Nigel Trevithick Tangye (24 April 1909 – 2 June 1988) was a British airman, novelist, journalist and the writer of various books about Cornwall. He worked for MI5, and later claimed to have been an MI5 agent during the Spanish Civil War.
Born in Kensington, Nigel Tangye started his career in the Royal Navy, spending three years in the Mediterranean having graduated at the Royal Naval College in Dartmouth. He then left the Navy and devoted himself to learning to fly. He soon earned a Professional Pilot's 'B' Licence, the Navigator's Licence and the Air Ministry Instructor's Licence. After that he performed aerobatic demonstrations and worked as a flying instructor at the London Aeroplane Club. [citation needed]
As the aviation correspondent for the London Evening News, Tangye covered the Spanish Civil War.[2] His 1937 account of the war, Red, White and Spain, provided a strongly pro-Nationalist viewpoint.[3] However, Tangye later recorded that it had been ″written by the author as a cover to his assignment by MI5 as a secret agent in the Spanish War″ seeking information on German military involvement.[4] There is independent evidence that he worked in MI5’s press department, later acting briefly as its director.[5]
In 1938 he wrote Teach Yourself to Fly, a book designed to help flying students with the basics before entering an aeroplane. The book - the first of the Teach Yourself series - was sufficiently well-regarded that it became recommended by the British Air Ministry for pilots in the run up to and during the Second World War, and Tangye was asked to train prospective RAF pilots.[6] In later life he became a hotelier at Newquay.[7] In later years he lived in Cornwall and died in Camborne, aged 79.
There is a portrait of Tangye at the Tate gallery, that was painted by Wyndham Lewis in 1945.[8]
Selected works
1935: The Air is our Concern: a critical study of England's future in aviation. London: Methuen (as editor)
1937: Contributions as Air Correspondent for the Evening News (from 1937)
1937: Red, White and Spain. London : Rich & Cowan (an account of a visit during the civil war)
1941: Teach Yourself To Fly; by Squadron Leader Nigel Tangye, R.A.F.O. (1941) (Reprinted by Hodder, 2008; ISBN978-0-340-96614-3)
1944: Britain in the Air. London: William Collins
1947: --do.-- in: British Adventure. London: William Collins (by six authors; ed. W. J. Turner; introd. by N. Tangye)
1959: The House on the Seine and Other Stories. Newquay: Eric Hale
1962: The Story of Glendorgal: a personal view. Truro: D. Bradford Barton
1984: --do.-- 3rd ed. Redruth: Dyllansow Truran
1974: Facing the Sea: a Cornishman remembers. London: William Kimber ISBN0718303237 (autobiography)
1976: The Inconstant Sea: a Cornishman's chronicle. London: William Kimber ISBN0-7183-0274-5
1977: From Rock and Tempest. London: William Kimber ISBN0718303156 (about shipwrecks round the Lizard peninsula)
1978: Voyage into Cornwall's Past. London: William Kimber ISBN071830196X (in the ketch Spray)
^Preston, Paul. We Saw Spain Die: Foreign Correspondents in the Spanish Civil War. Constable. 2008
^V. S. Pritchett, "The Spanish War", Spectator, May 13, 1937; Brian Shelmerdine, British Representations of the Spanish Civil War, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2006.