Product Code Database
Example Keywords: slacks -battlefield $41
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Ralph Izzard
Tag Wiki 'Ralph Izzard'.
Tag

Ralph William Burdick Izzard, OBE (27 August 1910 – 2 December 1992) was an English journalist, author, and, during World War II, a British Naval Intelligence officer. , Obituary – Ralph Izzard, 14 December 1992, , retrieved on 25 August 2009.

As a journalist, Izzard spent virtually his entire career with one newspaper, the . After rising to the position of bureau chief, he remained a star of the paper for 31 years. The stories he covered took him from Egypt to Algeria, to Kenya, Korea and beyond. Time Magazine, Upward in Sneakers, Issue: 26 July 1954, retrieved 24 August 2009.

In addition to his duties with the Daily Mail, he wrote four books chronicling his experiences in India, and the . Gulf Daily News, A novel love affair with life in the Gulf, 9 December 2007, Rebecca Torr, retrieved on 10 September 2009. He is best known for the most famous of his exploits, when, as portrayed in his book The Innocent on Everest, he set out on his own, without a compass or map, to pursue John Hunt's to its base camp at 18,000 ft.

During World War II, Izzard served with distinction as an officer with British Naval Intelligence and 30 Assault Unit. Attain by Surprise: Capturing Top Secret Intelligence WW II, David Nutting, p. 234, (D Colver, 2003) . He received several awards and was appointed an . (Supplement), no. 36958, p. 1131, 23 February 1945. Retrieved 24 August 2009. His tour of duty took place under the command of , who based elements of his first novel Casino Royale and its protagonist on Lieutenant Commander Izzard and a card game in which he found himself playing poker against covert intelligence agents at a casino in , Brazil.The Life of Ian Fleming, John Pearson, p. 194-195, (, London, 1966)


Early life
Born in , on 27 August 1910 to Percy and Florence Burdick Izzard, Ralph Izzard was the youngest of the couple's two children. His sister, Floris, was born in 1907. His father, , was the Daily Mail's highly respected gardening correspondent (claimed by Ralph to have been the inspiration of in the novel Scoop).

In 1919, Izzard entered , a preparatory school for boys near London, where he remained enrolled until 1924. Then, aged 13, he entered The Leys School, where, in addition to his studies, he played water-polo. In 1928, his term at The Leys School being complete, he went on to Queens' College, Cambridge and graduated in 1931. That same year he joined the staff at the Daily Mail.The Innocent on Everest, Ralph Izzard, int., (Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1954)


Foreign correspondent in Berlin
After graduation from Cambridge, Izzard was appointed as foreign correspondent for the . His first post was Berlin where he was appointed and remained bureau chief for a number of years during the cold war. Afterwards Izzard stayed on as a foreign correspondent for 31 years. It has been speculated that in addition to performing his actual duties with the Daily Mail, Izzard used the position as a cover while engaged in intelligence operations for MI6.


World War II

Royal Navy Volunteer Reserves
At the onset of World War II, Izzard joined the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserves as an , and qualified as a gunner but was soon commissioned a , eventually ascending to the rank of Lieutenant Commander in a position with British Naval Intelligence. He served with distinction, being Mentioned in Despatches and appointed OBE.


British Intelligence, 30 AU, MI9, MI19
Ralph Izzard was recruited to the Naval Intelligence Division and 30 Assault Unit by Ian Fleming due, in some measure, to his ability to speak fluent German, as well as his expert knowledge of and its society. His duties included the interrogation of captured German combatants,Battleship Bismarck, Müllenheim-Rechberg, p. 315-16, (Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 1990) intelligence collection in the battlespace, and .Nutting, Attain by Surprise, p. 235 The British Admiralty operated an interrogation centre known as the "CSDIC" (Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre) at for the joint use of the , the R.A.F., and the . Izzard regularly participated in the questioning of PoWs and provided detailed reports to his superiors regarding intelligence obtained as a result of interrogation.Müllenheim-Rechberg, Battleship Bismarck, p. 319 A number of his reports and letters were forwarded to and read by Winston Churchill. Interrogation Reports, N.I.D. (Admiralty), (08409/43), The National Archives (UK) Retrieved on 5 September 2009

Prior to its entry into World War II, the United States Navy sent an intelligence officer to Great Britain to observe the interrogation of German PoWs, for which the Royal Navy provided a : (then) Ralph Izzard, (RNVR). Izzard trained the initial cadre of U.S. Navy PoW interrogators and was further tasked with travelling to the United States in order to instruct operatives in the disciplines of , interrogation, and intelligence dissemination.Room 39: Naval Intelligence in action 1939–45, , p. 178, (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1968) He was instrumental in establishing Op-16-Z, a section of the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence, which dealt with the processing of enemy prisoners. Subsequently, British protocol for prisoner debriefing was adopted by the U.S. Armed Forces, and the Joint Interrogation Center for Prisoners of War was established in 1941.

Izzard also participated in the creation of a plan (codenamed Operation Ruthless), the objective of which was to obtain documentation to aid British Intelligence in the decryption of secret German communications. The plan consisted of crashing a captured German aeroplane into the where the British crew, dressed in uniforms, would be rescued by a German patrol boat. The "survivors" would then kill the German crew, hijack the ship, and confiscate the secret Enigma documents. Much to the annoyance of at , the operation was scrapped.You Only Live Once, Ivar Bryce, p. 155, (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1975) In a BBC Radio 4 program called The Bond Correspondence broadcast on 24 May 2008, Lucy Fleming, the niece of Ian Fleming, stated that the plan was cancelled because the Royal Air Force concluded that a downed dropped into the would sink rather than float, posing too great a danger to the lives of British operatives., The Bond Correspondence, broadcast 24 May 2008, 10:30AM BBC Radio 4


Awards
  • OBE
  • 1939-1945 Star
  • France and Germany Star
  • Defence Medal
  • War Medal 1939–1945 (Oak leaf)
  • Mentioned in Dispatches


Cryptozoology
Izzard took an interest in , a pseudoscience.Kumar, Anu (2015). "What brought the original James Bond to Upper Assam after World War II". Scroll.in. Retrieved on 28 May 2020. In 1945, Izzard accompanied by naturalist C. R. Stonor took a pseudo-scientific expedition to the Silo (Ziro) Valley of Arunachal Pradesh to search for evidence for the Buru, a legendary lizard creature.Blackburn, Stuart (2008). Himalayan Tribal Tales: Oral Tradition and Culture in the Apatani Valley. Brill. p. 117. Izzard published a book, The Hunt for the Buru which presented the results of the expedition. Izzard concluded that extant saurians, seemingly dinosaurs (four metres in length) had existed in the valley until as recently as 1940.Torrens, Hugh S; Palmer, Douglas (1993). Modern Geology. Special Issue: Halstead Memorial Volume Part III. Dinosaurs: Concepts, Histology and Stratigraphy. Gordon and Breach Science Publishers. pp. 302–303. This view was rejected by scientists as dinosaurs became extinct approximately 66 million years ago.


Personal life
Izzard was married to Ellen Schmidt-Klewitz from 1931 to 1946 with whom he had a daughter, Christina. Izzard had a son with the German actress , Benedikt Hoppe being born in 1946. Gewonnene Liebesmüh, 3 September 2005Anatol Regnier: Wir Nachgeborenen: Kinder berühmter Eltern, C. H. Beck, 2014 [9] He was married to from 1947 to 1992 with whom he had two daughters and two sons, Miles, Anthea, Sabrina and Sebastian. Obituary: Ralph Izzard, , 14 December 1992


Bibliography
  • The Hunt for the Buru, (1951)
  • The Innocent on Everest, (1954),
  • The Abominable Snowman Adventure, (1955)
  • Smelling the Breezes, (Co-Author with Molly) (1959)


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
2s Time