Archival Data Profile
  • Page Count 430
  • Publication Year 2024
  • Publisher Lume Books WW2 Non-Fiction History, A Joffe Books Company
  • ISBN-13

Camp X School for Spies

By David Stafford

Established in 1941 on Lake Ontario by Britain's Special Operations Executive, Camp X was North America's first secret agent training camp. It trained dozens of American and Canadian recruits in the art of secret war, including paramilitary skills, close combat, disguise, ciphers, propaganda, and undercover operations. Graduates served as secret agents in enemy-occupied Europe and Asia, or countered Nazi espionage and subversion in the Americas. The camp's HYDRA radio station also handled sensitive transatlantic intelligence. Based on eyewitness accounts and secret files from London, Washington, and Ottawa, this real-life spy adventure features figures like Sir William Stephenson ('Intrepid'), OSS chief 'Wild Bill' Donovan, and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. An essential read for understanding the evolution of modern espionage.
Archival Categorization Notes

This literature has been indexed under the primary pillar of World War II. It was manually vetted for the Read For Truth database because it provides educational insights into Espionage & Codebreaking, assisting researchers in locating established secondary research within this specific taxonomy.