Americans and the Holocaust: a reader
"What did the American people and the US government know about the threats posed by Nazi Germany? What could have been done to stop the rise of Nazism in Germany and its assault on Europe's Jews? Americans and the Holocaust explores these enduring questions by gathering together more than...
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New Brunswick
Rutgers University Press
[2022]
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's digital exhibit |
Zusammenfassung: | "What did the American people and the US government know about the threats posed by Nazi Germany? What could have been done to stop the rise of Nazism in Germany and its assault on Europe's Jews? Americans and the Holocaust explores these enduring questions by gathering together more than one hundred primary sources that reveal how Americans debated their responsibility to respond to Nazism. Drawing on groundbreaking research conducted for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Americans and the Holocaust exhibition, these carefully chosen sources help readers understand how Americans' responses to Nazism were shaped by the challenging circumstances in the United States during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, including profound economic crisis, fear of communism, pervasive antisemitism and racism, and widespread isolationism. Collecting newspaper and magazine articles, popular culture materials, and government records, Americans and the Holocaust is a valuable resource for students and historians seeking to shed light on this dark era in world history. To explore further, visit the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's digital exhibit, available here: https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust"-- |
Beschreibung: | xxxii, 229 Seiten Illustrationen 26 cm |
ISBN: | 9781978821682 9781978821699 |
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505 | 8 | 0 | |t Jewish Telegraphic Agency, "Germany Is Too Easy on Jews, Goebbels Asks Stronger Attack, " Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 26, 1933 -- |t Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, "Memorandum of Conversation between Secretary Hull and the German Ambassador, Dr. Hans Luther, " May 3, 1933 -- |t Associated Press, "German Students Burn Books of Noted American Authors, " (Boise) Idaho Daily Statesman, May 11, 1933 -- |t American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights, "Resolution Adopted at the [National Boycott] Conference, " June 27, 1933 -- |t Americans Assaulted in Germany -- |t Associated Press, "Nazi Attacks on Americans, " New York Times, October 13, 1933 -- |t Sigrid Schultz, "Hitler Assures Dodd Yanks Will Get Protection, " Chicago Daily Tribune, October 18, 1933 -- |t Germany's Jews in Danger -- |t Foreign News, Germany, "Little Man, Big Doings, " Time, September 23, 1935 -- |t President Franklin D. Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 -- |t Boycott the Olympics? -- |t Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 -- |t Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 -- |t "The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 -- |t Nazis in America -- |t Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 -- |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. Block], "Still No Solution, " 1939 -- |t The Refugee Crisis -- |t Associated Press, "Hitler Enters Vienna as Jews Begin to Feel Weight of Persecution, " Public Opinion (Chambersburg, PA), March 14, 1938 -- |t Dorothy Thompson, excerpts from Refugees: Anarchy or Organization? 1938 58 Sympathy without Action -- |t Department of State call for international special committee on emigration aid for political refugees, March 24, 1938 -- |t Gerald G. Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 -- |t Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 -- |t In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals -- |t Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 -- |t "'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom -- |t United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 -- |t President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 -- |t Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 -- |t Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 -- |t Admit Refugee Children? -- |t John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 -- |t Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 -- |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 -- |t Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 -- |t A Refugee Ship at Sea -- |t Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 -- |t "Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 -- |t St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 -- |t Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 -- |t Americans Who Dared -- |t Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 -- |t Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 -- |t Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 -- |t Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 -- |t Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 -- |t President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 -- |t The Foreign War and the National Defense -- |t Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 -- |t J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 -- |t Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 -- |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 -- |t Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 -- |t "A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" -- |t Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 -- |t Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 -- |t Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 -- |t The Nazi War on Europe's Jews -- |t Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 -- |t United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 -- |t United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 -- |t Intervention or Isolation? -- |t Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 -- |t Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 -- |t President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 -- |t Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 -- |t Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 -- |t "Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 -- |t America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 -- |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 -- |t Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 -- |t Hitler in American Popular Culture -- |t Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 -- |t "Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 -- |t Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 -- |t Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 -- |t The Double V Campaign -- |t A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 -- |t James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 -- |t Relocating Japanese Americans -- |t Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 -- |t Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 -- |t Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) -- |t "United We Win" -- |t Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 -- |t Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 -- |t Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- |t R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- |
520 | 3 | |a "What did the American people and the US government know about the threats posed by Nazi Germany? What could have been done to stop the rise of Nazism in Germany and its assault on Europe's Jews? Americans and the Holocaust explores these enduring questions by gathering together more than one hundred primary sources that reveal how Americans debated their responsibility to respond to Nazism. Drawing on groundbreaking research conducted for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Americans and the Holocaust exhibition, these carefully chosen sources help readers understand how Americans' responses to Nazism were shaped by the challenging circumstances in the United States during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, including profound economic crisis, fear of communism, pervasive antisemitism and racism, and widespread isolationism. Collecting newspaper and magazine articles, popular culture materials, and government records, Americans and the Holocaust is a valuable resource for students and historians seeking to shed light on this dark era in world history. To explore further, visit the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's digital exhibit, available here: https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust"-- | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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contents | Machine generated contents note Jewish Telegraphic Agency, "Germany Is Too Easy on Jews, Goebbels Asks Stronger Attack, " Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 26, 1933 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, "Memorandum of Conversation between Secretary Hull and the German Ambassador, Dr. Hans Luther, " May 3, 1933 -- Associated Press, "German Students Burn Books of Noted American Authors, " (Boise) Idaho Daily Statesman, May 11, 1933 -- American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights, "Resolution Adopted at the [National Boycott] Conference, " June 27, 1933 -- Americans Assaulted in Germany -- Associated Press, "Nazi Attacks on Americans, " New York Times, October 13, 1933 -- Sigrid Schultz, "Hitler Assures Dodd Yanks Will Get Protection, " Chicago Daily Tribune, October 18, 1933 -- Germany's Jews in Danger -- Foreign News, Germany, "Little Man, Big Doings, " Time, September 23, 1935 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 -- Boycott the Olympics? -- Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 -- Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 -- "The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 -- Nazis in America -- Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 -- Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. Block], "Still No Solution, " 1939 -- The Refugee Crisis -- Associated Press, "Hitler Enters Vienna as Jews Begin to Feel Weight of Persecution, " Public Opinion (Chambersburg, PA), March 14, 1938 -- Dorothy Thompson, excerpts from Refugees: Anarchy or Organization? 1938 58 Sympathy without Action -- Department of State call for international special committee on emigration aid for political refugees, March 24, 1938 -- Gerald G. Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 -- Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 -- In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals -- Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 -- "'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom -- United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 -- Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 -- Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 -- Admit Refugee Children? -- John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 -- Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 -- John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 -- Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 -- A Refugee Ship at Sea -- Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 -- "Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 -- St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 -- Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 -- Americans Who Dared -- Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 -- Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 -- Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 -- Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 -- Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 -- The Foreign War and the National Defense -- Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 -- J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 -- Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 -- Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 -- "A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" -- Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 -- Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 -- The Nazi War on Europe's Jews -- Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 -- United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 -- United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 -- Intervention or Isolation? -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 -- "Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 -- America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 -- Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 -- Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 -- Hitler in American Popular Culture -- Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 -- "Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 -- Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 -- Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 -- The Double V Campaign -- A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 -- James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 -- Relocating Japanese Americans -- Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 -- Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 -- Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) -- "United We Win" -- Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 -- Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 -- Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- |
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Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Boycott the Olympics? --</subfield><subfield code="t">Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Nazis in America --</subfield><subfield code="t">Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 --</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2="0"><subfield code="t">Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. 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Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals --</subfield><subfield code="t">Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom --</subfield><subfield code="t">United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Admit Refugee Children? --</subfield><subfield code="t">John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 --</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2="0"><subfield code="t">John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">A Refugee Ship at Sea --</subfield><subfield code="t">Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Americans Who Dared --</subfield><subfield code="t">Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">The Foreign War and the National Defense --</subfield><subfield code="t">Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 --</subfield><subfield code="t">J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 --</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2="0"><subfield code="t">President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" --</subfield><subfield code="t">Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">The Nazi War on Europe's Jews --</subfield><subfield code="t">Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Intervention or Isolation? --</subfield><subfield code="t">Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 --</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2="0"><subfield code="t">Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Hitler in American Popular Culture --</subfield><subfield code="t">Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">"Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 --</subfield><subfield code="t">The Double V Campaign --</subfield><subfield code="t">A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 --</subfield><subfield code="t">James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Relocating Japanese Americans --</subfield><subfield code="t">Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) --</subfield><subfield code="t">"United We Win" --</subfield><subfield code="t">Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 --</subfield><subfield code="t">Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 --</subfield><subfield code="t">R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 --</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1="3" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">"What did the American people and the US government know about the threats posed by Nazi Germany? What could have been done to stop the rise of Nazism in Germany and its assault on Europe's Jews? Americans and the Holocaust explores these enduring questions by gathering together more than one hundred primary sources that reveal how Americans debated their responsibility to respond to Nazism. Drawing on groundbreaking research conducted for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Americans and the Holocaust exhibition, these carefully chosen sources help readers understand how Americans' responses to Nazism were shaped by the challenging circumstances in the United States during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, including profound economic crisis, fear of communism, pervasive antisemitism and racism, and widespread isolationism. Collecting newspaper and magazine articles, popular culture materials, and government records, Americans and the Holocaust is a valuable resource for students and historians seeking to shed light on this dark era in world history. 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genre | (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content |
genre_facet | Anthologie |
geographic | USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV047663196 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:53:09Z |
indexdate | 2025-01-29T13:15:55Z |
institution | BVB |
institution_GND | (DE-588)5075370-8 |
isbn | 9781978821682 9781978821699 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033047973 |
oclc_num | 1252864661 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | xxxii, 229 Seiten Illustrationen 26 cm |
psigel | BSB_NED_20220301 |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | Rutgers University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Americans and the Holocaust a reader edited by Daniel Greene and Edward Phillips ; published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum New Brunswick Rutgers University Press [2022] xxxii, 229 Seiten Illustrationen 26 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Machine generated contents note Jewish Telegraphic Agency, "Germany Is Too Easy on Jews, Goebbels Asks Stronger Attack, " Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 26, 1933 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, "Memorandum of Conversation between Secretary Hull and the German Ambassador, Dr. Hans Luther, " May 3, 1933 -- Associated Press, "German Students Burn Books of Noted American Authors, " (Boise) Idaho Daily Statesman, May 11, 1933 -- American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights, "Resolution Adopted at the [National Boycott] Conference, " June 27, 1933 -- Americans Assaulted in Germany -- Associated Press, "Nazi Attacks on Americans, " New York Times, October 13, 1933 -- Sigrid Schultz, "Hitler Assures Dodd Yanks Will Get Protection, " Chicago Daily Tribune, October 18, 1933 -- Germany's Jews in Danger -- Foreign News, Germany, "Little Man, Big Doings, " Time, September 23, 1935 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 -- Boycott the Olympics? -- Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 -- Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 -- "The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 -- Nazis in America -- Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 -- Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. Block], "Still No Solution, " 1939 -- The Refugee Crisis -- Associated Press, "Hitler Enters Vienna as Jews Begin to Feel Weight of Persecution, " Public Opinion (Chambersburg, PA), March 14, 1938 -- Dorothy Thompson, excerpts from Refugees: Anarchy or Organization? 1938 58 Sympathy without Action -- Department of State call for international special committee on emigration aid for political refugees, March 24, 1938 -- Gerald G. Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 -- Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 -- In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals -- Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 -- "'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom -- United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 -- Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 -- Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 -- Admit Refugee Children? -- John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 -- Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 -- John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 -- Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 -- A Refugee Ship at Sea -- Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 -- "Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 -- St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 -- Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 -- Americans Who Dared -- Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 -- Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 -- Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 -- Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 -- Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 -- The Foreign War and the National Defense -- Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 -- J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 -- Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 -- Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 -- "A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" -- Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 -- Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 -- The Nazi War on Europe's Jews -- Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 -- United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 -- United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 -- Intervention or Isolation? -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 -- "Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 -- America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 -- Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 -- Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 -- Hitler in American Popular Culture -- Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 -- "Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 -- Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 -- Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 -- The Double V Campaign -- A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 -- James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 -- Relocating Japanese Americans -- Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 -- Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 -- Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) -- "United We Win" -- Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 -- Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 -- Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- "What did the American people and the US government know about the threats posed by Nazi Germany? What could have been done to stop the rise of Nazism in Germany and its assault on Europe's Jews? Americans and the Holocaust explores these enduring questions by gathering together more than one hundred primary sources that reveal how Americans debated their responsibility to respond to Nazism. Drawing on groundbreaking research conducted for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Americans and the Holocaust exhibition, these carefully chosen sources help readers understand how Americans' responses to Nazism were shaped by the challenging circumstances in the United States during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, including profound economic crisis, fear of communism, pervasive antisemitism and racism, and widespread isolationism. Collecting newspaper and magazine articles, popular culture materials, and government records, Americans and the Holocaust is a valuable resource for students and historians seeking to shed light on this dark era in world history. To explore further, visit the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's digital exhibit, available here: https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust"-- Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Einfluss (DE-588)4151276-5 gnd rswk-swf Judenvernichtung (DE-588)4073091-8 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) / Foreign public opinion, American Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) / Influence World War, 1939-1945 / Press coverage / United States World War, 1939-1945 / Public opinion National socialism in popular culture / United States Mass media / Political aspects / United States / History / 20th century Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) Mass media / Political aspects National socialism in popular culture Press coverage Public opinion Public opinion, American United States 1900-1999 History (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Judenvernichtung (DE-588)4073091-8 s Einfluss (DE-588)4151276-5 s Geschichte z DE-604 Greene, Daniel (DE-588)1249148359 edt Phillips, Edward edt United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Sonstige (DE-588)5075370-8 oth Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, mobi 978-1-978821-71-2 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, pdf 978-1-978821-72-9 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, epub 978-1-978821-7 0-5 https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's digital exhibit |
spellingShingle | Americans and the Holocaust a reader Machine generated contents note Jewish Telegraphic Agency, "Germany Is Too Easy on Jews, Goebbels Asks Stronger Attack, " Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 26, 1933 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, "Memorandum of Conversation between Secretary Hull and the German Ambassador, Dr. Hans Luther, " May 3, 1933 -- Associated Press, "German Students Burn Books of Noted American Authors, " (Boise) Idaho Daily Statesman, May 11, 1933 -- American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights, "Resolution Adopted at the [National Boycott] Conference, " June 27, 1933 -- Americans Assaulted in Germany -- Associated Press, "Nazi Attacks on Americans, " New York Times, October 13, 1933 -- Sigrid Schultz, "Hitler Assures Dodd Yanks Will Get Protection, " Chicago Daily Tribune, October 18, 1933 -- Germany's Jews in Danger -- Foreign News, Germany, "Little Man, Big Doings, " Time, September 23, 1935 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 -- Boycott the Olympics? -- Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 -- Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 -- "The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 -- Nazis in America -- Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 -- Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. Block], "Still No Solution, " 1939 -- The Refugee Crisis -- Associated Press, "Hitler Enters Vienna as Jews Begin to Feel Weight of Persecution, " Public Opinion (Chambersburg, PA), March 14, 1938 -- Dorothy Thompson, excerpts from Refugees: Anarchy or Organization? 1938 58 Sympathy without Action -- Department of State call for international special committee on emigration aid for political refugees, March 24, 1938 -- Gerald G. Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 -- Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 -- In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals -- Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 -- "'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom -- United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 -- Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 -- Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 -- Admit Refugee Children? -- John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 -- Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 -- John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 -- Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 -- A Refugee Ship at Sea -- Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 -- "Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 -- St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 -- Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 -- Americans Who Dared -- Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 -- Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 -- Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 -- Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 -- Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 -- The Foreign War and the National Defense -- Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 -- J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 -- Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 -- Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 -- "A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" -- Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 -- Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 -- The Nazi War on Europe's Jews -- Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 -- United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 -- United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 -- Intervention or Isolation? -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 -- "Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 -- America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 -- Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 -- Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 -- Hitler in American Popular Culture -- Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 -- "Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 -- Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 -- Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 -- The Double V Campaign -- A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 -- James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 -- Relocating Japanese Americans -- Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 -- Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 -- Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) -- "United We Win" -- Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 -- Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 -- Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- Einfluss (DE-588)4151276-5 gnd Judenvernichtung (DE-588)4073091-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4151276-5 (DE-588)4073091-8 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4002214-6 |
title | Americans and the Holocaust a reader |
title_alt | Jewish Telegraphic Agency, "Germany Is Too Easy on Jews, Goebbels Asks Stronger Attack, " Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 26, 1933 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, "Memorandum of Conversation between Secretary Hull and the German Ambassador, Dr. Hans Luther, " May 3, 1933 -- Associated Press, "German Students Burn Books of Noted American Authors, " (Boise) Idaho Daily Statesman, May 11, 1933 -- American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights, "Resolution Adopted at the [National Boycott] Conference, " June 27, 1933 -- Americans Assaulted in Germany -- Associated Press, "Nazi Attacks on Americans, " New York Times, October 13, 1933 -- Sigrid Schultz, "Hitler Assures Dodd Yanks Will Get Protection, " Chicago Daily Tribune, October 18, 1933 -- Germany's Jews in Danger -- Foreign News, Germany, "Little Man, Big Doings, " Time, September 23, 1935 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt to New York Governor Herbert H. Lehman regarding the immigration of German Jews into the United States, November 13, 1935 -- Boycott the Olympics? -- Avery Brundage, President, American Olympic Committee, Preface to Fair Play for American Athletes, October 1935 -- Heywood Broun, "The Olympics Merely an Opportunity for Hitler to Glorify Himself a Bit, " Morning Post (Camden, NJ), October 28, 1935 -- "The 1936 Olympic Games: An Open Letter, " New York Amsterdam News, August 24, 1935 -- Nazis in America -- Joseph F. Dinneen, "An American Fuhrer Organizes an Army, " American Magazine, August 1937 -- Illustration: Herblock [Herbert L. Block], "Still No Solution, " 1939 -- The Refugee Crisis -- Associated Press, "Hitler Enters Vienna as Jews Begin to Feel Weight of Persecution, " Public Opinion (Chambersburg, PA), March 14, 1938 -- Dorothy Thompson, excerpts from Refugees: Anarchy or Organization? 1938 58 Sympathy without Action -- Department of State call for international special committee on emigration aid for political refugees, March 24, 1938 -- Gerald G. Gross, "'Yes, But-' Attitude Perils Progress at World Refugee Conference, " Washington Post, July 10, 1938 -- Foreign News, International, "Refugees, " Time, July 18, 1938 -- In Search of Refuge: Teenage Pen Pals -- Marianne Winter, letters to Jane Bomberger, June 6 and 29, 1938 -- "'Hands Across Sea' Are joined, " Reading (PA) Eagle, February 5, 1939 70 November Pogrom -- United Press, "Hysterical Nazis Wreck Thousands of Jewish Shops, Burn Synagogues in Wild Orgy of Looting and Terror, " Dallas Morning News, November 11, 1938 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, draft press statement following Kristallnacht, November 16, 1938 -- Associated Press, "Treatment of Jews 'Shocks U.S.', " The Daily Missoulian (Missoula, MT), November 16, 1938 -- Gallup Polls on Nazi treatment of Jews and immigration of Jewish exiles to the United States, November 1938 -- Admit Refugee Children? -- John F. Knott, "'Please, Ring the Bell for Us, '" Dallas Morning News, July 7, 1939 -- Non-Sectarian Committee for German Refugee Children, "Suffer Little Children..." April 1939 -- John Cecil, American Immigration Conference Board, America's Children Are America's Problem! Refugee Children in Europe Are Europe's Problem! 1939 -- Clarence E. Pickett and Robert R. Reynolds, "America: Haven for Refugee Children?" The Rotarian, February 1940 -- A Refugee Ship at Sea -- Fred Packer, "Ashamed!" New York Daily Mirror, June 6, 1939 -- "Refugee Ship, " New York Times, June 8, 1939 -- St. Louis Passengers' Committee, draft telegram to American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York City, June 1939 -- Associated Press, "Refugee Ship Is at Antwerp, " Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, June 18, 1939 -- Americans Who Dared -- Associated Press, "50 Jewish Refugee Tots are Happy in New Home, " Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 5, 1939 -- Martha Sharp, Unitarian Service Committee, "Memorandum: Emigration from France to the United States of America, " November 26, 1940 -- Varian Fry, Emergency Rescue Committee, foreword to Surrender on Demand, 1945 -- Marjorie McClelland, American Friends Services Committee, letter to family, July 15, 1941 -- Illustration: Elmer, "War's First Casualty" 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "War in Europe" fireside chat, September 3, 1939 -- The Foreign War and the National Defense -- Confessions of a Nazi Spy motion picture advertisement, 1939 -- J. Edgar Hoover with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Stamping Out the Spies, " American Magazine, January 1940 -- Fortune/Roper Survey on a German "Fifth Column, " June 1940 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "National Defense" fireside chat, May 26, 1940 -- Gallup Poll on US involvement in war against Germany, May 1940 -- "A Wall of Bureaucratic Measures" -- Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, memorandum on limiting immigration, June 26, 1940 -- Cordell Hull, US Secretary of State, telegram to all diplomatic and consular offices, June 29, 1940 -- Albert Einstein, letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, July 26, 1941 -- The Nazi War on Europe's Jews -- Associated Press/Alvin J. Steinkopf, "A Walled Ghetto, Ruin Everywhere, Is What Writer Finds in Warsaw, " Minneapolis Tribune, October 13, 1940 -- United Press, "Nazis Decree Jews Must Wear Badge, " Philadelphia Inquirer, September 7, 1941 -- United Press/Jack Fleisher, "Germans Crowding Millions of Eastern European Jews Into Ghettos, " San Bernardino (CA) Daily Sun, November 8, 1941 -- Intervention or Isolation? -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "To the President of the United States, " 1941 -- Fight for Freedom Committee, "Wanted for Murder: Adolf Schicklgruber Alias Hitler, " 1941 -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "Maintaining Freedom of the Seas" fireside chat, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, "Who Are the War Agitators?" speech delivered in Des Moines, Iowa, September 11, 1941 -- Charles A. Lindbergh, diary excerpts, September-December 1941 -- "Principles of America First Committee, " America First Bulletin, November 22, 1941 -- America First Committee, promotional buttons and stickers, ca. 1941 -- Dr. Seuss [Theodor S. Geisel], "...and the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones..." PM (New York, NY), October 1, 1941 -- Arthur Szyk, "A Madman's Dream, " American Mercury, November 1941 -- Hitler in American Popular Culture -- Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America, Marvel Comics, March 1, 1941 -- "Hotzi Notzi" Hitler caricature pin cushion, 1941 -- Charlie Chaplin, The Great Dictator: Final Speech, 1940 -- Illustration: Chester Raymond Miller, "We're Fighting to Prevent This, " 1943 -- The Double V Campaign -- A. Philip Randolph, "The Negro and The War, " Norfolk (VA) Journal and Guide, January 3, 1942 -- James G. Thompson, "Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 31, 1942 -- Relocating Japanese Americans -- Executive Order 9102: "Establishing the War Relocation Authority, " March 18, 1942 -- Harry Paxton Howard, "Americans in Concentration Camps, " The Crisis, September 1942 -- Justice Frank Murphy, US Supreme Court, dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States (1944) -- "United We Win" -- Henry Koerner, "This Is the Enemy, " US Office of War Information, 1943 -- Lawrence Beall Smith, "Don't Let That Shadow Touch Them-Buy War Bonds, " US Department of the Treasury, 1942 -- Howard Liberman, photographer, "United We Win, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- R.G. Harris, "Do the job He left behind, " US War Manpower Commission, 1943 -- |
title_auth | Americans and the Holocaust a reader |
title_exact_search | Americans and the Holocaust a reader |
title_exact_search_txtP | Americans and the Holocaust a reader |
title_full | Americans and the Holocaust a reader edited by Daniel Greene and Edward Phillips ; published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |
title_fullStr | Americans and the Holocaust a reader edited by Daniel Greene and Edward Phillips ; published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |
title_full_unstemmed | Americans and the Holocaust a reader edited by Daniel Greene and Edward Phillips ; published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |
title_short | Americans and the Holocaust |
title_sort | americans and the holocaust a reader |
title_sub | a reader |
topic | Einfluss (DE-588)4151276-5 gnd Judenvernichtung (DE-588)4073091-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Einfluss Judenvernichtung USA Anthologie |
url | https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust |
work_keys_str_mv | AT greenedaniel americansandtheholocaustareader AT phillipsedward americansandtheholocaustareader AT unitedstatesholocaustmemorialmuseum americansandtheholocaustareader |