Mary Stalcup Markward

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Mary Stalcup Markward
Born
Mary R. Stalcup

(1922-02-10)February 10, 1922
DiedNovember 23, 1972(1972-11-23) (aged 50)
Resting placeBaltimore National Cemetery
Occupation(s)Beauty shop and FBI Informant[1]
Known forFBI informant
SpouseGeorge A. Markward

Mary R. Stalcup Markward (February 10, 1922 – November 23, 1972) was for seven years a member of the Washington, DC "District Communist Party" as director of the party's membership. She was actually working undercover for the FBI.[2]

Background[edit]

She was born as Mary R. Stalcup to Maria and Benjamin Stalcup on February 10, 1922.[3] Benjamin Stalcup worked as a government bookbinder. Mary lived in Fairfax County, Virginia, and was recruited by the FBI in 1943, just a week after her wedding. Her husband, George A. Markward (1912–1969), had been sent to Europe to fight in World War II.

Career[edit]

Markward was working in a beauty shop on Massachusetts Avenue.[2][4] She may have been approached to spy because several of her clients were thought to be Communists by the FBI. Her daughter believed that her mother's essay written about her pride in being an American brought her to the attention of the FBI. The essay was published in a local Virginia paper.[2] Markward worked undercover for almost seven years, a time that was stressful for her because she was shunned by friends and family because of her activities with the Party.[4][5]

After consulting earlier in the year with HUAC, the Party heard and expelled her in February 1951.[6]

Markward testified before the House Committee on Un-American Activities on July 11, 1951, that Annie Lee Moss, Maurice Braverman, and about 240 other people were Communist Party members.[5] She provided the names of their spouses and gave the exact dates of party meetings. While her memory of membership and Party activities was largely accurate, Markward did not provide evidence that the Communist Party had any strength in the DC area. At one point in her testimony, she even joked about the Party's inability to recruit young, new members. In the list of members she did provide, there appeared to be a connection between Party membership and civil rights activism; several people whom Markward accused were less involved with communism and more concerned with picketing segregated areas of the city.[6]

HUAC also questioned her in a manner to discredit the all-but-defeated the Progressive Party from the 1948 election:

Mr. Velde: As to the Communist Party connection with the Progressive Party, could you describe that briefly?
Mrs. Markward: The Progressive Party?
Mr. Velde: Yes. Was the Progressive Party infiltrated by the Communist Party after it was organized, or was the Communist Party responsible for the beginning of the Progressive Party organization?
Mrs. Markward: I don't believe the Progressive Party could have been organized without the energy and activity of various Communists in Maryland and the District of Columbia. They decided it was a desirable organization, and put everything they had to see that it was organized. Several committees, known as political action committees, were set up on city and district levels, and the people on those committees were to see that the Progressive Party did function.
Mr. Velde: Did any of the funds of the Communist Party go into the campaign of the Progressive Party?
Mrs. Markward: I don't know one way or another.
Mr. Velde: In Maryland?

Mrs. Markward: I don't know.[7]

Her accusation of Annie Lee Moss is the most remembered; Moss categorically denied membership or collusion with communists. Moss claimed that she was a victim of mistaken identity; that she was not the only person in Washington named Annie Lee Moss, and the communist Markward identified was a different Annie Lee Moss. However, files declassified years later confirmed Markward's identification as accurate.[8]

Later life[edit]

Mary Stalcup Markward contracted multiple sclerosis early in her life, which caused her to retire from the FBI. Later, FBI officials refused to acknowledge her, and retroactively taxed the income she received as an undercover agent. She died on November 23, 1972, in Silver Spring, Maryland, at age 50.[1][9] She was buried in Baltimore National Cemetery.[10]

People named by Markward[edit]

On the stand on July 11, 1951, Markward would name or confirm names mentioned by HUAC, as follows:

Mr. Tavenner: Will you give us the names of those who served with you from time to time as members of the district board?

Mrs. Markward: Al Lannon was the chairman while he was here. He was replaced by Phil Frankfeld ...

  • Elizabeth Searle ...
  • Dorothy Strange ...
  • William Johnson ...
  • William S. Johnson, from Washington ...
  • Henry Thomas ...
  • Elsie Smith ...
  • Sam Gordon ...
  • Dorothy Rose Blumberg ...
  • Albert Blumberg was a member after he got active in the district, but he was assigned to a national activity and did not participate on a local level so much.
  • Maurice Braverman often attended the meetings of the board, particularly during election campaigns. He was particularly active with the political-action committee of the organization.
  • Roy Wood was a member of the district board ...
  • Pete Forrest ...
  • Isidore Schwartz ... was a delegate to the national convention in 1944, either a delegate or an alternate.
  • Florence Schwartz ...
  • Levy Williamson ... attended meetings of the district committee ...
  • Robert W. Lee ...
  • Irving Winkler ...
  • Sally Winkler ...
  • Herbert J. Nichol ... also called Herb Silver ...
  • Irving Kandel ... attended district committee meetings ...
  • Sam Fox ...
  • Ruth Fox ... employed by the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America?
  • Louis Pearlman ... running a grocery store in Wahshington ...
  • Chase Isaacs ... also known as "Mama" Isaacs ...
  • Julia Kotelchuck ... elected to the district committee in 1945 ...
  • Lou Gilbert ... leadership nomination committee ... functionary in the Furniture Workers Union in Baltimore
  • Herb Kransdorf ...
  • Jack Zucker ... international organizer in Baltimore of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America
  • Anne Zucker ...
  • Esvand Jones ...
  • Mary Roberts ...
  • Eve Lannon
  • Jean Frankfeld[7]

She also named Sheppard Carl Thierman[11] and Annie Lee Moss.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Mary Markward, FBI Informant, Dies". Washington Post. November 25, 1972. Mary Stalcup Markward, a beauty shop operator who became an FBI informant and identified more than 200 persons as Communists during congressional hearings in the early 1950s, died of heart failure Thursday at her home in Silver Spring, Maryland. She was 50.
  2. ^ a b c "Pointing the Way in the Hunt for Communists". Washington Post. July 5, 1999. Retrieved 2007-09-25. Mary Stalcup Markward appeared nervous as she made her way into the cramped hearing room on the morning of July 11, 1951. ...
  3. ^ 1930 US Census with Stalcups in Fairfax, Virginia
  4. ^ a b "Woman Tells of Outwitting Reds In Seven Years as Agent for F.B.I." New York Times. July 7, 1951. Retrieved 2008-03-11. Mrs. Mary Stalcup Markward, 29-year-old former beauty shop worker, told today how she worked for nearly seven years as an undercover agent for the Federal
  5. ^ a b "F.B.I. Woman Limns Hard Lives of Reds. Agent Discloses Communist Party Tactics". New York Times. July 12, 1951. Retrieved 2008-03-11. A Communist's life is not a happy one, the House committee on Un-American Activities was told today by a young woman who had spent almost seven years as a rank-and-file member of the party while an undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  6. ^ a b Pederson, Vernon, L. (2001). The Communist Party In Maryland, 1919-1957. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 172–180. ISBN 9780252023217. Retrieved 5 August 2017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b Hearings Relating to Communist Activities in the Defense Area of Baltimore–Part 1. US GPO for the Committee on Un-American Activities, U.S. House of Representatives. 1951. pp. 784 (Progressive), 769–775 (names). Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  8. ^ Friedman, Andrea (September 2012). "The strange career of Annie Lee Moss: Rethinking race, gender and McCarthyism". The Journal of American History. 94 (2). Organization of American Historians: 445–468. doi:10.2307/25094960. JSTOR 25094960.
  9. ^ Social Security Death Index; Mary Markward; b. 10 February 1922 - d. November 1972
  10. ^ "Baltimore National Cemetery". interment.net. Retrieved 2018-12-23.
  11. ^ Fenton, John H. (May 2, 1953). "Witness Insists Officer was Red. Thierman Belonged to Party if She Processed His Card, Ex-F.B.I. Woman Says". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-06-21. Mrs. Mary Stallcup Markward, a former undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, asserted today it would "not be even remotely possible" for her to have processed the Communist party application card of Lieut. Sheppard Carl Thierman without his already having been accepted as a member.