LONDON.- An extraordinary MI9 catalogue containing top secret designs for covert equipment, worthy of James Bonds gadgets will go under the hammer at
Bonhams Gentlemans Library sale on 30th January 2013.
Per Ardua Libertas is an extremely rare book made by MI9 in 1942, detailing items produced to aid prisoners and operatives during the Second World War. It is estimated to sell for £500 800. Among the most fascinating designs are coat buttons and gold teeth concealing compasses, hacksaws hidden in dart boards, maps printed on clothing and cameras disguised as cigarette lighters. Other ingenious designs include maps concealed in playing cards and music records.
MI9, less well-known than MI6, was a secret department of the War Office formed in 1939 to handle covert operations and aid resistance fighters in enemy territories. It was instrumental in helping British prisoners of war, sending them advice and equipment disguised as innocuous domestic items and every-day objects.
Many of the escape aids were based on ideas by Christopher Clayton-Hutton. As well as hidden compasses and maps printed on silk, designs included flying boots for aircrew, which could be easily converted to look like a pair of civilian brogues and uniforms which could be transformed into business suits.
In 1942 a group of American Intelligence Officers travelled to Britain to study MI9 techniques and operations with a particular interest in the printing of maps on silk, so that they wouldnt rustle and could be disguised as handkerchiefs. Each secret agent was presented with a 76 page bound catalogue entitled Per Ardua Libertas to commemorate their visit.
Lionel Willis, Collectors Specialist commented: Very few of these catalogues are known to have survived and the remaining copies form rare pieces of secret service history. They give a fascinating insight into the ingenuity employed to assist the war effort.
The Gentlemans Library Sale is now in its 12th year. Unique to Bonhams, the sale features all kinds of objects that may have been found in a Victorian or Edwardian Gentlemans Library from fossils to cigarette boxes, leather armchairs to globes, chess sets to family portraits.