Inventory of the Louise Page Morris papers

Finding aid prepared by Lauren McCune
Hoover Institution Library and Archives
© 2008, 2014
434 Galvez Mall
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-6003
hoover-library-archives@stanford.edu


Title: Louise Page Morris papers
Date (inclusive): 1950-1984
Collection Number: 95034
Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives
Language of Material: English
Physical Description: 3 manuscript boxes (1.2 Linear Feet)
Abstract: Correspondence, reports, memoranda, speeches, notes, and financial records, relating to activities of the Free Trade Union Committee in opposing communist influence in trade unions abroad, especially in Asia and the Middle East, and to political conditions in those regions. Includes extensive correspondence with Jay Lovestone, executive secretary of the Free Trade Union Committee.
Creator: Lovestone, Jay
Creator: Morris, Louise Page
Physical Location: Hoover Institution Library & Archives

Access

The collection is open for research; materials must be requested in advance via our reservation system. If there are audiovisual or digital media material in the collection, they must be reformatted before providing access.

Use

For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

Acquisition Information

Acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 1995.

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], Louise Page Morris papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

Biographical Note

She was born in 1904 in Boston, to Edward and Olga Page. She married once, to John 'Koko' Morris, whom she divorced in 1932. Morris began her espionage career as an anti-Soviet counterintelligence agent during WWII. She spoke Russian was recruited to work in the London analyzing information lifted from the Soviets. In 1943 she became the deputy chief of the USSR Research and Analysis Section, Office of Strategic Services (OSS). After the war, Morris worked for OSS chief "Wild" Bill Donovan, who introduced her to Ray Murphy, Communist Expert for the State Department. Mr Murphy asked her to infiltrate the Congress of American Women and determine if it was a communist front group. It was through Ray Murphy that she met Jay Lovestone and began a romance with him that would last over thirty years. Lovestone was working closely with James Jesus Angleton, who would become the CIA's counterintelligence chief. Impressed with all he had heard about Morris's successful intelligence work, he propositioned that she be his personal agent, functioning outside the CIA, going on assignments for him to collect intelligence around the world. Her cover was that she worked for Lovestone and the FTUC, operating the "Gompers Research Library" in New York City. Louise Page Morris worked for Mr Angleton until 1974. She died in 2002.

Scope and Content of Collection

The Morris Papers contain correspondence from friends and colleagues received by Morris during her travels, as well as intelligence information produced by the American Federation of Labor's Free Trade Union Committee (FTUC).
Comprised primarily of personal and professional correspondence, most notably from Jay Loveston. Lovestone was the well-known President of the FTUC and worked closely with Morris' employer, James Jesus Angleton, the chief of the CIA's Counterintelligence Staff from 1954 to 1975. Lovestone frequently referred to Morris's work for the CIA and passes covert information to her via codewords.
The collection also contains reports accumulated by Morris, some of which she produced herself, and some by third parties on free labor movements in developing states. Reports by Morris were generally handwritten drafts of weekly or monthly reports sent back to her employer, James Angleton. Also included are notes taken during meetings with individuals of interest. These were often written on small scraps of paper or on the backsides of other printed material. Morris collected correspondence, reports, manuscripts, and transcripts from third parties. Such papers were often not addressed to her but copies of correspondence between international actors and the FTUC or written to supplement her collection of intelligence.
The Reports Series is divided into two categories, Personal and Third Party. Personal reports were written by Morris herself and were usually notes taken during meetings, drafts of weekly reports, and expense reports. Third party reports include copies of correspondence between two other parties, collected by Morris for information purposes. This category also includes reports on current events and transcripts of meetings and speeches. Third party reports are divided by country and subject.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

Labor unions and communism
American Federation of Labor. Free Trade Union Committee

 

Correspondence 1950-1984

 

Lovestone Correspondence 1950-1983

box 1, folder 1-2

1950-1953

box 1, folder 3-4

1954-1955

box 1, folder 5-6

1955-1960

box 2, folder 2

1961-1964

box 2, folder 3

1964-1969

box 1, folder 7

1976-1983

 

General Correspondence 1950-1984

box 1, folder 8

1950-1957

box 2, folder 4

1952-1967

box 2, folder 1

1957-1984

 

Reports 1950-1958

 

Personal Reports 1956-1958

box 2, folder 5

Meeting notes and daily journal undated

box 2, folder 6

Expense reports, meeting notes, speech transcript 1957-1958

box 2, folder 8

Weekly reports and correspondence 1956

box 2, folder 9

Personal notes 1957-1958

box 2, folder 11

Intelligence reports undated

 

Third Party Reports 1950-1957

box 2, folder 7

Copies, correspondence "American Federation of Labor" and Cairo 1952-1956

box 2, folder 10

Asian Socialist Conference 1956

box 2, folder 12

Correspondence and reports: labor parties and communism 1956-1957

box 3, folder 1

Reports and correspondence: Israel 1952-1953

box 3, folder 2

Reports and correspondence: India 1950-1957

box 3, folder 3

Manuscript: Kashmir, reports: India Undated

box 3, folder 4

Report: Tibet 1951

box 3, folder 5

Correspondence and reports: Hungary and Bulgaria 1951-1953

box 3, folder 6

Reports: Soviet Union 1951

box 3, folder 7

"Committee for Free Asia," 1953

box 3, folder 8

General reports 1951-1952