Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power (63 page)

Read Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power Online

Authors: Andrew Nagorski

Tags: #History, #General, #Europe, #Germany

BOOK: Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power
9.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
253
On April 14:
Jonas, 234.
253

could advantageously bend”:
Hooker, ed., 220.
254

the undisputed dean”
and other quotes from
Cosmopolitan
, April and May 1939 issues:
Wiegand Papers, box 31, Hoover.

CHAPTER TEN
: “
ON OUR ISLAND

PAGE

256

I sat for four hours”
and other Lochner quotes from letters:
“Round Robins from Berlin,”
Wisconsin Magazine of History
, Summer 1967.
257
The reports by Truman Smith:
Joseph C. Harsch,
Pattern of Conquest
, 41.
257
By early summer:
Hooker, ed.,
The Moffat Papers
, 251.
257

Optimistic Poles”:
H. R. Knickerbocker,
Is Tomorrow Hitler’s? 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind
, 29.
257

The Polish ambassador”:
Hooker, ed., 249.
258

the death of”:
John Gunther,
Inside Europe
, xxviii.
258

There is a chance”:
Ibid., xxii.
258

John fairly optimistic”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 170.
258

looked clean”
and exchange with Captain D:
Ibid., 171.
259

How completely isolated,”
German headlines, “
For perverse”
and “
Struck by”:
Ibid., 172–173.
259

completely Nazified”:
Ibid., 174.
259

this powder-keg”
and rest of Gdynia broadcast:
Shirer, “
This Is Berlin
,” 53.
259

We’re ready”
and Warsaw visit entries:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 176–178.
260

bombshell”
and “
There is no doubt”
and odds of war:
Hooker, ed., 250–251.
260

It goes much further”
and scene in Die Taverne:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 180–181.
261

The people in the streets”:
Ibid., 183.
261

From about the middle”
and other Beam recollections:
Beam, unpublished manuscript.
262

something was going to”
and rest of Thuermer account:
Thuermer interviewed by author (2009).
263

The excitement of”
and rest of William Russell’s account of August 31:
William Russell,
Berlin Embassy
, 5–29.
265
Józef Lipski
and his story:
Beam, unpublished memoir.
265

I have once more”:
Ibid.
265

a curious strain”
and rest of Shirer’s account of Sept. 1–2:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 197–199.
266

After, say, about 1
A.M
.
”:
Shirer, “
This Is Berlin
,” 71.
266

One expected”:
Russell, 31.
266

The people I have met”:
Ibid., 33–34.
267

It begins to”
and rest of Shirer’s initial war diary entries:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 204–207.
267

The war is raging”:
Russell, 38.
267

Drove all day”
and rest of Shirer account of Baltic coast fighting:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 212–214.
268
Joseph Grigg
and his account, including Hitler at Warsaw airport:
Frederick Oechsner,
This Is the Enemy
, 143–151.
268
The AP’s Lochner
and stories from Poland:
Louis Lochner,
What About Germany?
, 124–125.
269

that Germany is invincible”
and “
I hope”:
Russell, 51.
269

follow me blindly”
and exchange with maid:
Schultz,
Germany Will Try It Again
, 186–187.
270

squeals and shouts”
and rest of reactions to newsreels and massacres:
Ibid., 187–189.
270

Now go to Berlin,”
getting to Berlin and early days there:
Joseph C. Harsch,
At the Hinge of History, A Reporter’s Story
, 38–43.
272

pretty awful”
and “
I was an American”:
Hottelet interviewed by author (2009).
272

The troops seemed”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 234.
272

in the vain hope”:
Russell, 128.
273

the hope of”
and “
It is better”:
Otto D. Tolischus,
They Wanted War
, 199.
273

One Breslau daily”
and rest of Oct. 8 letter:
Louis Lochner, “Round Robins from Berlin,”
Wisconsin Magazine of History
, Summer 1967.
273

In the darkness”:
Russell, 53.
273

the groping”:
George F. Kennan,
Memoirs: 1925–1950
, 107.
274

Shan’t we go”
and rest of encounter with streetwalker:
Ibid., 109–112.
274
At the Soviet Embassy’s
and exchange between American correspondents and Goering:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 245–246.
275
According to the joke:
Harsch,
Pattern of Conquest
, 59.
275
Russell estimated:
Russell, 75.
275

If the United States”:
Ibid., 90–91.
275

It was hard”:
Kennan, 112.
276

the most intelligent”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 284.
276

isolated on our island”:
Russell, 84.
276
goods displayed
:
Ibid., 101.
276

A hundred or so”
and Oechsner dinner:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 252.
277

embarrassingly large”
and follow-up:
Russell, 49–50.
277
In January 1940:
Ibid., 128.
277

unmistakable inner detachment”:
Kennan, 108–109.
277

But here Germany was”:
Russell, 129.
278
two tin bathtubs
:
Ibid., 131–132.
278
“I never expected”
and rest of Jane Dyer episode:
Ibid., 142.

CHAPTER ELEVEN: FEEDING THE SQUIRRELS

PAGE

279

We had not”
and rest of Russell departure from Germany:
Russell, 203–208.
280

The last thing”:
Harsch,
At the Hinge of History
, 47.
281

Only one thing”:
Sumner Welles,
The Time for Decision
, 77.
281
Arriving on the morning
and rest of Welles visit:
Ibid., 90–109.
283

my uncompromising”
and account of Mooney mission:
Lochner,
Always the Unexpected,
262–272.
284

I was stunned”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 312.
284

I never dreamed”:
Harsch,
At the Hinge of History
, 48.
284
Broadcasting from Berlin:
Shirer, “
This Is Berlin
,” 246–247.
284

Hitler is sowing”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 317.
285

the German steamroller”:
Ibid., 335.
285

It’s been dream”
and other Lochner quotes from Belgium:
Lochner, “The Blitzkrieg in Belgium: A Newsman’s Eyewitness Account,”
Wisconsin Magazine of History
, Summer 1967.
285

the behavior of”:
Shirer, “
This Is Berlin
,” 289.
285

houses smashed”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 353–354.
286

But eyeing”
and exchange with German nun:
Ibid., 360.
286
He and two other reporters
and account of tensions among American correspondents:
Harsch,
At the Hinge of History
, 45.
286

Some of the correspondents”:
Henry W. Flannery,
Assignment to Berlin
, 41.
287

when he has forced”
and “
Every German soldier”:
Lochner, “The Blitzkrieg in Belgium.”
287

A most discouraging”:
Beam, unpublished manuscript.
287

France did not fight”:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 434.
288

He folded his arms”
and rest of Hitler at Napoleon’s tomb:
Pierre J. Huss,
The Foe We Face
, 210–212.
289

It was Hitler triumphant”
and rest of July 19 event, including Kirk’s reaction:
Harsch,
At the Hinge of History
, 49–50.
289

The little groups”:
Harsch,
Pattern of Conquest
, 53–54.
290

The loot of”:
Ibid., 45–46.
290

These Germans”:
Ibid., 46–47.
290

a violent anti-Nazi”
and rest of Schultz’s observations on German women:
Schultz,
Germany Will Try It Again
, 143–146.
291

books and magazines”:
Flannery, 115.
291

The word
illegitimate
”:
Ibid., 114.
292

their murder of”
and “
After weeks of”:
Ibid., 110–111.
292

I was one of”:
Ibid., 13.
293

human interest”
and other Delaney quotes:
Edward L. Delaney,
Five Decades Before Dawn
, 58.
293

wanton, premeditated”:
Ibid., 85.
293

He has a diseased”
and other Shirer remarks about Americans working for German radio:
Shirer,
Berlin Diary
, 528–529.
294

swept by”
and “
hiking club”
episode:
John Carver Edwards,
Berlin Calling: American Broadcasters in Service to the Third Reich
, 8–9.
294
On June 25, 1933:
Postcard from and clippings about Frederick Kaltenbach, Frederick W. Kaltenbach Papers, box 1, Hoover.
294

Dear Harry”:
Edwards, 11.
294

Roosevelt, himself an off-spring”:
Horst J. P. Bergmeier and Rainer E. Lotz,
Hitler’s Airwaves: The Inside Story of Nazi Radio Broadcasting and Propaganda Swing
, 61.

Other books

2 Deja Blue by Julie Cassar
All About Yves by Ryan Field
Don't Blame the Music by Caroline B. Cooney
The Kings Man by Rowena Cory Daniells
Enthusiasm by Polly Shulman
The Secret Supper by Javier Sierra
Under a Dark Summer Sky by Vanessa Lafaye
Hiding From the Light by Barbara Erskine