Kitty Harris (May 25, 1899–1966) was a Soviet secret agent. Born to a poor Russian Jewish family in London that emigrated to Winnipeg, Canada, she became a dedicated socialist, active in the Industrial Workers of the World(Wobblies) and a leader of the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike. After the IWW was crushed by the U.S. government, Harris became radicalized and left the group. She joined the Communist Party USA(CPUSA) in 1923 and became involved with Earl Browder, another former Wobbly who had links to Moscow. When he went to China in 1928, Harris joined him and began to serve him as a covert messenger.
Her ability was noted by the Comintern and she was sent to Berlin where she performed a number of duties. When Nazi anti-Semitism made her position too risky she was transferred to Britain where she became a part of the team funneling information from the Cambridge Five back to Moscow. She eventually became Donald Duart Maclean's main contact.
In 1941, Harris was sent to the United States as part of the operation against the Manhattan Project. In early 1943, Harris was sent to Mexico City to be a courier for Lev Vasilevsky, KGB Rezident in Mexico. She was further detailed by Vasilevsky to the Santa Fe drugstore safe house where she coordinated the front's clandestine activities. (Source: SS, p.58-63) Her complete role in this operation is still unknown. After violating protocol by meeting with her parents, she was transferred to Mexico after the war.
She became ill, however, and it was decided that she should be retired from active service. She was given an apartment in Riga but soon after she developed problems with alcoholism and mental illness and she died in Gorky in 1966.
Her code name in the Venona files is "Ada" or "Aida", but her real identity was only discovered in 2001.
Famous quotes containing the words kitty and/or harris:
“O sinewy silver biplane, nudging the winds withers!
There, from Kill Devils Hill at Kitty Hawk
Two brothers in their twinship left the dune;
Warping the gale, the Wright wind wrestlers veered
Capeward, then blading the winds flank, banked and spun.”
—Hart Crane (18991932)
“The deadly monotony of Christian country life where there are no beggars to feed, no drunkards to credit, which are among the moral duties of Christians in cities, leads as naturally to the outvent of what Methodists call revivals as did the backslidings of the people in those days.”
—Corra May Harris (18691935)