Utley's father was Willie Herbert Utley (1866–1918); her mother was his wife Emily Williamson. Willie Utley was involved with
George Bernard Shaw, the
Fabians, and labour struggles before becoming an
attorney, journalist and businessman. He was introduced to her mother by
Edward Aveling,
Karl Marx's translator. In her memoirs, Utley describes her early influences as "liberal, socialist and free-thinking, strongly colored by the poetry of revolt and liberty and legends, stories and romances of heroism and adventure." Utley was educated at a boarding school in
Switzerland, after which she returned to her native England to earn a B.A. degree followed by an M.A. degree in history (with
first class honours) at
King's College London. The
UK General Strike of 1926 and what she calls the "betrayal" of the workers by the British Trade Union Council and the
Labour Party made her more favourable to communism. After visiting Russia as the vice-president of the University Labour Federation in 1927, she joined the British Communist Party (CPGB) in 1928. Utley writes about her conversion: "It was a passion for the emancipation of mankind, not the blueprint of a planned society nor any mystical yearning to merge myself in a fellowship absolving me of personal responsibility, which both led me into the Communist fold, and caused me to leave it as soon as I learned that it meant submission to the most total tyranny which mankind has ever experienced." After a visit to the Soviet Union in 1928, the
Communist International sent Berdichevsky and Freda Utley on missions to
Siberia, China and Japan, where she lived for nine months. In 1931, she published her first book,
Lancashire and the Far East which established her as an authority on the subject of international competition in the cotton trades. Living in Moscow from 1930 to 1936, she worked as a translator, editor and a senior scientific worker at the
Academy of Sciences' Institute of World Economy and Politics. and
Harold Laski to try to find Arcadi and even sent a letter directly to Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin. Utley tried to get CPGB leader
Harry Pollitt to intercede with Moscow on behalf of her Russian husband, but Pollitt refused. She received two postcards from Arcadi reporting his five years' sentence to an
Arctic Circle prison for alleged association with
Trotskyists. (She herself had flirted with
Trotskyism.) In 1956, she learned he had died on 30 March 1938. It would not be until 2004 that her son Jon Basil Utley would learn from the
Russian government the details of his death by firing squad for leading a
hunger strike at the
Vorkuta prison labour camp. He was "rehabilitated" posthumously in 1961 under post-Stalin
rehabilitation laws. In 1938, Utley published two books on Japan's military attacks on China at the beginning of the
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). ''Japan's Gamble in China
, with an introduction by Laski, described Japan as "a police state, governed by a bureaucracy wedded to a plutocracy." The News Chronicle
made her a war correspondent and she spent three months in China in 1938, making two trips to the front line. Her 1939 book China at War'' idealized the Chinese communists. The work aroused considerable popular sympathy for China and helped foment poor relations with Japan prior to World War II. Her goal was to make for herself an international reputation and prove her communist credentials to free her husband. ==Anticommunism==