Bacall.
The Yugoslavia and Tito Subseries contains significant material including memoranda of meetings with Tito in 1949,1950, 1953, 1968, 1973; informative accounts by Maclean and other British officers about the Military Mission in World War II for an official book published by Muzej AVNOJ (1970-1971); correspondence about Maclean's involvement in proposals for the publication of Tito's memoirs (1966-1977) and about the nomination of Tito for the Nobel Peace Prize (1972-1973); correspondence and papers by Maclean and others from a conference on British Policy and Resistance in the Balkans (1973); Briefing papers, correspondence and memoranda of Margaret Thatcher's visit to Yugoslavia in 1977, and correspondence and memorabilia pertaining to the Prince of Wales' visit in 1978; correspondence about Maclean's visit in 1989 and transcript of an interview with Prime Minister Ante Markovic.
For the 1990's, the time of war and the dissolution of Yugoslavia , there is correspondence with David Owen, Stevan Dedijer and others, and about the Korcula Emergency Appeal, a relief effort for a hospital on the island of Korcula, Croatia, organized by the Macleans; letters from Yugoslav friends describing the turmoil , and/or seeking assistance in finding jobs in the United Kingdom; correspondence about renewed controversy about the British Military Mission in World War II. and the Aldington-Tolstoy Libel Case concerning the repatriation of Yugoslavs in 1945. It should also be noted that in Series II, Subseries B, Literary Material pertaining to Yugoslavia, there is some correspondence filed with the manuscripts, typescripts, articles and radio and television transcripts.
The Subseries Family& Personal Papers has letters from friends and teachers, some in German, French, and Italian. In a significant group of letters to his parents (1939-1945) from London, Cairo, Belgrade, and elsewhere, Maclean discussed the international situation, his desire to leave the Foreign Office in order to join the army, life in London during the Blitz, the beginning of his political career, and his military service (some letters were extensively cut by the censors). There are also a number of letters to his parents from the years 1946-1955 from Maclean and his wife Veronica discussing family matters and living conditions in Italy and Austria while Maclean was directing the Special Refugee Commission, and about their travels in Yugoslavia, Greece and Turkey in the early 1950's.
Also present is correspondence with Frank McLynn, his biographer, 1990-1994, and two scrapbooks. The blue scrapbook (1939-1951) includes one letter of Maclean to his aunt, newspaper clippings relating to his military service in Yugoslavia, his marriage, some articles by him, a few photographs. The red scrapbook, 1943-1946 also has newspaper clippings about his military service and political career and articles by him.
The Second Series consists of literary papers. This series contains drafts, typescripts, setting copies of his books with related correspondence with publishers and others about the publication process, contracts, royalty statements, book reviews, fan mail, articles, book reviews, speeches, lectures, transcripts of radio and television programs, film proposals or treatments. Several of his books were published under different titles in the United States. It is organized into five subseries based on subject matter. These include: Eastern Approaches (American title- Escape to Adventure ); Yugoslavia (the country as originally constituted and also the new states that emerged in the 1990's); Russia and the former Soviet Union and the new nations post 1990); Scotland; and Miscellaneous Literary.
The subseries about Eastern Approaches contains a typed manuscript (Setting copy) with corrections, including an unpublished introduction; some material omitted from the published version including his admiration for a Soviet army unit, comments on the Cetniks, and conversations with King George VI and Winston Churchill and King Peter of Yugoslavia; letters from Michael Adeane, Secretary to King George VI and Winston Churchill requesting that certain passages be omitted; a letter from Peter Fleming to Jonathan Cape offering his opinion of the book, a letter from Ian Fleming to Jonathan Cape and a note to Maclean.
Other material includes correspondence with Jonathan Cape and other publishers about a new edition, correspondence with Douglas Fairbanks, Eric Ambler and others concerning a possible film version, and with Ian Curteis about a proposed television adaptation.
The Yugoslavia Subseries includes books: Disputed Barricade (1957), published in America as The Heretic , which includes an interview with Tito; Yugoslavia (1969), in which Maclean wrote the text for this book of photographs; Battle of Neretva (1970); and Tito: A Pictorial Biography (1980). Also present are articles from newspapers and magazines, 1947-1995, on Yugoslav politics and society, including interviews with Tito. Particularly interesting are two unpublished articles "Whither Yugoslavia?" written in 1989 based on interviews with Yugoslav politicians, including Slobodan Milosevic. There are also a number of book reviews of works by Julian Amery, William Deakin, Noel Malcolm and Misha Glenny and others.
In addition, the subseries on Yugoslavia contains lectures, 1949-1995; transcripts of radio and television programs, with related correspondence; and some interviews with Tito, notably The "Life and Times of Marshal Tito" (December 1963); and one for a CBS news program (1969).
The Russian Material Subseries contains drafts, correspondence, and research material for his books A Person from England (1958), including several autograph letters,1827-1861, of Dr. Joseph Wolff, one of the English travelers chronicled in the book; Back to Bokhara (1959); Holy Russia (1978); drafts titled "All the Russias" and "The Other Russias," which were the basis for To the Back of Beyond (1974), To Caucasus: End of All the Earth (1976); and Holy Russia (1978) which completed the trilogy; Portrait of the Soviet Union (1988), including material for both the book and the related TBS television series since Maclean was working on these simultaneously; and All the Russias (1992). Correspondents include Pamela Harriman, Marietta Tree and Fitzgerald Bemiss.
In addition to his books about Russia and the Soviet Union, his papers also contain articles, 1949-1995 on political, social, economic, cultural aspects of the former Soviet Union, a number on Georgia and the Caucasus, and Mikhail Gorbachev; book reviews, 1949-1994; and radio and television material, such as correspondence and transcripts for programs, including "The End of All the Earth" and "Carnival in the Caucasus"; interviews with Anna Mikhailovna Larina (Bukharin's widow) and others for the BBC "Timewatch" program "Bukharin."
The subseries concerning his Scotland material includes books, A Concise History of Scotland (1970); Isles of the Sea (1985); Bonnie Prince Charlie (1988); and Highlanders (originally titled Clans ) (1995). Material for the book and television series are combined since Maclean was working on them simultaneously. Among the articles on Scotland is a notable series "Scottish Approaches" which appeared in The Scotsman in 1959.
The last subseries in Maclean's Literary Papers consists of miscellaneous literary material, including material for the book Take Nine Spies . There is also correspondence with publishers in which he discusses more than one book, and with his literary agents.
Articles are arranged chronologically, and topics range from post World War II Japan, Korea, Italy, the Middle East, and defense policy to China and Mongolia in the 1960's, an extended trip to China in 1988, and his travels in Nepal, Tibet, and Oman in the 1990's. There are also articles about his military, diplomatic, political and literary career, his travels, and personal life, and note that others are contained in two scrapbooks. The radio and television material includes his commentaries on the international scene from 1946 on.
Photographic Material comprises the third series, which contains twenty-four boxes of photographs (some in albums), contact sheets, negatives, and slides, taken by Maclean, primarily of his travels in the former Soviet Union, Europe and Asia, from 1938 through the 1990's. Especially noteworthy are those taken in Moscow, Leningrad, and Central Asia, including Afghanistan, the cities Bokhara and Samarkand, and Persia, Paris and Florence in the late 1930's, Yugoslavia during World War II, postwar Korean and China, and of Yugoslavia, Greece, Turkey and Iran in the early 1950's. Maclean visited the former Soviet Union frequently from the late 1950's through 1987 and took numerous photographs of his favorite regions, Central Asia and the Caucasus, particularly Georgia.
As for Yugoslavia, there is an album dated 1953 labeled Namanevru Jugoslovenska Narodne, Armije (Yugoslav People's Army) with photographs of Tito, Maclean, and soldiers; and photographs from the early 1960's through 1980 including a number of photographs of Tito. Individuals subjects include Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher. There are also many family photographs taken at Maclean's homes Beechfield and Strachur, and of friends. The photographs used in Eastern Approaches , Disputed Barricade , A Person from England , and Bonnie Prince Charlie are also in this section.
The collection is arranged in three main series, with
various subseries:
Series I: Career and Personal Papers (Boxes 1-11)
Subseries A: Diplomatic Service (Box 1)
Subseries B: British Military Mission to Yugoslavia
(Boxes 1-2)
Subseries C: Special Refugee Commission (Boxes 2-3)
Subseries D: Political Correspondence (Box 3)
Subseries E: VIP Material (Boxes 3-4)
Subseries F: Yugoslavia & Tito Related Material
(Boxes 4-8)
Subseries G: Family & Personal Papers (Boxes 9-10)
Subseries H: Honors & Decorations (Boxes 10- 11)
Series II: Literary Papers - Books, Television &
Radio Scripts, Articles, etc.
Subseries A: Eastern Approaches Material (Boxes 12-15)
Subseries B: Yugoslavia Related Material, including
Books (Boxes 15-21); and Articles, Book Reviews, Lectures,
Radio & Television, & Research (Boxes 21-26)
Subseries C: Russia & the Former Soviet Union
Material, including Books (Boxes 26-40); Articles (Boxes
41-43); Book Reviews & Lectures (Boxes 43-45); and Radio
& Television (Boxes 45-46)
Subseries D: Scotland Material, including Books (Boxes
46-57), Highlanders Television Series (Boxes 57-58), and
Articles, Book Reviews and Lectures (Boxes 59-60)
Subseries E: Miscellaneous Literary Material, including
Take Nine Spies (Boxes 60-63), Articles (Boxes 64-66); Book
Reviews, Introductions, Lectures & Speeches and Literary
Correspondence (Boxes 67-68); and Radio and Television (Boxes
68-69)
Series III: Photographic Material (Boxes 70-93)
re Appointments to London, Paris, and Moscow and his resignation from the Foreign Office
re Maclean's Mission to Tito and an Extract from The Second World War
including "The Partisan Movement in Yugoslavia" and "Note on the Present Military and Political Situation in Serbia"
Drafts of Statement on the Extent of British Aid to the Partisans
re Appointments and Impact on Service to Constituency
re the Threat of Soviet Expansion in Asia
re Irregular Warfare and Correspondence with Field Marshall Earl Alexander of Tunis and Others
re Vietnam War
re the Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia
re Interview with Vice-President Bodnaras of Romania; Meeting with Tito; and Draft Article on Sino-Soviet Border
Parlimentary Delegation to Romania
re Winston Churchill
re E.C. Grants for Argyll and Bute
re Consideration of Fitzroy Maclean as Governor of Cyprus
re a Resignation to Veronica Maclean
re his serving as godfather to her daughter, Charlotte
re British Press Coverage of Yugoslavia
re Simic Cureija
re Visit with Tito, with note from Jack Coville, Secretary to Winston Churchill
re Tito
re Korcula
re the Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia
re Visit to Yugoslavia for 25th Anniversary of National Liberation, includes photographs of Maclean and Willian Deakin
Decoration Awarded to Fitzroy Maclean
Proposed British Decorations of Yugoslavs
re Yugoslav Students in Britain
re Allied Mission to Yugoslavia in World War II for Muzej AVNOJ
re Korcula, Yugoslavia, Town Twinning with Argyll and Bute, Scotland
re Maclean's Efforts in Support of Tito for the Nobel Peace Prize
re British Policy towards the Balkan Resistance Movements
re Meeting with Tito
re Research and Annual Summaries (Copies) of Events in Yugoslavia, 1957-1972
re Margaret Thatcher's Trip, with Official Program
re the Prince of Wales' Visit to Yugoslavia
re Fitzroy Maclean's article for the British-Yugoslav Society on the Prince of Wales' visit
re Arrangements for the British Delegation to Tito's Funeral
re Official Visit of Fitzroy Maclean
re Program of Economic Reform
re his biography of Tito
re Controversy over British Military Mission in World War II
re BBC "Timewatch: Tito" Program
re a Yugoslav Detainee in 1945
re Korcula, Croatia Emergency Appeal
re Benefit Concert for Dubrovnik
re Owen's Mission
re Aldington-Tolstoy Libel Case (Repatriations in 1945)
re Tito Memoirs and other projects
re Purchase of "Beechfield"
re Ticonderoga story
re Purchase of "Creggans Inn"
re Fitzroy Maclean
re Evelyn Waugh biography
re Fitzroy Maclean
re Fitzroy Maclean and Articles by him
re Awarding of Baronetcy and Arms
re Honorary Degree from the University of Glasgow
re Honorary Degree from Acadia University
re Honorary Degree from Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Fitzroy Maclean and Tito
re Honorary Degree from Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Fitzroy Maclean and Tito, signed by Josip Broz Tito and Madame Jovanka Broz
re Honorary Degree from Dundee University
re Special Air Service
re the 23rd Special Air Service Regiment
re Installation of Fitzroy Maclean in the Order of theThistle
re Installation of Fitzroy Maclean in the Order of the Thistle
re Appointment of Fitzroy Maclean in the Order of the Thistle--Congratulations
re Appointment of Fitzroy Maclean in the Order of the Thistle
Order of the Thistle Ceremony
re Freedom of Argyll and Bute
re omitting part of an interview with the King about Yugoslavia from his book
with comments about what Maclean had written about himself in the book
thanking him for the copy of his book sent to the King
re Publicity
Translations
re American Edition
re German Edition
re Paperback Edition
re Proposed Film, with a copy of the script for the film, April 1956
re Proposed TV Series
re Proposed TV Series
re Yugoslav Edition
re Yugoslav Edition
Letter of thanks on behalf of Tito
re American Edition, The Heretic
re Translations
re German Forces in Yugoslavia
including "The Fourth Enemy Offensive" and some in Serbo-Croatian
re Book Promotion Tour in Yugoslavia
re Book Promotion Tour in Yugoslavia
including some correspondence and notes
re Korcula by Charles Maclean
Unpublished
re of BBC Radio Broadcast on Mission to Tito
re Tito obituary for BBC Radio
re BBC Radio "I Was There"
re Film "General from Strachur"
re BBC Television Tito Obituary
re Tito Interview for CBS News
re Proposed BBC Programs
re Proposed Film on Tito
re BBC Program on the S.O.E. (Special Operations Executive)
re BBC Program on Evelyn Waugh
re Miscellaneous Television and Film Projects
re BBC Program "Ratlines"
re VPRO Program
re New Edition
re Proposed Film
re Research
re Translations
Original Letters of Joseph Wolff and Correspondence with Ancient Light Bookshop
Transcripts and Copies of Letters of Charles Stoddart and others from the Public Records Office
re American Edition and Other Projects
re Copyright Renewal
re German edition
re the Sino Russian Border in Life
re the Caucasus Region
Correspondence re
re the Bukharin Trial in Moscow & Interview with his widow
re Mikhail Gorbachev
re Georgia in The Sunday Times
re Azerbaijan
re Georgia, including notes and drafts
re Georgia in The Scotsman Magazine
re Azerbaijan
re Caucasus
re Mikhail Gorbachov
re Mikhail Gorbachev in honor of Hugh Seton-Watson
given at Foyle's Lunch
re Georgia
re Georgia
re a New Edition
re an American Edition
re a German Edition
August 1, 1996 from Edwin Moore to Veronica Maclean
re German Edition
re reprint as West Highland Tales
re Publicity & Book Reviews
re Publicity
re "Scotland in Parliament"
re Japan
re Asia
re Korea
re Italy
re the Middle East
re Persia
re Defense of Great Britain
re Greece
re Libya during World War II
re Turkey
re China "Inside Red China"
re China Trip
re China "Peking Revisited," "Don't Let China Stew in Her Own Juice," and "Eyewitnesses in China"
re Mongolia
re Sir Winston Churchill
Mongolia
re the Black Sea, including one by Veronica Maclean
re Defense of Europe: "Nuclear Deterrence and Conventional Forces," with Correspondence
re China--Trip to Kashgar in Chinese Turkestan, including Correspondence
re Nepal and Bhutan
re Germany
re David Stirling for Dictionary of National Biography and Correspondence
re Canary Islands
re Oman
re Tibet--Correspondence, Travel Arrangements, and Memorabilia
re Tibet
re the Channel Tunnel
re Fitzroy Maclean, some in German, French, Serbo-Croatian, Swedish, and Dutch
re Tibet
re Publication of Evelyn Waugh's Diaries, which include references to Fitzroy Maclean
re Invitation to Frankfurt
re German Translations of Isles of the Sea and Eastern Approaches
re Proposed Book of Interviews including Fitzroy Maclean
some accompanied by correspondence, including: Violet Asquith, Nancy Astor, Charles Bohlen, John Bute, Nicolae Causescu, Earl Cawdor, Thomas Churchill, John Clarke, the Queen Mother, Lord Lovat, Charles Maclean, Andrew Maxwell, Paddy Mayne and Bill Elliot, Iain Moncrieffe, Peter Moore, David Scott, David Stirling, and Lord Ward
People
Environs & Monasteries
GUM Store, Race Track, & Fashions
The Kremlin & Red Square