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- Harry Gold - Wikipedia
Harry Gold (born Henrich Golodnitsky, December 11, 1910 – August 28, 1972) was a Swiss-born American laboratory chemist who was convicted as a courier for the Soviet Union passing atomic secrets from Klaus Fuchs, an agent of the Soviet Union, during World War II
- Harry Gold: Spy in the Lab - Science History Institute
Today Gold is best known as a spy and a snitch He accepted top-secret documents from Manhattan Project physicist Klaus Fuchs and delivered them to Soviet agents And when the FBI finally caught Gold, his testimony helped land Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in the electric chair
- Harry Gold - Nuclear Museum
Harry Gold was an American laboratory chemist who was convicted of being a courier for a number of Soviet spies during the Manhattan Project, including Klaus Fuchs
- 1972 Death of Harry Gold Revealed - The New York Times
Harry Gold, a once obscure Swiss‐born research chemist, rocketed to prominence in May, 1950, when he was arrested in Philadelphia by agents of the Federal Bureau of investigation
- History: South Philly kid turned atomic spy, helped convict Rosenbergs
This is the story of the South Philly kid who became a spy, helped pass atomic secrets to the Soviets, and later helped the U S convict a famous Cold War couple
- Harry Gold Spy | Legends Live On
Harry Gold Spy Harry Gold’s involvement in one of the most damaging espionage operations of the twentieth century stemmed from a mixture of personal insecurity, misplaced gratitude and a naïve belief that helping the Soviet Union would prevent nuclear domination by any single nation Born Henrich Golodnitsky in 1910 to struggling Russian Jewish immigrants, he grew up in Philadelphia in a
- Harry Gold - Spartacus Educational
Gold was recruited as a spy by Jacob Golos in November 1935 His first task was to steal information from his company "for the benefit of the masses of the Russian people" Over a period of time Gold became an important figure in the spy network
- The Invisible Harry Gold: The Man Who Gave the Soviets the Atom . . . - JSTOR
Unable to locate Gold and failing to find his name through a routine obituary search, he placed an advertisement in the New York Times asking anyone who knew the whereabouts of Harry Gold to contact him
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