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Edith Tudor-Hart (Suschitzky)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Death: 1973 (64-65)
Brighton, The City of Brighton and Hove, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Wilhelm Suschitzky and Adele Suschitzky
Wife of Alexander Ethan Tudor-Hart
Mother of Tommy Martin Tudor-Hart
Sister of Wolfgang Suschitzky

Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Edith Tudor-Hart

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Tudor-Hart

Edith Tudor Hart (née Edith Suschitzky; 1908–1973), an Austrian-British photographer, communist-sympathiser and spy for the Soviet Union. Some of her work is in the National Gallery in London.

Biography

Born in Vienna, her father was a bookshop owner. She studied photography at the Bauhaus in Dessau, but worked in Vienna as a Montessori kindergarten teacher. Her brother, Wolfgang Suschitzky, also became a well-known photographer in Britain.

An anti-fascist activist and Communist, she saw photography as a tool for disseminating her political ideas. She married Alex Tudor-Hart, who belonged to a well-known radical and artistic family. The couple fled to London, England in 1933, so that she could avoid prosecution for Communist activities in Austria.

London

While her husband practised as a GP in the coal mining area of Rhondda Valley in South Wales, she began to produce photographs for The Listener, The Social Scene and Design Today, dealing with issues such as refugees from the Spanish Civil War and industrial decline in the north-east of England. From the late 1930s, she concentrated more on social needs, such as housing policy and the care of disabled children. This change in work may have been because after separation from her husband who had just returned from the Spanish Civil War, their son, Tommy, became an incurable schizophrenic.

Spying recruitment

Tudor-Hart was key in recruiting both the Cambridge Spy ring which damaged British intelligence from World War II through to their discovery in the late 1960s.

Tudor-Hart had met Arnold Deutsch in Vienna in 1926, and with whom she worked in the OMS, the International Liaison Department of the Comintern.

When, in 1934, Litzi Friedmann and Kim Philby arrived in London from Vienna, Tudor-Hart is credited as having suggested to Deutsch in his role as the now London-based NKVD recruiter, that the NKVD recruit them as agents.

She acted as an intermediary for Anthony Blunt and Bob Stewart when the rezidentura at the Soviet Embassy in London suspended its operations in February 1940.

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Edith Tudor-Hart's Timeline

1908
1908
Vienna, Vienna, Austria
1936
1936
London, United Kingdom
1973
1973
Age 65
Brighton, The City of Brighton and Hove, England, United Kingdom