Included in the donation are the papers of Morris Childs, a longtime FBI spy inside the Communist Party USA from the end of World War II until 1980. In 1987, President Reagan awarded Childs the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his Cold War spy work.
This collection of personal papers includes correspondence, reports, notes, speeches, writings, and interview transcripts relating to FBI surveillance of the Communist Party (known as Operation SOLO) and the relationship between the Communist Party in the U.S. and the Soviet Communist Party and government. John Barron used this collection as research material for "Operation Solo: The FBI's Man in the Kremlin," published in 1996.
"The addition of the J. Edgar Hoover collection makes the National Law Enforcement Museum one of the 'go to' places for conducting research on Director Hoover and the FBI," said Laurie Baty, the Memorial Fund's senior director of museum programs.
She noted that the museum already is the repository for interview transcripts from the oral history program of the
Society of Former Special Agents of the FBI
. More than 200 transcripts of interviews are now available through the museum's online catalog.
The J. Edgar Hoover objects are the latest addition to the museum's growing collection, which now contains more than 10,000 artifacts documenting American law enforcement history.