Helen P. Silvermaster was an accused Soviet spy.
Background
Elena Witte was born in 1899 in Tsarist Russia. Her father, Baron Peter Witte, was a counselor to Tsar Nikolai II and acted as an advisor to the Mongolian government. After her father"s arrest, she moved to China and married a Russian, becoming known as Elena Volkov, around 1923.
The couple emigrated to San Francisco, California in 1924 where their son, Anatole Boris Volkov was born the same year.
Career
After the October Revolution he was arrested by Bolcheviks, but later released. Shortly after their son"s birth the couple separated. The couple came to Washington District of Columbia in 1939.
In Washington, she was one of the leaders of the Washington Bookshop, the American League for Peace and Democracy, the Washington Committee for Aid to China, and the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties.
All these organizations were Communist International and CPUSA sponsored organizations. Her code name with Soviet intelligence, identified in Venona decrypts, was "Dora".
At first, Jacob Golos was the main contact of the Silvermaster group but his failing health meant that he used Elizabeth Bentley to collect information from the house. Helen was highly suspicious of Bentley and she told Golos that she was convinced that she was an undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Golos told her that she was being ridiculous and that she had no choice but to work with her.
The Silvermasters reluctantly accepted Bentley as their new contact.
Kathryn South. Olmsted, the author of Red Spy Queen (2002), points out: "Every two weeks, Elizabeth would travel to Washington to pick up documents from the Silvermasters, collect their Party dues, and deliver Communist literature. Soon the flow of documents grew so large that Ullmann, an amateur photographer, set up a darkroom in their basement. Elizabeth usually collected at least two or three rolls of microfilmed secret documents, and one time received as many as forty.
She would stuff all the film and documents into a knitting bag or other innocent feminine accessory, then take it back to New York on the train." Moscow complained that around half of the photographed documents received in the summer of 1944 were unreadable and suggested that Ullmann received more training.
However, Pavel Fitin, who was responsible for analyzing the material, described it as very important data. She died on December 22, 1991 in Beach Haven, New Jersey, aged 92.