Communists and suspected Communists: Frederick Copeman

Frederick Copeman

File ref KV 2/2322-2324

Copeman's fame rests on two pillars: his leading part in the 1931 Invergordon Mutiny, for which he was discharged from the Navy; and his leadership of the British Battalion in the International Brigade during the Spanish Civil War.

From lowly roots in a Suffolk workhouse, Copeman joined the Navy and first came to Security Service attention, not as a leader of the Mutiny, but as one who continued agitating for better treatment for seamen immediately afterwards. A note as to his character when he was discharged from HMS Norfolk (in November 1931) describes Copeman as "A bully and general bad character, but a good seaman when he tries which is not often" (serial 1X in KV 2/2322, covering 1931-1932). Copeman soon began working on behalf of the Communist Party - there is a report of his first speech, describing the circumstances of the Mutiny, at serial 16A.

Copeman was very active as a speaker and agitator, and his activities are recorded on this file in some detail. At serial 127B (KV 2/2323, 1932-1938) there is an account of a riot at a meeting in Oxford where Copeman was speaking, when 200 under-graduates invaded the hall and a pitched battle ensued. The file also includes copies of The Unemployed Leader of 21 October 1931, reporting Copeman's arrest for obstruction. This file goes on to detail Copeman's time in Spain with the International Brigade - and at serial 197A there is a letter describing his life and experiences there in some detail. A photograph of Copeman in Spain is included. At serial 200A there is a false report of Copeman's death in July 1937 while leading the British Battalion, and at serial 203 a Metropolitan Police account of his return to Britain.

Though Copeman initially held to the Communist cause after the Spanish Civil War, by 1940 he had become disenchanted with the Soviet system and threw himself instead into air-raid precaution work, in the end running the ARP services in Westminster, for which he was awarded the OBE. There is correspondence about his recommendation for this award, and the Security Service's response to it, in KV 2/2324 (1938-1948).