Home > Back to Search Results > Soviet atom bomb spy Klaus Fuchs arrested...
Click image to enlarge 722893
Show image list »

Soviet atom bomb spy Klaus Fuchs arrested...



Item # 722893

February 04, 1950

THE SPRINGFIELD UNION, Mass., Feb. 4, 1950 

* Klaus Fuchs arrested
* German atomic bomb scientist
* Russian - Soviet Union spy
* re. Manhattan Project


The top of the front page has a five column headline: "DR. FUCHS CONFESSES GIVING SECRET OF NEW H-BOMB TO RUSSIANS" with subheads. Small photo of Fuchs on page 4. (see images)
Complete with 28 pages, light toning at the margins, minor spine wear, generally in very nice condition.

AI notes: Klaus Fuchs, a German-born physicist who had worked on the British and American atomic bomb projects during World War II, was arrested on February 2, 1950 in the United Kingdom for espionage. While employed at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell, Fuchs had secretly passed highly classified information about the Manhattan Project and subsequent British nuclear research to the Soviet Union, including designs for the plutonium and uranium bombs, and details on the hydrogen bomb. His activities were uncovered through a combination of intelligence from the Venona project, which decrypted Soviet communications, and internal suspicions about leaks in Britain’s nuclear program. Fuchs confessed during interrogation, was tried in March 1950, and sentenced to 14 years in prison, of which he served nine before being released in 1959, after which he emigrated to East Germany, where he resumed his scientific career and became a prominent figure in nuclear research.

Category: The 20th Century