Eddie Chapman: World War II's most unlikely
double agent
The history books are filled with colorful
characters, and Eddie Chapman was definitely
one of the brightest.
He could be called many things: rogue, scoundrel,
con man, cheerily unrepentant criminal, and…
secret agent?
Desperate times call for desperate measures,
the old saying goes, and the dark days of
World War Two were definitely desperate times.
Had Chapman been living, working, and stealing
at any other time in history, he may have
found governments and military agencies — and
those who regularly arrested him — to be
much less lenient than they were.
He wasn't the sort to be trusted with anything,
yet British intelligence did trust him.
And so did the Germans.
And it's here we use the word "trusting" rather
loosely.
One of the military intelligence agents who
worked with Chapman was Lieutenant-Colonel
Robin "Tin-Eye" Stephens, and it's worth setting
the scene with his thoughts on one of his
most unpredictable agents.
He wrote:
"I do not wish to be held wanting in admiration
of a brave man, [but] must issue a warning
about this strange character.
[...] Where do the loyalties of Chapman lie?
Personally, I think they are in fine balance."
Desperate times, indeed.
TITLE: Lowlife.
Criminal.
Spy?
Eddie Chapman was born in England on November
16, 1914, and for the first decade or so of
his life, he had little in the way of a male
role model that he could look up to and learn
from.
His father, Ralph Edward, was a chief engineer
on a tramp steamer — a merchant vessel that
had no schedule and simply went wherever it
needed to in order to sell or deliver whatever
cargo was loaded onto it.
And that had to be difficult.
The elder Chapman would be gone for up to
five years at a time, making his young son
the man of the house.
During this time, the family lived in Sunderland.
It was an area defined by the shipyards and
the sea, and Chapman grew up surrounded by
the hustle and bustle of shipyards scrambling
to keep up with the demands made by World
War One.
By all accounts Chapman, the oldest of three
siblings, was well-loved by his brother and
sister.
It's an unconventional start to the tale,
maybe, because family life wasn't bad.
To start with.
Although his father had hoped to see his oldest
child follow in his footsteps, Chapman had
little mechanical aptitude and even less interest
in school.
As fate would have it, it didn't really matter.
By the time Chapman was a young teenager,
World War One was over.
Soldiers were returning to the lives they
had left behind — as best they could — and
that meant there were a lot of people looking
for work.
A recession gripped the country, unemployment
skyrocketed, and by 1930, 19 of area's shipyards
had closed.
The industry that had been so vital to the
country and to the war effort just years before
was floundering, and Chapman's father was
forced to find other work.
He took on work at a pub, where his son helped
him serve dockworkers, sailors, and fishermen
— in other words, a rough sort of crowd.
The family still found it nearly impossible
to make ends meet, so young Chapman dropped
out of school at just 14 years old.
His intentions were good: he was going to
help support his family.
But times were tough, and he was only able
to find work for a handful of days each month.
What jobs he could find were hard work for
little pay, and in his older years, Chapman
would speak of the slums of his native Sunderland
and say they were "far worse than I had seen
anywhere else in Europe," adding that his
"most lively memories of childhood had been
of the cold misery of the dole."
In order to claim any benefits, Chapman was
instructed to attend a school where he would
learn skills that would make him more employable.
That was the goal, at least, and in hindsight…
that's kind of what happened.
He was taught things like working with metal,
but it was hardly productive.
It's no wonder that he started skipping classes,
and when he realized his parents had found
out about his absences, he decided to go on
something of a walk-about.
He tried to go to London, tried to find work,
and neither of those things panned out.
He returned home, and it ended up being a
surprisingly important episode in his life.
He'd gotten a taste of the adventure that
was out there, and it made a lasting impact.
This is also when a small but significant
event took place, one that would show that
the lifelong duality of Chapman's personality
and motivations went back to when he was a
teenager.
It was one Sunday when he and his brother
had skipped out on going to church — a transgression
that was a big deal to their mother.
They headed to the beach instead, and that's
where Chapman heard a call for help.
A man was drowning, fifty yards out into the
water.
Chapman took off down the beach, dove into
the water, and saved the man's life.
He never told anyone about it, though, at
least, not until he was honored with a certificate
from the Royal Humane Society.
He didn't want his mother to know he'd skipped
church… even though he had done something
amazing with his day.
It embodied an idea that will continue throughout
the tale: he may do some not-so-honorable
things, he may have been a scamp and a scallywag,
out only for himself, but at the end of the
day, he saved lives.
In spite of all the hardships, Chapman still
had good intentions.
He joined the Coldstream Guards when he was
just 17 years old, with the help of a falsified
birthday and a talent for forging his father's
signature.
And he excelled at it — in spite of a serious
knee injury, he ultimately found himself wearing
a guards' uniform and was quite literally
tasked with guarding England's Crown Jewels
at the Tower of London.
He'd come a long way.
But the old Chapman — the boy who had seen
the slums, witnessed the struggles of the
unemployed and the starving, who had collected
bottles on the beach to turn in for just a
bit of cash to help his struggling family
— that boy was still there.
And in 1933, he saw something that would change
his life again: the death of his mother.
He was in the Guards when he got the letter,
and he immediately went to the tuberculosis
ward of a local hospital for the poor.
He made it to her side before she died, and
she did manage to tell him how proud she was,
and how respectable he looked in his uniform.
But he saw something quite different that
day: a wonderful woman who had given all for
her family, and who had died in a hospital
for the poor.
And while it doesn't seem to have changed
who he was, it does seem to be a trigger that
changed the path he was on.
After his mother's death he was given a leave
from the guards.
He headed to London, and it was there that
he promptly went AWOL.
Predictably, Chapman was arrested and sent
to the stockade before being dishonorably
discharged.
From there, it was off to Soho and a whole
new world.
Throughout the 1930s, Chapman was flexing
his muscles in the seedy underbelly of London's
Soho district.
He did everything and anything — he danced,
he wrestled, he forged checks, and he was
always on the lookout for the chance to knick
something.
After getting in good with the shady characters
who frequented a bar called Smokey Joe's,
he escalated into breaking and entering.
It wasn't long before he got the attention
of a group of criminals called the Jelly Gang,
who took their name from the highly explosive
materials they used to break into safes.
The gang — led by a man named Jimmy Hunt
— welcomed him into their ranks, and it
wasn't long before they were blowing up safes
and stealing thousands of pounds from some
of the most upscale businesses and retail
shops in London.
That kind of thing gets attention, though,
and the manhunt for the Jelly Gang came to
an end in 1939.
Chapman was first captured in Scotland, and
managed to escape once.
His luck ran out in Jersey, though, and he
was arrested and thrown in jail.
And this is where his life takes yet another
turn.
While Chapman was busy honing his skills in
Britain's criminal underworld, something major
was unfolding on the world stage.
In June of 1940, German forces invaded the
Channel Islands and set up an occupation that
would last until 1945.
This meant something far different for Chapman
than it did for most of the British citizens
living on the islands.
Control of the island's prisoners was also
taken over — Chapman was now the Germans'
problem.
He was released in October of 1941, and he
— along with a friend he'd made on the inside
— set up a barber shop that catered mainly
to the occupying German forces.
This was clever, because it was only a barber
shop on the surface.
Chapman used his newfound contacts to start
buying and selling mostly stolen goods in
his own small corner of the black market,
but it quickly became clear that the Germans
weren't as friendly as he might have hoped.
Chapman was riding his bike one day when he
was hit by a car.
The accident turned into an interrogation
by the German forces, and he was given a warning.
He was to stay out of trouble… or else.
The accident and subsequent questioning was
a very clear indication of just how precarious
his position in this German-occupied territory
was, so he decided to take an extra step to
secure his own safety.
He wrote a letter to General Otto von Stulpnagel,
offering his services… in whatever capacity
was needed.
The Germans declined to give him a direct
answer, and a few weeks later he was mysteriously
arrested and sent to a prison just outside
Paris.
It probably wasn't the response he was hoping
for, but it wouldn't take him long to realize
he wasn't headed for jail.
TITLE: An offer he couldn't refuse
Chapman was held at Fort de Romainville, and
after he was first interrogated by German
intelligence, they made him an offer: they
would not only allow him to go free but return
him to Britain… if he would agree to carry
out whatever secret missions the Germans sent
him.
Not surprisingly, he agreed.
He spent the next three months in training,
learning espionage and spycraft.
He added the use of invisible inks and wireless
communications to his already lengthy skill
set, and the German spymasters were so impressed
with him that he quickly got his own code
name and designation: Fritzchen, V-6523.
Finally, it was go-time; on a chilly night
in December 1942, Chapman parachuted into
Cambridge carrying a radio, a pistol, some
invisible ink, some cash, and a cyanide capsule.
And from there, he walked right into a local
police station and turned himself in.
He told the Littleport officers that he had
been imprisoned on the Channel Islands then
had become a German spy, and in all fairness,
that had to be an extremely unlikely tale.
Accounts suggest that he did, indeed, have
trouble convincing them that he was telling
the truth, but this is where MI5 stepped in.
Bletchley Park had already intercepted communications
regarding his presence on British soil, and
they saw an opportunity.
So they made him another offer: work for MI5.
He agreed to that, too, and it was his British
handlers who gave him his most infamous nickname:
ZigZag.
Under the watchful eye of MI5, Chapman radioed
his German handler and told him all was well,
and that he had made it safely into British
territory.
The plan was to go ahead, and he was going
to blow up the De Havilland aircraft factory,
putting a damper on the manufacture of the
fast, agile new Mosquito fighter planes.
MI5, of course, couldn't allow that to happen,
and here's where the story crosses into a
territory that sounds more like something
that's the responsibility of an overzealous
screenwriter.
They couldn't blow up the factory, but they
needed to make the Germans think the mission
had been a success… so, how were they going
to pull that off?
First, Chapman's time with the Jelly Gang
proved useful; it had given him experience
with the explosive gelignite, which MI5 made
sure to "requisition" from a quarry in Kent.
But they weren't going to blow up the whole
factory, they were just going to create some
smoke and mirrors, and a little bit of trickery
to make it look like it had been destroyed.
So, the next step was to enlist the help of
— believe it or not — a master magician
and illusionist.
His name was Jasper Maskelyne, and his role
in this makes a lot of sense.
At the onset of the war, Maskelyne volunteered
in a place where his talents could be put
to good use: the Camouflage Development and
Training Centre.
While he was initially poo-pooed as not having
any legitimate skills, he was soon transferred
to "A Force," a unit specializing in deception.
Among his projects were sun shields that would
reflect light off tanks and make them essentially
invisible from the air, building a fake city
of Alexandria, and redirecting German bombers
to a fake Suez Canal.
His work was so successful his name was added
to the Gestapo's Black List, and he had a
bounty placed on his head.
Faking the bombing and destruction of one
small aircraft factory?
Surely, child's play.
Chapman, Maskelyne, and an MI5 officer set
to work.
Small charges were set, and part of the factory's
roof was destroyed.
Maskelyne set off smoke bombs around the perimeter
of the factory, scattered pieces of what looked
like debris, hung tarpaulins to camouflage
sections of the factory, and with the help
of media coverage detailing the destruction
of the factory and an enthusiastic message
from Chapman to his German handlers, Germany
not only bought the story hook, line, and
sinker, but welcomed Chapman back into the
fold.
He had proved himself valuable.
In 1943, MI5 sent him on his way: he hopped
a ship for Lisbon and ultimately ended up
in one of the Abwehr's Norweigan safehouses.
Then, he was awarded the Iron Cross for his
success — and MI5 says he's still the only
Britizen citizen to have been awarded this
highest honor.
TITLE: If you can't assassinate them… have
some fun
The relationship between Chapman and his British
spymasters was an uneasy one.
They didn't approve of the way he spent his
down time — which mostly involved a lot
of drinking and a revolving door of women.
He was happy enough, but Major Michael Ryde,
the MI5 agent directly in charge of keeping
track of him, put it bluntly when he wrote:
"The Zigzag case must be closed down at the
earliest possible moment."
But Chapman had other ideas, and as unlikely
as it sounds, before he headed back into German
territory, he volunteered for a suicide mission.
The success he was believed to have had in
destroying the factory gave him a certain
amount of clout, and his German spymaster
had spoken of the distinct possibility that
he would be treated to a front-row seat at
one of Hitler's rallies once he returned to
Germany.
Chapman's idea was to make good use of his
knowledge of explosives, and cut the head
off the snake once and for all.
He offered repeatedly, but every time, his
MI5 handlers said no, and, because they were
familiar with him by now, stressed that he
was not, under any circumstances, to try to
kill Hitler.
It didn't matter if he thought he could get
away with it, if he was willing to die for
it… he wasn't to try.
Unfortunately, all the documents that have
been declassified about Zigzag and his wartime
exploits don't mention just why his superiors
were so adamant about keeping him from turning
into an assassin, but it's been suggested
by historians that there was a very real fear
of reprisals, and that by this point in the
war, Hitler — and his erratic behavior — was
actually more useful alive than dead.
There's also a theory that it wasn't Chapman's
idea at all, but that it had been pitched
to him by the same spymaster who had offered
him a place in the front row of a rally.
Dr. Stephan Graumann, who also went by the
name von Groning, had been one of the men
who oversaw Chapman's supposed conversation
at Fort de Romainville, and the word on the
street was that he was the one behind Chapman's
bid to become immortalized in history as the
one who took out Hitler.
Even without that notch on his belt, Chapman
did a decent job of making his own mark on
history, but further word on the street is
that he and Graumann were kindred spirits
of a sort.
Graumann was more than happy to toot Chapman's
horn and sing his praises, because he was
reportedly skimming a bit off the top of Chapman's
pay.
Art wasn't just going to pay for itself, after
all, and he had an asset he could exploit.
Ultimately, Chapman's plan to assassinate
Hitler was never put into motion and he was
sent to Norway.
There, he went through more training and — among
other things — fell in love with a Norweigan
woman named Dagmar Lahlum.
The affair would be one of many wartime flings.
It was another thing he was notorious for;
during his time under the watchful eye of
MI5, they got so tired of him hooking up with
various ladies-of-the-night that they gave
him his own safe house — and it came complete
with a former girlfriend named Freda Stevenson,
who would ultimately give birth to their daughter.
If there was any one thing that was consistent
about Agent Zigzag, it was his love of the
ladies — no matter which side he was currently
working for.
And that would change one more time: in 1944,
his German handler told him that they had
another job for him.
TITLE: One last hurrah
Chapman was handed one more assignment from
the Germans: he was to head back to Britain
and find out what he could about their abilities
to track German U-Boats, and to secure whatever
technology it was that they were using in
their night flights.
He was also supposed to report back on how
successful German bombing raids were, and
after parachuting back into England in June,
he and MI5 fed false information through the
German intelligence network.
It was thought to have a very real effect,
and was credited for diverting numerous attacks.
The war was, of course, drawing to a close.
Chapman appealed to his handlers and offered
to head back to Paris, but British intelligence
declined for a few reasons.
First was that he was high-maintenance and
unpredictable, and those who worked with him
seemed in decent agreement that it was time
for his career as a spy to end.
Secondly, MI5 already had a slew of information
about Axis plans, thanks to their other agents
and their successes in decryption.
With little fanfare, Agent Zigzag was retired
from the field.
What happened to Chapman after the war?
It didn't take him long before he tried to
capitalize on his adventures, writing an account
of his actions in the war that he tried to
serialize in a French newspaper.
Unfortunately for him, that was in violation
of the Official Secrets Act, and he was back
in court yet again.
He didn't give up, though, and published his
own story in 1966.
Still, the official documents remained classified
until MI5 released them to the National Archives
in 2001.
The decades after the war were filled with
enough schemes to fill a book of their own.
He married Betty Farmer, the former girlfriend
he had abandoned way back on the Channel Island
of Jersey.
They had a daughter, but he didn't settle
down — and neither did she.
Both carried on affairs throughout the duration
of their relationship, and it was a very non-traditional
one.
Chapman returned to his old ways of buying
and selling on the black market, he got into
protection rackets, and even invested in a
ship that he used to further his criminal
empire.
He got involved in smuggling, once even being
smuggled out of Tangiers himself.
By the 1980s, he had slowed down just a touch,
and settled into running a health spa in Hertfordshire.
He passed away in 1997, at 83 years old.
There's a recurring theme in the opinions
of those he worked with: they believed he
was unpredictable, fickle, and mainly out
for himself.
But there's an interesting footnote to the
story that suggests he was something else,
too.
Likeable?
Charming?
It's difficult to say, but it is fascinating
that he and his German spymaster, Dr. Graumann,
remained friends even beyond the end of the
war, after the truth came out, and after all
his deceptions as a double agent were made
public.
Still, Graumann was at the wedding when Chapman's
daughter got married, and that's… possibly
the most incredible part of 
the story.
