The Great Brown Scare
The Amerika-Deutscher Bund in the Thirties and the Hounding of Fritz Julius Kuhn
A note on the title: Liberal-Establishment historians have an all too effective propaganda device to promote approved ideologies. They invent labels which, in due course, are thoughtlessly parroted and tend to set the desired concepts in concrete, obviating any further need for argument. Thus the raids carried out by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer on subversive and revolutionary Communist groups, mostly on New York's Lower East Side, in 1919 and 1920, have been derisively labeled “The Great Red Scare.” This neatly glosses over the very real threat such groups constituted in the early days of Bolshevik euphoria and proselytizing and the horrors taking place concurrently not only in Russia but in Bavaria, Hungary, and elsewhere under Communist regimes. Thepotent label “McCarthyism” is a later example of the use of this tactic to deflect any expression of concern about subversive conspiracies. T'he “Bund,” however, which is the subject of this paper, was never, as I will show, a danger or in any way unpatriotic or subversive. Its enthusiasm for the recovery of German pride, self-confidence, economy, and independence after 1933 was a natural enough emotion in an ethnic and cultural minority especially one which had suffered great humiliation and persecution during the recent war. But there were many and powerful special interests which sought, with considerable success, to create the image of a frightful menace in the Bund. I have therefore chosen to call this paper by the title above. Besides, even the color “brown” seems a more appropriate modifier for the noun “scare.”
In the feverish eight years of world history immediately preceding the entry of the United States into World War II, there streaked across the American political firmament a rather noisy meteor officially called Das Amerikadeutscher Bund, more generally referred to as the German-American Bund or simply as the Bund. In its brief lifetime, the Bund was the object of much hostility, suspicion and fear. It had an almost univerally “bad press” and wild exaggerations conceming its aims, its size and its resources were uttered with patent self interest and arrières pensées by a number of politicians, journalists and assorted public figures. Yet post-war historians usually dismiss the Bund in a sentence or two when writing general histories of the American thirties. For example:
The Bund appeared to be more powerful than it was. It attracted so few members and aroused so much antagonism that the Third Reich severed its ties with this stupid and noisy organization which it recognized to be a liability.[1]
The tone is still hostile and derogatory but one should recall this when reading the wild accusations by influential politicians and others (vide infra) that its funds and its programs were provided directly from Berlin. The same writer just cited offers an apparently contradictory assessment of the Bund's strength, however, when he tells us that in Februuy,1939, “22,000 members and sympathizers of the German-American Bund packed Madison Square Garden.”[2]
When I first became interested in the history of the Bund about twenty years ago, there was not only no scholarly study of it or of Fritz Kuhn but not even a popular account.[3] Not until 1974 do any such appear and inevitably it is polemical and hostile in tone.[4]
The Bund itself maintained few records. Its newspaper Deutscher Weckruf und Beobachter, is virtually unobtainable, and former members are now dead or elderly and fearful and unwilling to identify themselves or to be interviewed or quoted. Nevertheless, contemporary magazines and newspapers provide us with a great deal of information from which it is relatively easy to filter out the invective and diatribe.
The questions to be addressed in this paper are as follows: What were the ideological, emotional and historical roots of the Bund and how did its enemies encompass its destruction and wreak vengeance upon its leadership? The Bund was, after all, itself a reaction. It was certainly not a `Goethe Society.” And it did not spring into existence fully grown like Pallas Athene from the head of Zeus. In its final form was it a tactless, overly vocal, overly demonstrative reaction of largely unsophisticated elements to a painful and humiliating ethnic experience? Or was it, as its enemies alleged, a sinster and subversive alien conspiracy and a nest of treason?
Richard O'Connor, discussing Sinclair Lewis's contemporary cautionary novel, It Can't Happen Here, tells us:
“It” never did happen here, or even come close to happening. Fascism…was opera bouffe. Its promoters were clowns and its followers slightly demented sheep. A Nuremberg-type rally in Madison Square Garden, with all its sweating solemnity and raucous appeals to unreason, was an hilarious spectacle wnen looked back upon.[5]
The passage just cited was published nearly thirty years after the demise of the Bund and the reader may consider it to be evidence of the persistence of unmitigated dislike for the Bund even among authors who, like O'Connor, are generally admiring of Deutschtum and the German record in the United States since colonial times.
Arthur Smith (vide supra, n.2) remarked to this writer that the Bund was “largely playacting.”[6] Is this consistent with a sinister menace, one must ask. Time describes the Bundesleiter thus: “No great shakes as a chemist was simple, earnest Fritz Kuhn” [emphasis added].[7] On the other hand, O'Connor says:
But appearances were deceiving in Kuhn's case. Actually he was a well-educated man, if not an intellectual. After the war he had attended the University of Munich and received a master's degree in science.[8]
Contradictions abound. On the one hand, we have an entirely undocumented assertion by Harold Lavine of the Institute of Propaganda Analysis that Dr. Goebbels had “created” the Bund;[9] on other hand, we have the utter failure of successive official investigations to demonstrate any connection between the Bund and the Reich government bureaux beyond a natural and unconcealed exchange of literature. A feature article in the New York Times as late as February, 1939, concludes: “There has been no evidence of any active support of nazism [sic] in America on the part of the Nazi [sic] diplomatic force in this country.”[10] Even Alton Frye, a virulently hostile commentator, says:
Since it employed the appurtenances of a Nazi organization, the general conclusion was that the Bund recieved its directions ultimately from the Reich. This was not strictly true, but the Bund readily adapted itself to the will of the Nazi Party without the need of specific instructions. Shortly after the founding of the Bund, Kuhn led a delegation to Berlin for the 1936 Olympics, where he was received briefly by Hitler. This is the only known meeting betwen Kuhn and the Führer and there is no evidence that Hitler attached any special significance to it.[11]
According to Frye, Kuhn nevertheless claimed to Bund members that he had concluded a secret agreement with Hitler, which Frye clearly disbelieves. As we shall see, Kuhn's tendency to brag a little became a source of some embarrassment to Germany and a cache,
gratis, of all kinds of ammunition for his enemies. One of the most energetic and implacable of those enemies was Congressman Samuel Dickstein. Dickstein, testifying at one of the interminable investigations, claimed to have knowledge of the details of secret discussions between Kuhn and Hitler. As history has shown to the present day, Dickstein's is an imaginative race. We may, perhaps warm to Kuhn a little for his reply to Dickstein's charge. Quoting a contemporary radio comic, Kuhn said, “Vas you dere, Sharley?”
The Historical Experience of Germans in America
It is necessary in the course of explaining the roots of the Bund to offer at least a synoptic sketch of the role of the German element in this history of the United States. Construed as a minority ethnic group, Gennans constitute probably the largest single element exceeding even the Irish, with whom they have intermarried considerably. Estimates for those of German or part-German descent range up to 52 million, far exceeding the Blacks and, at least for a while, the “Hispanic” hordes pouring across the Rio Grande.
The usual date given for the arrival of the first Germans in the colonies is 1683, but one writer has asserted that the “damned Dutch” in Jamestown in 1607 were actually the first.[12] The “Dutch” governor of New Amsterdam, Peter Minuit, was born in Wesel on the Rhine, and about 1664, Johann Prinz arrived in New Sweden (now Delaware) with fifty-four German families from Pomerania.[13] The story of Jacob Leisler, the second governor of New York in the confused period of the English “Glorious Revolution” of 1688, is well known.
The first permanent and wholly German settlement did indeed take place in 1683, when Germantown, Pennsylvania.was founded. The German immigrants of 1683 were Protestants of various fundamental sects. Francis Daniel Pastorius, their leader, was an educated man, but German immigrants, in 1683 and thereafter were tradesmen, skilled artisans and farmers. Huebner lists carpenters, locksmiths, shoemakers and tailors.[14]
During the War of Spanish Succession (1701-1713), large numbers of poor refugees began arriving from the Rhineland, devastated by the aggressive designs of Louis XIV. In the single year of 1709, more than 600 families were shipped to the Carolinas.
After the large influx of Hessians, many of whom stayed on after the Revolutionary War, German immigration continued at a fairly modest level. It began to increase again in the period 1830 – 1850 and positively exploded after 1852, amounting to perhaps a half a million in a very few years.[15] Again the preponderance seems to have been workmen, small tradesmen and peasants, although there was a fairly sizeable contingent of liberal intellectuals – refugees from the failed revolutions of 1848.
In the sunnier days before Europe began its suicidal “Peloponnesian Wars.” Germans in America had no doubts about thier successful integration into American life. Germans played a major role in the Federal Army during the War between the States. The XI Corps of the Union Army contained two entirely German divisions and the name of Carl Schurz is prominent in the history of the period. Germans also played an important part in the Westward Movement.
Wine flowed from German vineyards, gold from German-discovered mines, wheat from virgin prairies broken by diligent and skillful German farmers, and blood from Indians who fought the cavalry regiments with their large proportion of German troopers.[16]
During the epoch between the Gilded Age and the outbreak of World War I, a number of German families moved up socially and were assimilated into the then Anglo-Saxon Establishment. Chief among them were the big brewing families of St. Louis and Milwaukee and the meat barons of Chicago. But for the Swabian and Bavarian peasants, the Austrian and German waiters and beer-garden proprietors, a certain, sentimental Heimweh (homesickness) was always present. The Songfest at the local Turnverein Halle (gym) was at least as natural and gemütlich (innocently cheerful) as a Cinco de Mayo parade in Los Angeles or St. Patrick's Day in New York.
The unification of Germany under Bismarck, though incomplete without German Austria, was by 1871 a source of great and justifiable pride for persons of German ancestry everywhere. So was the seemingly miraculous victory over erstwhile mighty France in six short months. Germans had no longer to smart under a somewhat patronizing view of them as rather quaint peasants and pedagogues with a medieval social structure.
In the late nineteenth century there reigned an era of great good will between the United States and Germany. German universities attracted many American students and the American university system itself was modeled after that of Germany and not, as might have expected, after Oxford and Cambridge. German immigrants were encouraged and welcomed because of their enterprise, hard work, and respect for the law.
Not very long after the outbreak of World War I in 1914, this affection and admiration was to undergo an almost total volte face from which it never recovered. It is not necessary here to dissertate upon the causes of this change of heart. It was essentially due to the extremely effective and one-sided propaganda to which the American public was exposed. The effect, however, was that even before the entry of the United States into the war, public sentiment in the United States had become virulently anti-German. And the understandable reaction of German publications in the United States to defend their ancestral land only succeeded in exacerbating the hostility.
Huebner and O' Connor are both very graphic on the subject of the German-American reaction to Allied propaganda and the enormous advantage that the propaganda had in English-speaking, Anglo-Saxon dominated America.
When eminent Americans of German ancestry defended the Central Powers with the same passion which innumerable other Americans were bringing to the support of the Entente, they were dismayed to find that in their case such efforts were held to be akin to treason. Their response – as human as it was unwise – was to speak with only greater anger and violence.[17]
Referring to the last months of 1916, O'Connor points out that “German-Americans” were now “only a few months away from their most traumatic moment in their history as patt of American life.”[18] Huebner writes that at this critical period, the inability of the Central Powers to present their case fairly and the incessant denunciation of everything Gennan caused many Gennan-Americans to become even more pro-German than they might otherwise have been. They bitterly resented the epithet “Hun” applied to themselves and to their kin in Europe as well as President Wilson's contemptuous remarks about “hyphenated Americans” and his doubts as to their loyalty.[19]
In describing H.L. Mencken's biting attack in 1920 on those “who had fought the war with their mouths” – the bullying of elderly German waiters for example – O' Connor has the following very interesting sentence for those of us who have witnessed the same propaganda warmed over for use in the Second World War.
Nor did Mr. Mencken believe that posterity should overlook the New York Tribune liar who invented the story about the German plant for converting the corpses of the slain to soap.[20]
The teaching of the German language was forbidden by statute in twenty-six states.[21] Even Helmann Hagedom, a great friend of Theodore Roosevelt, was suspected because of his German name and the fact that his water-tower “commanded” the arms factory at Bridgeport, six miles away.[22]
The venomous hysteria even extended to the animal world and the lives of dachshunds, schnauzers, weimaraners and German shepherds (temporarily renamed Alsatians) were made miserable by small boys aping their super-patriot fathers.[23]
The end of it all, of course, was what John Maynard Keynes called “the Carthaginian Peace”: the Diktat of Versailles. Not only Germans but even among Germany's former enemies there was a growing number of those who felt a great revulsion at the spectacle of the victorious democracies exulting in their unbridled orgy of revenge, and who perceived in the vicious spite of the victors the seedbed of another war. Harold Nicolson, a member of the British delegation at Versailles, wrote:
We came to Paris confident that the new order was about to be established; we left it convinced that the new order had merely fouled up the old… conscious that the treaties imposed on our enemies were neither just nor wise… that seldom in the history of man has such vindictiveness cloaked itself in such unctuous sophistry.[24]
If Englishmen could harbor such sentiments, it is hardly to be wondered at that the shock and horror at the Diktat and the rea1 or apparent cynical betrayal of the promise of a just peace implicit in Wilson's “Fourteen Points” were infinitely more acute among Germans and German-Americans. It is also pertinent to note that despite the starvation and misery of the immediate post-war period in Germany, the moral stigma which was forced upon Germany by the “war guilt” clause (Article 231) burned as a deeper humiliation and injustice in the German soul than the physical deprivation of food, territory, armaments or money. O'Connor writes of the lingering resentment of German-Americans for their treatment and their suspicion in the thirties that “F.D.R. was heading towards another intervention in Europe.”[25] It was undoubtedly this sense of injustice and persecution which accounts for a certain degree of stridency in the public utterances of the Bund and its leaders.
I have quoted O'Connor at some length precisely because his hostility towards the Bund and his description of it as a minority “infected” with the “Nazi virus” and as a “lunatic fringe” tends, I believe, to lend all the greater verisimilitude to his sympathetic description of the role of Germans in American history. Unencumbered by either love or loathing, we may now approach the study of the Bund itself and its enemies without recourse to the kind of epithets and disclaimers which O'Connor appears to find necessary. That the Bund acted rashly, and sometimes lacked the sensitivity and Levantine subtlety which might better have served the interests it sought to defend, may well be true. But it was a very human and natural reaction to the humiliations of World War I and to the Versailles Diktat as well as glory and pride in the 1933 German renaissance. And if, despite its best and most earnest efforts, Deutschtum was fated never again to win the affection of pre-war days, it could at least win respect. German-Americans and Germans of the Reich alike could derive a thrill of pride at the new mood of hope, the achievement of full employment, and the general transformation in so short a time from pariah Germany into a Germany which spake with such confidence in the councils of World Powers. This writer as a teenager was a personal witness to that extraordinary and ubiquitous mood of joy and uplift, having spent a vacation in Germany from his native England, at that time plunged in the all-pervading gloom of the Great Depression.
Such was the historical milieu into which the Bund was born.
The Bund and its Enemies
The German-American Bund was, in fact, the third generation of successive organizations in the United States which were sympathetic to Germany and to National Socialism. The first of these was the Nationalsozialistische Vereinigung Teutonia.
[A] number of Hitler's followers fled abroad after the abortive Hitler-Ludendorff Putsch of November, 1923, and it would have provided a logical motivation for the formation of a National Socialist organization elsewhere. The founder…, Friedrich Gissibl, had come to the United States in 1923 and probably founded the organization in October, 1924, in Detroit, later moving to Chicago. The life of the Teutonia was about seven years.[26]
The Teutonia was dissolved in March, 1932, and after a confused period during which several insignificant and short-lived groups came and went, was effectually replaced in the summer of 1933 by the Friends of the New Germany.[27]
In January, 1934, Democratic Congressman Samuel Dickstein of New York obtained Congressional consent for the establishment of a committee to investigate “Nazi activities” in the United States. “It was thought that the Nazis would be sure to exploit the fact that a Jew, Samuel Dickstein, headed a committee investigating Nazi activities…therefore [Congressman John] McCormack was selected as chairman.”[28] The work of the committee was “to create the image of a widespread conspiracy with truly giant proportions.”[29] The German Foreign Office was besieged with complaints about the Friends' activities and began to disassociate the govemment of the Reich from any connection with the organization or with its successor, the Bund.[30] Prior to late 1935, these organizations had included in their membership American citizens, both native-born and naturalized, as well as some Reich citizens who were legal resident aliens or temporary residents such as students or businessmen. It is interesting to note that among the native-born American members were some with unimpeachably Anglo-Saxon names. Sympathy for Germany has never been wholly restricted to those of German descent.
In the interests of appeasing the increasingly inflamed teutonophobia in the United States, Deputy Führer Rudolf Hess, in October 1935, acting through the Foreign Minister, Baron von Neurath, issued the Oktober Direktiv. This was an order which forbade the participation of Reich citizens in the United States in domestic organizations or societies. Fritz Gissibl, on learning of this Direktiv, went to Germany in November where he attempted to persuade the Foreign Ministry to permit those who had taken out their “first papers” (that is, had made the initial application for American citizenship) to remain members of the Friends. He was unsuccessful in this endeavor.[31]
In March,1936, as a result of both of the Oktober Direktiv and of the hostile publicity emanating from the McCormack-Dickstein Committee, a final convention of the Friends was held in Buffalo and the German-American Bund was created, phoenix-like, from the ashes of its predecessor. Fritz Julius Kuhn was elected Bundesführer or Bundesleiter. Kuhn had been an American citizen since 1934. He was born in Munich on May 15, 1896. He had served in World War I as a lieutenant in the Bavarian army and had been decorated with the Iron Cross. In 1923, he went to Mexico whem he worked as a chemist. Subsequently, he entered the United States as an immigrant and obtained work as an industrial chemist at the Ford plant in Detroit. He became a naturalized citizen on
December 3, 1934. While in Mexico, he had married a fellow student whom he had first met at the University of Munich. In due course, his wife, Elsa, presented him with a son and daughter (Walter and Waltraut).
During most of Kuhn's period of leadership in the Bund, he was on unpaid leave of absence from the Ford plant, which gave rise to the widespread but unsubstantiated allegation that “certain wealthy industrialists” had financed the Bund. It would appear that “certain interested parties” which already evinced extreme hostility to Henry Ford saw in the allegations about the Bund's finances an opportunity to fire two salvoes for the price of one.
From June 1936 until its dissolution, the characteristic activities of the Bund and those of its implacable enemies take center stage. In default of the Bund's own publications, insights may be – with the greatest caution – achieved from newspaper and magazine articles of the period despite their polemical nature. An article, “Star Spangled Fascists” which appeared in the May 1939 Saturday Evening Post seems minimally fairer than most Thus the “thriving state of our current Fascist crop does not mean that [they] received cash from the Nazis.” The article suggests that the links to the Fatherland are rather “a fraternal source of inspiration.” It offers an estimate of “8000 to 10,000 uniformed, strong-arm storm-troopers.” From the same article we learn that the Bund publishes a youth magazine and four local issues of the Deutsche Weckruf in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and Los Angeles. Some twenty other German newspapers are alleged to give it “aggressive backing.” The Bund s customary activities involve:
a never ending round of meetings, the largest and most successful of which was the recent mass celebration of Washington's birthday in Madison Square Garden. That meeting was attended by some 22,000 Bundsmen and their sympathizers. These activities and the propaganda which they spread all appear to be within the law.
Describing the Bund's “folder of purposes,” the writer says that it begins with the “embrace of the Constitution, Flag and Institutions of the United States” and then lists its enemies as (inter alia):
abuse of the pulpits designed to undermine the Morals, Ethics or patriotism of Americans; all Racial Intermixture between Aryans (White Gentiles) and Asiatics, Africans or other non-Aryans; all subversive Internationalism; the liberal-pacifistic forces undermining the morale of Youth; Alien-controlled, international so-called Labor Movements; the Rackets of International Finance….
The Bund urges, the article continues, an American movement of liberation in order that “the dictatorship of a small racially and ethnically alien Jewish minority to which the mind of the entire nation is being rapidly subjected, may be broken.”
When der Tag comes, the Bund's young men will probably be the first on the barricades. But there is nothing in its progam, either of venom or of violence, that cannot be matched in the propaganda of more authentically American groups.[32]
It is well to keep constantly in mind the wild variations in estimates of the Bund's numerical strength and by extrapolation to consider that all other conjectures, for example as to its treasonable or subversive nature, may be equally wide of the mark. We have just quoted one estimate of from 8,000 to 10,000 members. Here are a few other guesses: an article in the Christian Science Monitor suggests that while a press estimate of from 200,000 to 250,000 may be too high, 70,000 would be a reasonable figure.[33] On January 18, 1938, a Justice Departinent report which stated that no violations of Federal law were involved in the Bund's activities estimated the Bund's strength at the rather precise figure of 8,299.[34] In 1939, the Dies Committee – otherwise known as the House Committee to Investigate Un-American Activities, or HUAC, and chaired by Martin Dies – produced a witness using the alias “Ralph Metcalfe'' who testified to a figure of 500,000.[35]
At a somewhat earlier date, Dickstein charged that the figure was 200,000 and a “war chest” of $20,000,000 existed (about a quarter of a billion in today's terms). To this, Congressman Thomas riposted that “Mr. Dickstein has more Communists in his own district than are Nazis in the whole United States.”[36] In retrospect, most authorities appear to have agreed that the larger figures for Bund membership were sheer fantasy, dreamed up by people with an enduring penchant for vast numerical exaggerations, no doubt; but Kuhn’s own tendency to exaggerate a little added fuel to the all-too-willing fires. he mentioned a figure of 200,000 in 1938.[37]
In the same way, hints dropped by Kuhn of secret agreements he had made with the Reichskanzler himself in connection with the 1936 presidential election were acutely embarrassing to Germany. It was in 1936 that Kuhn and some fellow Bundists attended the Olympic Games in Berlin where Hitler recieved him briefly and accepted from Kuhn a donation of about $3000 for the Winterhilfe (Winter help) fund. Kuhn then implied that his support for Alf Landon had been arranged with the Führer. The German embassy in Washington immediately denied that there was any truth to this story or any attempt to influence American domestic politics.
In March, 1936, the Bund held a protest meeting against the proposal of New York's falsetto-voiced, half Jewish mayor Fiorello La Guardia, to install a bust of Hitler in the Chamber of Horrors at the New York World's Fair. Meanwhile the indefatigable Congressman Dickstein demanded that the House conduct a Congressional investigation of Kuhn's purported $20,000,000 fund. He contended that “thousands” of Bundists drilled every Sunday at Camp Upton; that Henry Ford had not destroyed the plates of his “anti-Jewish book.” Kuhn merely answered that Dickstein was a Jew and a Soviet sympathizer.[38]
A certain Julius Hochfelder, head of an “anti-Nazi” organization now entered the lists. He demanded that Attorney-General Cummings bar the Bund s newspaper from the mails claiming that it was German-subsidized and under the direct control of Dr. Goebbels.[39] A New York Times feature article of march, 1937, reported Bund membership at about 10,000 and ridiculed Dickstein’s “200,000 army of stormtroopers.” It admitted the Nazi idealogy but said there was no coercion, only education, in the activities.[40] The secretary of something called the “The Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League” petitioned Congressman Dickstein and Citrone to investigate a “new Nazi Camp Nordland” at Andover, New Jersey, claiming that it was the seventeenth camp for boys and girls operating illegally on American soil.[41]
The Bund Camps, Camp Siegfried on Long Island and Camp Nordland in New Jersey, appear to have been the sites somewhat bucolic gatherings of Bundist families for picknicking, beer drinking, singing and some pro-German and so-called “right-wing Americanism” speeches as well as some calisthenics and marching about by uniformed children. They were, however increasingly portrayed by their enemies as sinister, para-military training facilities. The reader may care to recall Mr. Hagedom’s water tower (vide supra). In a lighter vein, we find a Bund leader, August Klapprott, protesting that the New York Times had falsely reported that mainly German was drunk at Bund rallies whereas in fact it was mostly American beer that was consumed.[42]
On July 21,1937, Representative Martin Dies of Texas asked a Congressional investigation of the “un-American activities of Nazis, Fascists, Communists and White Russians.” Dickstein urged the adoption of Dies' resolution and wamed that “twenty-one Nazi camps” were close to “big munitions factories.”[43]
You remember what happened in 1916… If you want to fix it so that when we get into trouble again [emphasis added] we will have to fight our enemies from within as well as from without, well, just let this thing keep going on like it is going.[44]
Kuhn answered Dickstein's charges by demanding, as he was repeatedly to do in the next two years, a Congressional investigation “to stop the nonsense…once and for all, I demand as an American citizen, an investigation of our organization and our camps.”[45]
In August, Dickstein, for the second time, inserted into the Congressional Record a list of names of “persons spreading un-American propaganda.” One smeared individual by the name of Dietrich Wortmann, not a Bundist, was the president of an amateur Athletic association. Wortmann complained that under the law he had no redress for Dickstein's slanders and demanded that a committee of inquiry be set up to clear himself of them. Also in August, Julius Hochfelder asked the Immigration and Naturalization Department to revoke Kuhn's citizenship. Kuhn wrote to the Speaker of the House, Bankhead, again demanding an investigation.
But all reaction to the Bund was not hostile. Charles Masterbrook, Vice-Commander of the New Jersey American Legion, said that he could find no more fault with German-American gatherings than with St. Patrick's Day parades. Major-General George Van Horn
Moseley, retired former Second-in-Command of the Army, said, “Nazis in America have only one mission…to see to it that the communists shall not take possession of this nation.”[46]
But teutonophobia was being extended even to sporting events. The Anti-Nazi League of Congressman Samuel Untermeyer (the gentleman who personally declared war on Germany in 1933 on behalf of World Jewry) proclaimed a boycott of the Max Schmeling-Joe Louis fight at the Garden. Bundists in Southbury, Connecticut were arrested under a dusted-off blue law forbidding work on the Sabbath – they had been cleaning up their camp on a Sunday. Bundist meetings were increasingly subjected to violent attacks by organized mobs or else their proposed meetings were banned in advance by local authorities.
In May, 1938, the House approved the setting-up of the Dies Committee, which we have already encountered in these pages. Representative Maverick of Texas, however, said:
It is time this House quit four-flushing and ballyhooing. You know this resolution is aimed particularly at the Nazi movement. It is not the Dies resolution. It is the Dickstein resolution… [and] will cause race-hatred and may prove the entering wedge for persecutions.[47]
Kuhn said later before the Dies Committee that “Jews are Jews first before they are Americans” and quoted the famous Rabbi Stephen Wise as telling a body of the American Jewish Congres (AJC) that he was not an American but a Jew and had been 4,000 years a Jew.
On July 12, 1938, a Suffolk County (N.Y.) court found six officials of Camp Siegfried guilty of belonging to an oath-bound organization and fined them $13,000 under what the Times called “a rarely evoked statute.” Numerous witnesses denied any oath taking but Judge Hill ruled that the evidence of the solitary State witness had equal weight with one hundred contrary testimonies.[48]
HUAC labored mightily and in August brought forth this mouse: “A close relationship exists between the German-American Bund and the Nazi government in Germany.” This certainly did not satisfy Dickstein who complained that the Committee had failed to expose Nazi activities and had instead become a “Red-baiting excursion.” A month or so later, Kuhn sent a notarized statement to Cpngress reiterating that the Bund had 'no political, financial or other ties with the German government. The only ties were those of sympathy for Germany's emancipation from the oppressions of the Versailles Treaty.
Typical of the quality of testimony presented to the Dies Committee is that of Mr. Arnold Gingrich, editor of Ken, Esquire, and Coronet. Mr. Gingrich declared that he had personally seen German Foreign Office documents which proved that the “job” of the Bund was not merely propaganda but to constitute a military organization for sabotage and espionage.[49]
The apogee of the Bund's career came with the great Madison Square Garden rally of 1939. The Times, reporting about it on the following day, said that 22,000 had attended with 1,700 police present to prevent violence. Nevertheless desultory street brawls erupted over several adjacent blocks. As the audience left the Garden, reported the Times, “the most violent anti-Nazis began assaults on individuals.”
The meeting had opened, the report continues, with the singing of the national anthem. There were cheers for Herbert Hoover, Senators Nye, Hiram Johnson, and William E. Borah; and jeers for President Roosevelt. G(erhard) W(ilhelm) Kunze said, “When a
Henry Morgenthau takes the place of a Washington, the country is a deplorable state.” The audience roared a mass response when called upon to give the pledge of allegiance to the flag.
A man named Isadore Greenbaum tried to scale the platform and seize the microphone but was prevented from doing so by uniformed stewards. A former magistrate, Joseph Goldstein, was prevented by the police from serving a writ for criminal libel on Kuhn. An anti-Bund Negro, Peter Saunders, was charged with cruelty to animals after he injured a policeman's horse.[50]
Injuries to people were minimal, however, and the violence was not remotely comparable to the violence in London which was a constant feature of the meetings of Sir Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists at the hands of the Left, or, in recent years, that directed against the National Front and the British National Party. To the bloody prewar violence this writer can bear personal testimony. What does appear incontrovertible from the reports in the New York Times and other major newspapers during the years of the Bund's existence, and that parallels events in London where ideologically similar organizations were, and are, concerned, is that violence was never initiated by the Bund but always by hooligans of the far Left. Conservatives know this pattern to be true for their own meetings. Rightist speakers in Britain, in Germany before 1933, and in the United States have frequently been subject in certain “red” areas to violent attacks and had their meetings broken up. This writer has never heard of a Conservative mob, armed with razors, broken bottles and coshes, breaking up a Leftist meeting. It is about as plausible a scenario as stabbings, gang rapes and drugs at a symphony concert. The New York Times, for example, reported on a group of young lady canvassers for Alf Landon being pelted with garbage and rotten vegetables in New York.[51]
The Hounding of Fritz Julius Kuhn
If the great Madison Square Garden rally of February 20,1939, was the zenith of the Bund's activities, its nadir was soon to follow. The Bund simply dissolved but Orestes was not pursued by the Erinyes with more malignancy than the hapless Kuhn by his triumphant enemies for the next ten years.
On May 25, 1939, Fritz Kuhn was indicted on a charge of having stolen $14,548 of the Bund's funds and was arrested near Allentown, Pennsylvania. With Kuhn were three other high-ranking Bundists, Thomas Dixon, Gustav Elmer and Gerhard Wilhelm Krunze. No complaint had been lodged by any Bund member against Kuhn and the latter protested that he was not, as alleged, in flight but headed for speech-making commitments in Chicago and Milwaukee. The New York District Attorney, Thomas Dewey, claimed, however, that Kuhn was fleein and was “just a common thief.”[52] There were twelve charges in the indictment representing a possible fifty-year sentence for grand larceny and forgery. Kuhn’s office was raided on May 2 and books and papers seized. Kuhn alleged that $1,380 had been stolen from his desk during the raid.
Kuhn was released on $5,000 bail after pleading not guilty. The following day he told a cheering audience of about 1,100 Bundists in Milwaukee, “I have never taken a nickel of the Bund’s money. Dewey is just fishing to line up the Jewish vote.”[53]
The Bund itself regarded the charges as without substance or foundation as was made very clear early in July. “Kuhn vindicated by Bund membership” headlined the New York Times.
At a 3-day annual convention of 330 Bund delegates from all parts of the U.S. which terminated July 3, Fritz Kuhn was re-elected unanimously Bund leader with full power of attorney over all Bund finances.[54]
On July 26, Judge Morris Koenig denied a motion on behalf of Kuhn for the return of documents seized by Dewey's men in the raid on Bund headquarters and on the private home of the Bund treasurer. On August 29 the Dies Committe requested New York authorities to prevent Kuhn from leaving the country. Kuhn denied that he had any such intention. The Dies Committe interim report stated that the Bund, William Pelley’s Silver Shirts, and some other groups were “potent organizations for espionage and sabotage if war breaks out even though this country does not participate.”[55] One can only marvel at this language and what it reveals even before war had broken out in Europe and more than two years before Pearl Harbor.
While on bail awaiting trial, Kuhn’s public utterences were like that of a man bent on his own destructlon or still unaware of the hideous power of the forces now intent on destroying him. On September 3, the day that Britain and France declared war on Germany in defense of Poland (though evidently only in defence of its western half, Kuhn told a Bund rally that the Bund stood for absolute neutrality and no aid to any belligerent. “We shall see how far the Jewish war-mongers go; how far our youth will be driven into war.” And G.W. Kunze, speaking at the same meeting, said, “When F.D. Rosenfeld is thrown out of the White House next year an American will be elected.” Poles in the U.S., said Kunze, were collecting funds for the Polish army and he wondered what would happen if German-Americans behaved similarly.[56]
On September 5, Max and Louis Levant, publishers of the Wichita Beacon, telegraphed Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, asking that Fritz Kuhn be deported along with other Bund leaders as threats to peace and the neutrality (sic) of the country. Kuhn, on 26 September, ridiculed the Dies Committee's decision to seek his indictment for perjury and said that allegations of espionage and of being an unregistered agent of a foreign govemment should be investigated by the F.B.I. and a U.S. attomey and passed on by a court of law not by a committee. Dies replied that Kuhn was afraid to appear before the Committee because “he knows we've got him.”[57]
Parenthetically, Dies, on 28 September, launched an attack on the Ukrainian Independence Movement, which he called Fascist and Nazi. A few days earlier, he had charged that precisely 2,850 Communists held positions in the U.S. government.
Two items in the New York Times are interesting in juxtaposition. On the front page appeared an article which stated that Thomas Dewey had demanded and obtained the raising of Kuhn's bail from $5,000 to $50,000. This being allowed and the money not being immediately available, Kuhn was jailed. The second item, on page seven, reported that William Z. Foster, chairman of the Communist Party of the United States, told the Dies Committee that he would not support the United States in the event of a war with Russia.
An appeal for the reduction of Kuhn's bail was rejected but by October 7, the Bund raised the extra money and Kuhn was released. He was immediately driven to Bund headquarters where he was surrounded and cheered by a small crowd.
On October 13, Kuhn issued a protest against what he termed malcious rumors deliberately disseminated by the D.A.'s office and widely reported in the Press that the bail money was comprised, in part, of the ransom money from the Lindbergh baby kidnapping and murder of March, 1932, more than seven years earlier. Kuhn said that no effort was being spared to poison the minds of the prospective jurors in advance of his trial.
Captain Fritz Wiedermann, German Consul-General in San Francisco, was reported as saying that he did not approve of the Bund which could only caue trouble because its members were American citizens and his advice was that they be good American citizens.[58]
On 6 December, Kuhn was sentenced to 2½ to 5 years in the penitentiary. He promptly designated G.W. Kunze as his successor in Bund leadership. Kunze and G.J. Elmer were, however, arrested a few months later on “undisclosed charges.” They were not held however, and Kunze took over a rapidly disintegrating Bund after Kuhn's incarceration. There is some reason to believe that Kunze really did misappropriate considerable Bund funds, including monies that had been raised to provide for appeals on behalf of Kuhn. At all events, there was considerable infighting and the Bund simply fell apart. Kunze himself disappeared but was apprehended in Mexico and sent back to the United States where he eventually tried for espionage and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. By the time America entered the war, the activities of the Bund had diminished to the vanishing point.
On the subject of Kuhn's trial, however, some comments of Time magazine seem worth quoting. Said Time:
The defense scored heavily; the prosecution auditor admitted an error of calculation of the alleged thefts, all but five charges against Kuhn were dismissed.[59]
Bund members, reported Time, testified that under the leadership principle, Kuhn could, in fact, spend the Bund's funds as he saw fit. After some titillating revelations about Kuhn's private amours – presumably for want of anything more serious – Time's three column article concludes:
Introduced as evidence were two notes by Mayor La Guardia and Tom Dewey written before Kuhn's arrest –
La Guardia “Dear Tom: You can have him.”
Dewey: “I don't want him either. I guess the ashcan is the best place for him.”[60]
Kuhn entered Sing-Sing on December 7, 1939. The penultimate mention of him in the files of the New York Times is almost ten years later, in June 1949, but that is a passing reference to an extensive article, cited and quoted below. For Kuhn's personal ordeal in the intervening years, we are largely dependent on that journal. On the day that Kuhn entered Sing-Sing, the Times reported without explanation that he would be barred from most of the prison's recreational diversions such as movies, football and baseball games, the gymnasium and the fellowship of the prison yard.[61] A later story reported that Kuhn was allowed no gifts or packages.[62]
In May 1940, the House passed a $l,111,754,916 relief Bill for the next fiscal year, with $975,650,000 allocated to the W.P.A. from which Bund members were specifically to be denied benefits. No explanation was offered for this selective discrimination.
In the same month, Representative Leland Ford of California asked the House to revoke Kuhn’s citizenship on the grounds he had “mental reservations” when pledging his allegiance in his naturalization proceedings in December 1934. In October 1940, Kunze, Klapprott and two other Bundists were indicted in Newton, New Jersey, for “promoting hatred and hostility against people of the Jewish religion contrary to a 1935 New Jersey statute.”[63] In December, an annual convention of 600 delegates of the Amencan-Jewish Youth passed a resolution calling upon Congress to declare the Bund outlawed. It should be bome in mind that outlawry permits anyone to kill the outlaw without penalty and one might reflect on certain events half a century later.
In June, 1941, with Pearl Harbor still six months in the future, the New York State Parole Board turned down Kuhn's parole appeal on the grounds that he was a “hazard to public peace and security.” The warden of Sing Sing is quoted as testifying to Kuhn's good behavior.[64]
In the following year, a small item in the Times reports leniency (a suspended six-month sentence for illicit possession of narcotics) for Mrs. Virginia Cogswell “whose testimony helped send Fritz Kuhn to State prison.… “[65] In March, 1942, the Justice Department announced that it would deprive Kuhn of his citizenship and that as soon as he was released from Sing- Sing he would immediately be interned in a camp for enemy aliens for the duration of the war. In June,1943, therefore, Kuhn was taken directly from prison to an internment camp in Texas.
An item, peripheral to our subject perhaps but worth noting as casting light on contemporary attitudes, appeared in the Times in 1944. It concerned a complaint by the “chief investigator of the Dies Committee” that Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau was impeding investigations of subversives by refusing to release information about their tax returns. Referring to such suspects (clearly not of the “Right”), Morganthau denied that many of them could be considered subversive or “un-American.”[66]
In April, 1945, Kuhn's wife Elsa and his teenage daughter Waltraut were arrested by American army authorities near Nuremberg, where they had been living quietly since before the war. On September 17, Kuhn was deported from New York to Germany along with “500 undesirable Germans.”[67]
But Kuhn's ordeal was far from over. A photograph of Kuhn in the Times in November is captioned: “Learning About Internment Camps: Fritz Kuhn, former German-American Bund Leader sitting it out in the internment camp at Augsburg, Germany, where he is confined.”[68] The next story is datelined February 1946. A Lieutenant Roselinsky (sic) from Brooklyn, in charge of the internees in the cells of the Heidelberg Schloss, describes Kuhn as “a beaten, broken man” who “walks with his head bowed, eyes downcast and murmurs `I beg your pardon' every few seconds.” Kuhn is reported as hoping some day to return the United States. He is said to feel guiltless. He claims to have established the Bund to promote German-American friendship but admits that he failed. He says he would have undoubtedly dissolved the Bund the moment that America went to war.[69] Two days later as reported in the Times a U.S. amry spokesman said that there was no plan to release Kuhn as:
He is one of the greatest security threats in the American zone. We can't possibly release Kuhn as long as there are occupation forces in Germany, for he might gather together his henchmen and threaten our security.[70]
Anyone who has any concept of the condition of Germany in Jahr Null (Year Zero) or has comprehended the mental and physical condition of Kuhn from what has been said above, may be excused for wondering if the “spokesman” quoted was affiicted with a very unpleasant sense of humor or was mentally deranged.
Nevertheless, Kuhn was released on April 25, 1946 and entrained for Munich where Elsa, Walter and Waltraut were then living. A Times reporter noted with unconcealed satisfaction that “he will now, like other Germans, have to live on 1,275 calories per day.”[71] On November 29, a small item reports that Kuhn is living “drably” with his wife and children and two other families in a sparsely fumished Munich house. The item, referring to Thanksgiving Day, is headed “No Turkey for Fritz Kuhn.” The gloating tone is unmistakable.[72]
In the following Spring, Kuhn was again jailed. This time he was to be tried before a Bavarian “denazification” court. The Times published a photograph of an emaciated Kuhn talking to a guard in the German prison.[73] In February, 1948, eight months later, while still awaiting trial, Kuhn escaped from Dachau by simply merging with a crowd of visitors and walking out. The prison director was promptly dismissed. In April a Munich “denazification” court sentenced Kuhn, in absentia, to ten years imprisonment and forfeiture of all his property except a small sum of money. The evidence presented against him by the public prosecutor, one Julius Herf, consisted of 23 orders from Kuhn to Bund members concerning uniforms to be worn or American political candidates, such as Alf Landon, to be supported. In Kuhn's absence, no defense was offered, nor could be.
Kuhn was recaptured on June 16, 1948, in the French zone where he had filed a permit to open a chemical laboratory. He was returned to Munich in custody. The Times, in reporting this, said, “He wept as he was escorted back to a cell here.”[74]
Kuhn finally obtained a hearing before a German appellate court on February 14, 1949. He continued to maintain that the Bund had never been affiliated with the Third Reich. Except for two brief interludes, he had now been incarcerated since 1939. The court reduced his sentence from ten years to two years and he was released for the last time on February 22,1949. When news of his release reached the United States, the insatiable sadism of certain elements was once more aroused. The “Non-Sectarian” Anti-Nazi League petitioned the United States Senate to make “comprehensive investigations of army and civilian authorities in the government [they meant “governance”] of Germany.”[75]
The penultimate reference to Kuhn in the columns of the New York Times is in a feature article quoted in extenso below.
Ambassador Dieckhoff sent a series of messages during 1938 pointing out the harm done to German-American relations by the activities of the German-American Bund…. His warnings seem to have been largely instrumental in the ultimate disavowal of Kuhn and the Bund by the German goventment…. Speaking of the possibilities of revolutionary activist conspiracies of U.S. Nazis, Dieckhoff, who exempts Kuhn from such charges, continues that such ideas are ludicrous in the United States and reminiscent of Balkan intrigues in which latter they might be mildy efficacious. In the U.S., says Dieckhoff, the undercover men of the Justice Department would have complete lists of names almost immediately such a conspiracy was formed.[76]
Those diplomatic reports would seem once and for all to put into proper perspective the “deadly menace” of this “monster” with his “250,000 or 500,000 highly trained stormtroopers and his $20,000,000 war chest” and the necessity of imprisoning and persecuting him for ten years. And our last mention of Kuhn is a belated obituary notice in the Times in 1953 which reports that Fritz Julius Kuhn died on December 14, 1951. The information was given to the press by Kuhn's former lawyer, Otto Gritschneider. No mention was made of Waltraut, but Gritschneider also revealed that Kuhn’s widow, Elsa, and son, Walter, were in Mexico where Walter was serving in the Mexican army.
To round out this brief study, I beg to submit a few personal conclusions.
Fritz Kuhn, Magister Artium and winner of the Iron Cross, may well have been typical of the Bund itself. If so, what emerges is a story of a provocative minor movement but not a treasonable one which made enemies far beyond its strength to defy. Its members rejoiced in their ethnic and cultural roots and dreaded what they foresaw as another war against Germany in the near future which would be brought about by the machinations of her implacable enemies (a representative of whom had already “declared war” on Germany as early as 1933).
The Bundists nurtured the hope – which at times one senses was even to them a forlorn one – that through propaganda enlightenment (whichever way it is seen) disaster might be averted.
In the Bundesleiter we find a man, stubborn courageous, sincere – even at times witty – more than a little rash in his actions and somewhat lacking in charm. Kuhn is a German – deutsch and deutlich – without guile. No “fine Italian hand” for Kuhn. In some ways, he and his followers may have been, as Dieckhoff and others feared, more dangerous to the very causes they espoused than to their enemies. Kuhn is the Sorcerer's Apprentice, mercilessly destroyed by the forces he evoked. But if we cannot quite elevate him to the rank of tragic hero, we can at least scorn the obvious chicanery and perversion of justice which not only led to his initial imprisonment but to the ten years of hounding and persecution and prolonged sadistic cruelty which followed. What was Fritz Kuhn’s crime? I cannot discern one. His own organization absolved him from the patently trumped up charge of stealing its funds. No other charges were ever substantiated against him, or indeed, levied. Unless a certain lack of discretion be a crime, I am forced to say that “I find no fault with this man.”
Bibliographic Note
This study has dealt, after the dissolution of the Bund and Kuhn’s incarceration in Sing-Sing, with the subsequent fate of Kuhn himself. Other senior members of the Bund were also subjected to various forms of persecution. This has been covered, though somewhat sketchily, in a book published in 1974 by Cornell University Press. The author is, as expected, hostile to the Bund and its members. However, the dearth of published material on the subject makes even polemical works useful when treated with caution. The author of this particular book is Sander A. Diamond, the title, The Nazi Movement in the United States: 1924-1941. Caveat lector.
Notes
[1] | Wiliam E. Leuchtenberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal: 1932-1950 (New York,1963) p. 276 & 276n. |
[2] | loc. cit. |
[3] | Arthur L. Smith, Jr., The Deutschtum of Nazi Germany in the United States (The Hague, 1965) p. 92n. |
[4] | See Bibliographical Note. |
[5] | Richard O'Connor, The German-Americans: An Informal History (Boston & Toronto,1968) p. 441. |
[6] | Professor Arthur L. Smith in a conversation with the author at Los Angeles, May 19. |
[7] | Time, December 4,1939, p. 18. |
[8] | O’Connor, German-Americans, p. 441. |
[9] | Harold Lavine and James Wechsler, War Propaganda and the United States (New Haven,1940) p. 35. |
[10] | New York Times, February 26,1939, IV, 6. |
[11] | Alton Frye, Nazi Germany and the American Hemisphere (New Haven & London,1967) p. 82. |
[12] | Theodore Huebner, The Germans in America (Philadelphia & New York, 1962) pp. 2ff. |
[13] | Ibid., p. 4. |
[14] | Ibid., passim. |
[15] | Ibid., p. 61. In default of confirmatory statistics, this figure should, perhaps, be taken cum gtano salis. |
[16] | Ibid., p. 146. |
[17] | Ibid., p. 389. |
[18] | Ibid., p. 405. |
[19] | Huebner, Germans in America, p. 149. |
[20] | O'Connor, German-Americans, p. 415. Now where have we heard about human soap before? Déja vu, perhaps? |
[21] | Ibid., pp. 411-12. |
[22] | Ibid., pp. 413-14. |
[23] | Ibid. |
[24] | Harold Nicolson, Peacemaking 1919 (New York,1965) p. 187. |
[25] | O'Connor, German-Americans, p. 434. |
[26] | Smith, Deutschtum, pp. 61-62. |
[27] | Ibid., p. 69. |
[28] | Ibid., p. 81n. |
[29] | Ibid., pp. 82-84. |
[30] | Frye, Nazi Germany, p. 63. |
[31] | Smith, Deutschtum, p. 81n. |
[32] | Stanley High, “Star Spangled Fascists,” Saturday Evening Post, May 30,1939, p. 6. |
[33] | George W. Pate, “How The Nazis Penetrated America,” Christian Science Monitor, October 31, 1942. |
[34] | New York Times, January 13,1938, p. 4. |
[35] | This individual is referred to in later documents as John Metcalfe. Either name, in fact, appears to have been a nom de guerre for a Mid-European immigrant who had been “planted” in the Bund by a Chicago tabloid. |
[36] | New York Times, May 4,1939, p. 2. |
[37] | Ibid., March 16, 1937, p. 3. |
[38] | Ibid., April 26, 1938 p. 3. |
[39] | Ibid., March 12,1937, p. 15. |
[40] | Ibid., March 19,1937, p. 11. |
[41] | Ibid., March 21,1937, p. 1 |
[42] | Ibid., July 17,1937, p. 13. |
[43] | Ibid., July ?3,1937, p. 10. |
[44] | Ibid., July 22,1937, p. 27. |
[45] | Ibid., July 28,1937, p. 4. |
[46] | O. John Rogge, The Official German Report (New York,1961) p. 285. |
[47] | Ibid. |
[48] | New York Times, July 13 1938 pp. 1,16. |
[49] | Ibid., October 7,1938, p. 1. |
[50] | Ibid., February 21,1939, p. 5. |
[51] | Ibid., October 16,1936, p. 20. |
[52] | Ibid., May 26,1939, p. 1. |
[53] | Ibid., May 28,1939, p. 1. |
[54] | Ibid., July 4,1939, p. 4. |
[55] | Ibid., August 30,1939, p. 11. |
[56] | Ibid., September 4,1939, p. 17. |
[57] | Ibid., September 27,1939, pp. 1,9. |
[58] | Ibid., November 26, 1939, p. 32. |
[59] | Time, December 4, 1939, p. 18 (see note 5). |
[60] | Ibid. |
[61] | New York Times, December 7,1939, p. 23. |
[62] | Ibid., January 29,1940, p. 32. |
[63] | Ibid., October 11,1940, p. 12. |
[64] | Ibid June 19, 1941, p. 10. |
[65] | Ibid., March 17,1942, p. 10. |
[66] | Ibid., September 19, 1944, p. 11. |
[67] | Ibid., September 17, 1945. p. 7. |
[68] | Ibid., November 29, 1945, p. 8. |
[69] | Ibid., February 19, 1946, p. 8. |
[70] | Ibid., February 21, 1946, p. 27. |
[71] | Ibid., April 26, 1946, p. 6. The calorific figure given was the official entitlement. Few Germans, in fact, were able to obtain it, and in any case it was mostly carbohydrates. |
[72] | Ibid., November 29, 1946, p. 32. |
[73] | Ibid., July 26,1947, p. 5. |
[74] | Ibid., June 18,1948, p. 11. |
[75] | Ibid., July 17,1949, p. 24. |
[76] | Ibid., July 17,1949, p. 24. |
Bibliographic information about this document: The Journal of Historical Review, vol. 7, no. 4 (winter 1986), pp. 419-442
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