Ewen Montagu's account Ewen Montagu, the officer in charge of Operation Mincemeat, was faced with the task of finding a body to give substance to the persona of William Martin. In this he was assisted by
Bentley Purchase,
coroner of St Pancras District. Several different accounts of this have been given. In Montagu's book,
The Man Who Never Was, written in 1953, he states that in 1942 there was no shortage of bodies, but none they felt they could take. He states that the body of a young man who had died of pneumonia was found, and that permission to use the body was given. Pneumonia was important because it meant the presence of liquid in the lungs which, in the event of autopsy, would appear consistent with death by drowning. The body was released on the condition that the man's real identity would never be revealed. However, historian Ben Macintyre states that the dead man's parents had died and no known relatives were found. Anna Pukas states that neither of Montagu's claims, that the man died from
pneumonia and that the family had been contacted and permission obtained, were true.
Glyndwr Michael }} Montagu stated that the body was released on the condition that the man's real identity would never be revealed. However, in 1996, Roger Morgan, an amateur historian from London, uncovered evidence in the
Public Record Office that the identity of the corpse was a Welshman named Glyndwr Michael. Michael was born in
Aberbargoed in
Monmouthshire in South
Wales. Before leaving the town, he held part-time jobs as a gardener and labourer. His father Thomas, a coal miner, died by suicide when Michael was 15, and his mother died when he was 31. Homeless, friendless, depressed, and with no money, Michael drifted to
London where he lived on the streets. Michael was found in an abandoned warehouse close to
King's Cross, seriously ill from ingesting
rat poison that contained
phosphorus. Two days later, he died at age 36 in
St Pancras Hospital. His death may have been suicide, although he might have simply been hungry, as the poison he ingested was a paste smeared on bread crusts to attract rats. After being ingested,
phosphide reacts with
hydrochloric acid in the
stomach, generating
phosphine, a highly toxic gas. One of the symptoms of phosphine poisoning is
pulmonary oedema, an accumulation of large amounts of liquid in the lungs, which would satisfy the need for a body that appeared to have died by drowning. Purchase explained, "This dose was not sufficient to kill him outright, and its only effect was to so impair the functioning of the
liver that he died a little time afterwards". When Purchase obtained Michael's body, it was identified as being in suitable condition for a man who would appear to have floated ashore several days after having died at sea by
hypothermia and
drowning.
John Melville After the identification of Michael as Major Martin, doubts began to surface. It seemed odd that an operative as meticulous as Montagu would risk the success of the operation by using a body of a man neither physically fit (as might be expected of a Marine officer) nor having died in the manner suggested (drowned, or as a result of an air crash). Montagu formally states in his book that, in 1942, there was no shortage of bodies, but none they felt they could take. He also states that he feared they might have to steal a body ("do a
Burke and Hare"), before the body of a young man who had died of pneumonia, and for whom permission to use the body was given, could be found. From this Montagu dismissed the need for physical fitness ("he doesn't need to look like an officer – only a staff officer") and the difference in cause of death ("If a post mortem examination was made by someone who had formed the
preconceived idea that the death was probably due to drowning there was little likelihood that the difference between this liquid, in lungs that had started to decompose, and sea water would be noticed"). However, in 2004 John and Noreen Steele suggested that Montagu resolved these objections by using the body of a serviceman, and pointed to the accidental loss of
HMS Dasher in the
River Clyde in March 1943, and the loss of 349 of her crew. They argued that such a person would be of military fitness (which Michael was not) and had died in a marine accident (as Michael had not); also that there would be little difficulty in obtaining identity papers and that the body would be considerably fresher than one that had been on ice for three months. The submarine designated for the mission was
HMS Seraph, which departed from the Clyde on 19 April 1943. Before the mission set off from the Clyde, Montagu described having to drive from London with the body while a Scottish source for the body would have made this task easier. The Steeles named the person whose body was used as John Melville; in recognition of this, in 2004 a memorial service was held on the present-day
Dasher, a patrol craft, at which John Melville's daughter was present. However the Royal Navy later said that there had been a mistake and that the crew had been given wrong information ahead of the service.
Ordinary Coder John Melville of HMS
Dasher, died 27 March 1943, is recorded by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission as buried in
Ardrossan Cemetery,
Ayrshire.
Tom Martin Another investigation into the
Dasher affair was published in 2003 by Colin Gribbons, drawing similar conclusions to the Steeles'. However, Gribbons identified the body used in Operation Mincemeat as that of yet another person, Tom Martin, a sailor who perished in the
Dasher incident. ==Commemoration==