What’s In a Name? “Harvey” and “Lee” & Why
It Matters
By James Norwood
Over many years, two boys using the same name and living in
different
families were participants in American intelligence operations.
It is likely that references to them in government records included
separate identifications: one boy was "Lee Harvey Oswald," born
to Marguerite Claverie Oswald on October 18, 1939. The other boy
was "Harvey Lee Oswald," likely a Russian-speaking refugee from World
War II, brought to this country with thousands of other refugees.
Frank Wisner was a Wall Street lawyer and during World War II worked
for the Office of Strategic Services (predecessor of the CIA).
After World War II ended, thousands of Eastern European refugees were
brought to the United States under his supervision. National
Security Council (NSC) records show that Wisner, the CIA's director of
clandestine operations, oversaw the relocation of thousands of
anti-Communist exiles to the United States. Wisner became the CIA
and State Department’s expert on European war refugees, and he secretly
subsidized the refugee relief organizations that brought these Eastern
Bloc refugees to the United States throughout the 1940s and early 1950s.
Wisner recognized that he could use these Eastern European immigrants’
knowledge, customs, and familiarity with their respective homelands in
the struggle against communism in the Cold War. Wisner asked the
National Security Council (NSC) to sanction the “systematic” use of
such refugees, and they (the NSC) agreed. The NSC soon issued a
top-secret intelligence directive (NSCID No. 14), which has been
partially declassified:
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1950-55Intel/d253
On multiple occasions, the document explicitly uses the expression
“exploitation of aliens,” which was precisely Wisner’s goal in his
massive project with the immigrants. There were not merely
thousands but likely tens of thousands of assignments that involved a quid
pro quo arrangement. In return for the promise of American
citizenship, the immigrants would be required to perform tasks,
utilizing their knowledge and experience as Eastern Europeans.
With the authorization stipulated in NSCID No. 14, the FBI and the CIA
were able to jointly exploit the talents of well over 200,000 Eastern
European refugees resettled in the USA. The CIA soon contacted the
Displaced Persons Commission (DPC), which worked closely with the
leaders of refugee organizations in the USA. DPC chairman Ugo
Carusi (1902-94) sent a memorandum to all refugee organizations in the
USA that read: “We would like to advise that the U.S. Commission [DPC]
has a formal agreement with the CIA to cooperate in every possible way
to facilitate their programs. It is, therefore, altogether
desirable that local representatives of the voluntary agencies and
State Commissions and Committees make available to fully identified CIA
agents the addresses of displaced persons.”
In one of these projects, a young Russian-speaking refugee was selected
and given the name Harvey Lee Oswald, and his birthdate was often
listed as October 19, 1939, whereas October 18 was the birthdate for
the American-born Lee Harvey Oswald. It is of paramount
importance to understand that the original purpose of the merging of
the two identities has nothing to do with the assassination of
President Kennedy whose political career as a Congressman was just
beginning at the time Wisner was recruiting the Eastern European
refugees. The fledgling Oswald operation was one of thousands
conducted by Wisner with the overarching goal of winning the Cold
War. For this project, the idea was to place a Russian-speaking
young man with the identity of an American citizen in the Soviet Union
as a spy. During his stay, he feigned his knowledge of the
Russian language while listening to and observing his hosts. His
successful concealment of his Russian language proficiency while living
in Minsk is covered in detail in the article “Oswald’s Proficiency in
the Russian Language”:
https://harveyandlee.net/Russian.html
Two defining periods are at the heart of understanding the life story
of the immigrant boy Harvey Oswald. First, it was the carefully
planned intelligence operation of merging his life with the
American-born Lee Oswald between the late 1940s and the 1959
“defection” to the Soviet Union. Second, the period of
August-November 1963 is pivotal after Harvey Oswald had returned from
the Soviet Union and was now being groomed by the CIA as the patsy in
the assassination of President Kennedy. It is likely that
different CIA personnel were framing Oswald than those who originally
conceived the Oswald Project as part of Frank Wisner’s refugee
program. In 1958, Wisner himself was diagnosed with manic
depression and went into steep decline, retiring from the CIA in 1962
and dying by suicide in 1965. Still, the entire life of this
young immigrant was overseen by the CIA, first in the role of a patriot
and later in the role of a patsy.
In the immediate aftermath of the assassination, there was a scramble
to understand the background of the suspect killed while in custody of
the Dallas police. At the same time, there was a massive effort
on the part of the FBI to suppress information about the Oswald
project. But much evidence slipped beneath the cracks, including
a surviving teletype from December 4, 1963 that was sent by an aide
to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. The aide was William J.
Vanden Heuvel, who was also President of the International Rescue
Committee (IRC). The teletype was intended to alert the FBI that
“the files of the IRC contain information pertaining to Oswald”:
There would have been no reason why the American-born Lee Oswald would
have been of interest to the IRC. But it was entirely appropriate
that the Russian-speaking immigrant Harvey Oswald would be identified
by this organization if he were an immigrant from Eastern Europe
recruited by American intelligence.
Another piece of tantalizing evidence is the subject of an anonymous
phone conversation to Mrs. Jack Tippit of Westport, Connecticut on the
day following the assassination. Mrs. Tippit’s husband, a
self-employed cartoonist for national magazines, was a distant relative
of Officer J.D. Tippit, who was shot to death in Dallas on the
afternoon of November 22. The anonymous caller indicated that she
personally knew Oswald's father and uncle in New York City, who were
from Hungary, promoted communism, and resided at 77th and 2nd Avenue in
Yorkville (NYC). On multiple occasions during the call, the woman
on the line indicated that she was fearful for her life in revealing
this information. The text of a long suppressed November 30 FBI
teletype describing the phone call, as well as John Armstrong’s
analysis of the call, may be read in the article entitled “Who Was
Harvey?”:
https://harveyandlee.net/Harvey%20Who/Harvey_who.htm
The surviving evidence points to the unidentified refugee, who was
given the name Harvey Oswald, being placed with a caretaker who was
given the name "Margaret” (as opposed to Marguerite) Oswald. The
similarity in the names of Harvey Oswald and Margaret Oswald was of
critical importance administratively to distinguish the young immigrant
and his caretaker mother from the real Marguerite Claverie Oswald and
her young son Lee Harvey Oswald. At the height of the McCarthy era, a
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) file in New York City
made reference to a "Mrs. M. Oswald" in a CIA Office of Security
file. The date of the file in 1953 would have coincided with the
early phase of the Oswald Project. During the deliberations of
the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) in the 1990s, Judge John
Tunheim wrote to Congressman Henry Hyde (R, Illinois) and requested the
HUAC file on "Mrs. M Oswald." Despite the fact that the JFK
Records Act mandated the release of the documents, the request was
denied the ARRB. It is conceivable that this file may be among
the records still being withheld from the American public by the
CIA. If released, it could potentially expose the story of the
two Oswalds.
Both Harvey and Lee enlisted in the Marines where they served between
1956-59. The Marine enlistment card for Harvey Oswald, dated
October 24, 1956, was recently discovered and was published for the
first time on this website. The name that first appeared on the
card was “Harvey Lee Oswald.” It was subsequently scratched off
and re-entered as “Lee Harvey Oswald.” The card also indicates
that both of the parents of the recruit are deceased, yet it identifies
Marguerite Oswald as the recruit’s mother. It also indicates that
the parents were not divorced; but the real Marguerite Oswald was
divorced and was living at the time at a different address than the one
indicated on the card. If there had been only one Lee Harvey
Oswald, there never would have been the set of anomalies evident on the
enlistment card. Shortly after Harvey Oswald enrolled in the
Marines, he was sent to San Diego for boot camp. But at the same
time, Lee Oswald was receiving his training at the Marine Corps Air
Facility in El Toro, up the California coast near Irvine in Orange
County. Images of the two-sided enlistment card of Harvey Oswald
along with detailed analysis appear in the article “Marine Corps and
the Soviet Union”:
https://harveyandlee.net/Marines/Marines.html
The final assignment for Harvey Oswald during his stint in the Marines
was for him to be stationed at the ninth Marine Air Control Station
(MACS 9) in Santa Ana, California. Around the same time, Lee
Oswald was once again assigned to the nearby El Toro Marine Corps Air
Facility (MCAF). The Warren Commission failed to identify the two
distinct bases, which were approximately ten miles apart in Orange
County. The Commission selectively focused on interviewing
Marines in the smaller MACS 9 base for first-hand accounts about Harvey
Oswald when he was preparing for his “defection” to the Soviet Union
and was all but advertising his love of Russian culture and fascination
with Marxist ideology. For his fellow Marines, he was putting on
quite a show in playing a recording of Tchaikovsky’s “Russian War
Dance,” reading Russian-language newspapers, addressing his buddies as
“Comrade,” and asking his roommate James Botelho to call him
“Oswaldovich.” When he applied for a dependency discharge to help
his allegedly injured “mother,” the accompanying parent’s affidavit
form lists the same Marine ID number of 1653230 that corresponds to the
number on his original enlistment card. But in the box entitled
“My Children Currently Serving in the Armed Forces,” the applicant
lists as her son “Oswald, Harvey Lee,” who was currently
stationed at the MACS 9 base.
Was this a slip on the part of “Margaret” Oswald, who habitually
referred to her “son” as Harvey? Or, was it a conscious choice in
bookkeeping in order to distinguish Harvey Oswald from the other
Marine, Lee Oswald, who was also recently discharged? It is clear
that this was more than a mere clerical error due to the pattern of
references to Harvey Lee Oswald that show up time and again in the
documentary record.
Specialists in linguistics have also weighed in on the writing and
speaking patterns of Harvey Oswald. In December 1963, Vladimir
Petrov, head of the Slavic Language Department at Yale University, read
a copy of a letter Oswald had written to Senator John Tower.
Petrov stated that “I am satisfied that the letter was not written by
him [Harvey Oswald]. It was written by a Russian with an
imperfect knowledge of English." In an unrelated study, a
professor at Southern Methodist University listened to the voice of
Oswald from the 1963 New Orleans radio interview without being told
that it was Oswald speaking. The expert concluded that the man
was not a native-born American; rather, he was speaking English as a
second language.
The New Orleans born Lee Harvey Oswald preferred to be addressed as
"Lee," while the young Eastern European immigrant identified himself as
“Harvey.” As early as 1953-54 there are four witnesses in three
different locations that identified one of the boys as Harvey:
Psychiatrist Dr. Milton Kurian interviewed Harvey Lee Oswald in New
York in March, 1953; William Henry Timmer met Harvey Oswald in Stanley,
North Dakota in the summer of 1953; and when Oswald entered Myra
DaRouse's home room class in New Orleans in early 1954, he asked Myra
to call him Harvey. Harvey's best friend in the spring semester
of the 8th grade at Beauregard Junior High in New Orleans was Ed
Voebel, who knew young Oswald as Harvey.
In each instance of a reference to "Harvey Lee Oswald" in the
documentary record, there is a story behind the name "Harvey" which
precedes "Lee." One very important reference is found on the
typewritten sheet of employees of the Texas School Book Depository
(TSBD) prepared by Lieutenant Jack Revill, intelligence officer of the
Dallas police, on the day of the assassination:
Revill, however, was not typing from records provided to him by the
TSBD. Instead, he had in all probability received information
about Oswald from an officer of Naval Intelligence with whom he rode
back to the station after a short trip to Dealey Plaza. It may be
significant that the name "Harvey Lee Oswald" is at the head of
Revill's list. Additionally, Oswald's address of 605 Elsbeth is
inaccurate; the correct location was 602 Elsbeth. That address
was not found in any records of the TSBD. In an unrelated
document discovered in the 1980s, a file from the 112th MI (Military
Intelligence) group listed a man named Harvey Lee Oswald, who was "a
procommunist who had been in Russia and had been involved in pro-Castro
activities in New Orleans." That document listed the man's name
as "Harvey Lee Oswald" with the same incorrect address of 605 Elsbeth.
Taken together, the two documents identifying "Harvey Lee Oswald"
residing at an incorrect address point to the intelligence network
implicating Oswald in the assassination of President Kennedy almost
instantly after the shooting. Author Jim Marrs offers a detailed
overview of the multi-faceted circumstances of an immediate
identification of Harvey Oswald as the suspect in the following video
from Len Osanic's series Fifty Reasons for Fifty Years:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzrDxSTAvOc&list=PLT8L13rH2ZvtyvDz01EuLznX0Bpz_0wwu&index=23
As researcher Peter Dale Scott observes, the usage of the name Harvey
Lee Oswald "is no accidental anomaly, but part of an organized pattern,
widely dispersed, that suggests an official intelligence deception (and
possible dual filing system)....A consistent pattern of behavior in
these agencies since the assassination has been the tendency to
suppress references to 'Harvey Lee Oswald' and replace them by the more
standard 'Lee Harvey Oswald.'" The suppression of references to
“Harvey Oswald” was the exact function of the FBI and the Warren
Commission, which were both instrumental in concealing the identity of
the two Oswalds. The backgrounds of the two young men were
combined into a single biographical profile. That manufactured
biography of a composite of two men was the centerpiece of the Warren
Report published on September 24, 1964.
The man who was accused of killing JFK was not American-born Lee Harvey
Oswald, but was an unknown refugee brought to this country as a
child. Due to his fluency in the Russian language, he was
monitored, directed, and trained during his formative years for the
express purpose of "defecting" to the Soviet Union while working for
the CIA. At a later time, this man who had served his new country
in the area of espionage was targeted by his handlers to be the
scapegoat in the assassination of JFK. For nearly his entire
life, the experience of the immigrant Harvey Oswald was circumscribed
by the CIA. The government’s staunch reluctance to release
documentary evidence in the assassination of President Kennedy is
almost certainly tied to the coverup of the existence of the two
Oswalds that has been suppressed from the American public for nearly
sixty years.