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Politics | 08/14/2008 9:45 am

Culinary Queen Julia Child Was a World War II-Era Spy

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
Julia Child
© AP

Julia Child used to cook up more intriguing things than apple tarte and beurre noir.

Before one of the world’s most renowned chefs began her culinary career, Child was a spy for the United States’ Office of Strategic Services, the first CIA.

The Associated Press reports that details about Child’s background as a government agent came to light Thursday when the National Archives released more than 35,000 top-secret personnel files — 750,000 documents — of World War II-era spies, both military and civilian. The papers identify the vast spy network managed by the OSS, created by President Franklin Roosevelt as the nation’s first centralized intelligence operation.

These spies, part of a surveillance network at a time when the Nazi threat loomed larger than all others, studied military plans, created propaganda, infiltrated enemy ranks and stirred resistance among foreign troops.

The AP report says the OSS files offer details about other agents, including Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, major league catcher Moe Berg, historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., film actor Sterling Hayden, John Hemingway (son of author Ernest Hemingway), Kermit Roosevelt (son of President Theodore Roosevelt) and Miles Copeland (father of Stewart Copeland, drummer for the band The Police).

The operatives’ identities were so secret, that information about their involvement with the OSS was often kept from even their family members.

"I think it’s terrific," Elizabeth McIntosh, 93, a former OSS agent now living in Woodbridge, VA, told AP. "They’ve finally, after all these years, they’ve gotten the names out. All of these people had been told never to mention they were with the OSS."

Julia played a key role in the communication of top secret documents between U.S. government officials and their intelligence officers. In 1945, she was sent to China, where she met future husband and fellow OSS employee Paul Child. The pair moved to France in 1984 after Paul was assigned to the U.S. Information Service at the American Embassy there. It was in France that Julia developed a love for French cuisine.

In 2002, Linda McCarthy, curator of a National Women’s History Museum exhibition on female spies throughout history, told NPR that Child was an operative. Even then, her cooking skills came in handy.

Child was assigned to solve a problem for U.S. naval forces during World War II: Sharks would bump into underwater explosives, setting them off and warning the German U-boats they were intended to sink.

"So … Julia Child and a few of her male compatriots got together and literally cooked up a shark repellent," used to coat the explosives, McCarthy said.

Read more about: CIA, Espionage, Julia Child, News, Spies

28 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Frank Peterson
So what’s the news here? This has been known about for decades—I heard her once talk about her career in intelligence ages ago.
By Frank Peterson on 08/14/2008 11:46 am
Jeannot Kensinger
Frank is right, I heard this before. She was a treasure, anyone not afraid to cook with butter is my heroin.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 08/14/2008 12:25 pm
Jeannot Kensinger
my mother is turning around in her grave. Heroine! she is yelling, OK Mom whatever! I just bought a book on French verbs as I am slipping in that department too.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 08/14/2008 12:28 pm
Lady Gator
Julia Child is a treasure. I loved to watch her when she had a guest chef. She would just pelt them with questions. What a neat lady. Wonder if when she went for her interview with the CIA they said….”Excellent resume, but can you cook”?
By Lady Gator on 08/14/2008 12:47 pm
Marjorie C.
”Excellent resume, but can you cook”? LOL. Good one. Loved Julia Child especially with Jacques Pépin.
By Marjorie C. on 08/14/2008 1:23 pm
Frannie Em
I heard about Julia Child before, I wish I knew who 355 was and what she did. That would be fascinating. Seems like they can’t track down any other info on her. There must have been so many that we don’t even know about.
By Frannie Em on 08/14/2008 1:39 pm
Frank Peterson
OSS Frannie in WW2—what exactly she specifically did I don’t remember.
By Frank Peterson on 08/14/2008 2:41 pm
Frank Peterson
For a year, she worked at the OSS Emergency Sea Rescue Equipment Section in Washington, D.C., where she was a file clerk and also helped in the development of a shark repellent to ensure that sharks would not explode ordnance targeting German U-boats. In 1944 she was posted to Kandy, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), where she met her future husband, a high-ranking OSS cartographer, and later to China, where she received the Emblem of Meritorious Civilian Service as head of the Registry of the OSS Secretariat. [2]
By Frank Peterson on 08/14/2008 2:44 pm
Dona Howlett
Yes I to heard about this before. In fact I heard her being interviewed on a TV show and she spoke about her work in the OSS. She was a facinating woman.
By Dona Howlett on 08/14/2008 5:02 pm
Chris Broersma
Julia Child was a a real lady if character, and I certainly loved her cooking shows too.
By Chris Broersma on 08/14/2008 10:53 pm
Sam Mirando
Now there’s a woman to admire and a role model too. She didn’t care that she wasn’t put together like a movie star and she knew implicitly that women age like fine wine. We should try to emulate her as we grow older. She had a wonderful sense of humor and she taught me to cook too, via her magnificent cookbooks.
By Sam Mirando on 08/15/2008 2:43 pm
Chari Bonagua
What a strong woman. A woman to admire. And she can cook, too. I just love her cookbooks. She made French cooking simple.
By Chari Bonagua on 08/16/2008 11:55 am