Published on CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) (https://www.cia.gov/readingroom)


FOR SALE: A MANSION WITH A GRAND VIEW AND A SPOOKY PAST

Document Type: 
CREST [1]
Collection: 
General CIA Records [2]
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000606040030-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 24, 2010
Sequence Number: 
30
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 25, 1981
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000606040030-4.pdf [3]161.2 KB
Body: 
STAT' I , 3y A'rv HucHWT : s t iJJ Reporter .J Tax WALL S?RSCT TO VRNAL .? ROYAL OAX, Md.-ft-walls could talk- and local rumor has It. that thanks to the magic of electronic bugging, these walls once could-what tales Ashford Farm could telL The sprawling old mansdoa tucked away on the edge of Maryland's Eastern Shore, out of sight of neighboring estates - and reachable only by a winding, one-lane ac- cess.road about a third of a mile- long: was cnce one cf the *Jsafe liouses"'used by the Central Intelligence Agency to house Impor- tant defectors from Communist countries. in its time- it has shielded .from prying, eyes such guests as East- German atomic scientist Heinz Barwicht -KGB defector Pe- ter Deriabin and Reino Hayhanen, another KGB defector who was-the chief witness against Soviet master, spy Cot- Rudolph Abel. Others have incfuded lesserknown Rans, Poles. East Germans, Chinese and Bulgarians who were on.the lam from their native lands- -, e a'- Francis.-Gary Pow.rs also stayer! .here briefly after the Soviets trade&thecapture4 U-2 spy-plane pOa back to-the. U.S. in return for Col. AbeL In fact; -It-v-as~ Mri Power s's presence here,. w;d* the?nation's press was Today, Ashford Fariii;-with its park-Arse' setting of 62. acres. overfooZcing_. the; tidal. Choptank River neat-' ft point" 'here----it: spills into Chesapeake -Bay R is-up. for sale: It's likely that the government would be willing to give the place away. if It could find a suitable nonprofit oaganiration.to take.it. Unloading-an Elephant- , For the. truth is that-Ashford, Farm:is something.of a white elephant: It has been vacant, except for a caretaker- couple, since 1976, when the CIA appereatiy-decided. the house, was too far from-Washington or had ? become.too well mown and turned it over to~ the General Services lldmic-isi~atilyn. the of. 5dal agency for disposini- ot?'government- owned property. The= GSA bay been - trying. unsuccessfully to ~laad fCewer since..:, j ', THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 25 August 1981 ? A room-by-room inspection reveals some of the reasons. The red-brick main building is certainly.big enough-8,688 square feet of floor area on two floors, with eight bed- rooms and seven baths, plus a four-car ga- rage. But.its architectural style can.best be described as. "bad bogus Tudor." The once impressive circular driveway irr front of the mansion now is almost completely grassed over. The roof of the house leaks, the green- painted wood trim is peeling, and the inte- rior~ walls seem to have been finished by spreading a stucco-like substance over wall- board- so thinly that in places the seams are visible. Just to keep the. place from deterio- rating further. . costs the government about $18,000 a year. Nevertheless,.the four auctions of the. farm conducted so far by the GSA have at- tracted more than 60 bidders. Some of the bids, such as those of John R, Porter of Sev- erna Park. Md., ($210) and Eugene Batis of San Francisco ($10), apparently were based on;a mistaken-beL'ef that the. government was so.desperate.to dispose=of the property that it would sell at any price.. Most of the other bids were at more realistic levels, al- though not quite up to the GSA's own undis- closed -estimate of the farm's true value. A -local -real-estate t:ian believes Ashford should self for $475,000 to $550,000. A ' Problem on the River There was one successful bid-of $550,000 -in 1979 by A.G. Proctor Inc., a Georg a real-estate firm. "We'bought it for'.specula lion.'.'. says A.G. Proctor, the firm's head. Them, he says, Hurricane David "came and. took -about 800 feet of the shoreline"-lead- ing to the discovery that an estimated $800,000 was needed to protect Ashford's 3,- 600-foot frontage on the Choptank River. Mr. Proctor backed out, and the GSA says it then spent about $100,000 on riprap (stone revetment) to protect the house. Un- riprapped shoreline continues to fall into the hoptank; gi?ingpause to prospective buy- :ers. . For much ,of its. existence, -Ashford has stood-'vacant. It was built in- the late 1920s by -a family that came from. Pittsburgh. 'The-man who built it had a mortgage, and he couldn't keep up the payments. For about 1 20 years nobody lived in it. Then my parents bought it from the bank for about $35,000 or $40,0004" says: John Todd, a local resident. He says his mother 'Just bought it to kind of fix It up" and kept it only a year or two. The CIA entered the local scene in 1951 when Peter Sivess, who. now is retired from his former job as head of the CIA's alien branch. bought Ashford for the agency from the Todds for $65,000. Most of the time Ashland Farm was run' by a succession of CIA resident managers. l hir. Sivess would come o out rob em orhin ton im- when there was a special p portant defector, and his wife and son one lived at the mansion for a year and a half' when his own home in Cheverly, Md., was being occupied by a diplomatic defector. Mr. Sivess, a big, g uft man whose long t government career. first with the Navy and then the CIA, was preceded by two and a half years as a pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies. has vivid memories of many of f the government's guests from, were put up at Ashford Farm. Some were "phonies," he says, anQ"omeow gwhat us learned was garbage.. staff he had read in a book." Furthermore, Mr. Sivess says, "there's got to be something wrong with them some- ' place" or they wouldn't have defected. I "Anybody who sells his country down the river is a snake." he adds. There were behavioral problems, too. Sr. Sivess remembers one KGB defector who put away 30 ounces of vodka a day and had a wife who was hooked on peach brandy. "A couple lost their marbles," he says, and some redefected.- They learned. that America "is not a paradise," he ob- serves. Mr. Sivess's wife, 'Eleanor;. was some- times pressed into- service to deal with diffi-: cult wives. She recalls an East -German woman who had married a Soviet officer she had met as a maid in the officers' bar- racks. The woman was difficult to deal with at Ashford, refusing to obey her doctor's or- ders after a' complicated childbirth. "That woman could very, well have been a lady of the street," says .Mrs. Sivess matter o factly. Mr. Sivess says that he ran ' Ashford "on :?` a shoestring," furnishing it with secondhand furniture and'getting its transient residents to help out by painting, gardening and rais- ing chickens and'pigs.-"They had good food'. and clean beds,''. says Mrs.' Sivess. Mr:' Siv- ess indicates that the Spartan way cf.life. was by design since his job was to get-his charges."off on their.. own as quickly as Dos - slvlc... a.-J ....... ---- - often coached for job-hunting efforts Some became friends, particularly Nicho- las Shadrin, a Soviet naval officer who de- fected in Poland with his wife-to-be in 1958. Ivlr Shadrin eventually went to work for the a "He was practIC211y a. member of" my fam- ily. HA-wa,' u3 bt outdoon?'an. ewe t sumabty kidnapped by the KGB. Although Mr. Sives& concedes that- Mr.I Shadrin may ve been a Soviet agent all along. he says. h U.S. Defense intelligence; Agency and' then is said to have become'a double agent for h FBI before he disappeared In 1975. pre- hunte~Vl fe Bshed:~'r~^+= Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/24: CIA-RDP90-06552R000606040030-4 For Sale: AWanion With a Grand 'View And a Spooky Past CIA's Hideaway in Maryland Once Harbored.Defectors From Iron Curtti n Lands Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/24: CIA-RDP90-00552R000606040030-4

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[2] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/collection/general-cia-records
[3] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP90-00552R000606040030-4.pdf