WORLD WAR TWO STUDIES ASSOCIATION
(formerly American Committee on the History of the Second World War)
Donald S. Detwiler, Chairman
Department of History
Southern Illinois University
at Carbondale
Carbondale, Illinois 629014519
`
NEWSLETTER
detwiler@midwest.net
Permanent Directors
ISSN 0885-5668
Charles F. Delzell
Vanderbilt University
Terms expiring 2004
Martin Blumenson
Washington D.C.
D’Ann Campbell
Sage Colleges
No. 72
Fall 2004
Contents
Ernest R. May
Harvard University
Dennis Showalter
Colorado College
Mark A. Stoler
University of Vermont
Gerhard L. Weinberg
University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Terms expiring 2005
Dean C. Allard
Naval Historical Center
Edward J. Drea
Department of Defense
Waldo Heinrichs
University of Nebraska
David Kahn
Great Neck, New York
Agnes Peterson
Hoover Institution
Ronald H. Spector
George Washington University
Alan Witt
Iowa State University
Earl Ziemke
University of Georgia
Terms expiring 2006
Carl Boyd
Old Dominion University
Alexander Cochran
Carlisle Barracks, Pa.
Roy K. Flint
Valle Crucis, N.C.
John Lewis Gaddis
Yale University
Robin Higham
Kansas State University
Richard H. Kohn
University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Allan R. Millet
Ohio State University
Robert Wolfe
Alexandria, Virginia
parillo@ksu.edu
James Ehrman, Associate
Editor and Webmaster
Department of History
Norwich University
158 Harmon Drive
Northfield, VT 05663-1035
Robert Dallek
University of California,
Los Angeles
Stanley L.Falk
Alexandria, Virginia
Mark P. Parillo, Secretary and
Newsletter Editor
Department of History
208 Eisenhower Hall
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas 66506-1002
785-532-0374
FA X 785-532-7004
Archive s :
Institute for Military History and
20th Century Studies
221 Eisenhower Hall
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas 66506-1002
World War Two Studies Association
The WWTSA is affiliated with:
General Information
2
The Newsletter
2
Annual Membership Dues
News and Notes
2005 Elections
WWTSA Annual Dues
WWTSA Annual Business Meeting
WWTSA Panel at the SMH
Report on the 2004 Annual Meeting
Appendix: Chairman’s Report
NARA Recent Accessions
Recently Published and Reprinted Books
in English on World War II
2
3
3
3
3
4
5
8
24
Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation
by Christina Fishback
Recently Published Articles in English
on World War II
Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation
by Christina Fishback
36
American Historical Association
400 A Street, S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20003
http: //www.theaha.org
Comité International d'Histoire
de la Deuxième Guerre Mondiale
Institut d'Histoire du Temps Présent
(Centre national de la recherche
scientifique [CNRS])
École Normale Supérieure de Cachan
61, avenue du Président Wilson
94235 Cachan Cédex, France
Institute for Military History and
20 th Century Studies, at
Kansas State University
General Information
Established in 1967 “to promote historical research in the period of World War II in all its
aspects,” the World War Two Studies Association, whose original name was the American
Committee on the History of the Second World War, is a private organization supported by the
dues and donations of its members. It is affiliated with the American Historical Association, with
the International Committee for the History of the Second World War, and with corresponding
national committees in other countries, including Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, the Czech
Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New
Zealand, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, the United Kingdom, and the
Vatican.
The Newsletter
The WWTSA issues a semiannual newsletter, which is assigned International Standard Serial
Number [ISSN] 0885-5668 by the Library of Congress. Back issues of the Newsletter are
available from the Institute for Military History and 20th Century Studies, 221 Eisenhower Hall,
Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506-1002.
Please send information for the Newsletter to:
Mark Parillo
Department of History
Kansas State University
Eisenhower Hall
Manhattan, KS 66506-1002
Tel.: (785) 532-0374
Fax: (785) 532-7004
E-mail: parillo@ksu.edu
Annual Membership Dues
Membership is open to all who are interested in the era of the Second World War. Annual
membership dues of $15.00 are payable at the beginning of each calendar year. Students with
U.S. addresses may, if their circumstances require it, pay annual dues of $5.00 for up to six
years. There is no surcharge for members abroad, but it is requested that dues be remitted
directly to the secretary of the WWTSA (not through an agency or subscription service) in U.S.
dollars. The Newsletter, which is mailed at bulk rates within the United States, will be sent by
surface mail to foreign addresses unless special arrangements are made to cover the cost of
airmail postage.
Fall 2004 - 3
News & Notes
2005 Elections
Enclosed with this issue is the ballot for
the 2005 elections of the association’s
Board of Directors serving the 2005-07
term. Remember to vote for no more
than eight candidates. Please mail your
completed ballot to the association
secretary at the indicated address by
January 7, 2005.
WWTSA Annual Dues
The WWTSA annual membership fee
comes due at the beginning of the
calendar year. Members should include
the enclosed renewal form with their
dues payment.
WWTSA Annual Business Meeting
The 2005 World War Two Studies
Association business meeting will be
held in conjunction with the annual
meeting of the Society for Military
History, to be held at the Francis Marion
Hotel in Charleston, South Carolina, on
24-27 February 2005. The business
meeting will convene at 12:15 p.m. in
the Middleton Room on Friday,
February 25th.
WWTSA may make hotel reservations at
the Francis Marion Hotel by calling
(843) 722-0600 or toll free at (877) 7562121 or by going online at
<www.francismarioncharleston.com>.
Use the group code MILITARY to
obtain the conference rate of $129 per
night. The deadline for room
reservations at the Francis Marion is 25
January 2005. There are also fifty rooms
reserved at the overflow hotel, the
Hampton Inn Historic District. To make
reservations at the Hampton Inn, call
(843) 723-4000 or toll free 1-800HAMPTON. The room rates at the
Hampton are also $129 per night, but the
deadline is 11 January 2005.
For further information on the Society
for Military History’s 2005 annual
meeting, refer to:
<http://citadel.edu/history_dept/News%2
0and%20Announcements/Societyformilh
ist/SMHInfopage.htm>.
WWTSA Panel at the SMH
The association will be sponsoring a
scholarly session at the 2005 meeting of
the Society for Military History in
Charleston. The session is a roundtable
discussion titled “Is World War Two the
New Civil War? Perspectives on the
Place of World War Two Studies in the
Academy and Popular Culture.”
The participants are:
Allan R. Millett, The Ohio State
University
Mark P. Parillo, Kansas State
University
Charles Sanders, Kansas State
University
Mark Stoler, University of Vermont
Janet Valentine, U.S. Army Center for
Military History
The session will run from 10:15 a.m. to
12:00 noon on Friday, February 25th in
Room B-1 (the Gold Ballroom) of the
Francis Marion Hotel.
4 - Fall 2004
Report on the 2004 Annual Business
Meeting
The World War Two Studies
Association annual business meeting for
2004 convened at the Hyatt regency
Bethesda on May 21st, during the
Society for Military History annual
meeting for 2004. Board members in
attendance included Stanley Falk, Allan
Millett, and D’Ann Campbell.
Association secretary Mark Parillo
called the assembly to order and chaired
the meeting.
Parillo began by conveying the regrets of
Chairman Donald S. Detwiler about his
inability to attend due to health
problems. Parillo then reported on the
past year as newsletter editor and
secretary-treasurer. He noted that Jim
Ehrman might be leaving the staff
shortly because of his imminent hire to a
position that would make his
continuation as associate newsletter
editor much more difficult. The
secretary’s report expressed the
association’s gratitude to those
individuals who participated in the
WWTSA-sponsored panel, “Teaching
Military History to Undergraduates,”
held at the recent annual meeting of the
American Historical Association: Dale
Clifford of the University of North
Florida, John Guilmartin of the Ohio
State University, Patrice Olsen of Illinois
State University, Lori Lyn Bogle of the
U.S. Naval Academy, and Michael
were made available to those in
attendance. Special note was made of
Secretary-General Lagrou’s informal
extension of the deadline for paper
proposals for the conference.
When the meeting moved to calls for
business from the floor, there was some
Ramsay of Kansas State University.
Parillo then called for ideas or
suggestions for more panels for the
upcoming SMH and AHA annual
meetings. The treasurer’s report
indicated continued financial solvency
for the association and noted that the
WWTSA reserve account at the Kansas
State University Foundations was
uncalled upon again this year, which has
allowed that fund to rise to a little more
than $800.
Next, Parillo read the association
chairman’s report on relations with the
International Committee on the History
of the Second World War and the 2005
international conference, prepared by the
chairman when he had determined that
he would be compelled to miss the
meeting. The report is included in its
entirety as an appendix to this report.
Printed copies of the report were
distributed to those in attendance.
With no items for action carried over
from the previous year, the meeting
moved quickly through “old business” to
“new business.” The sole item of new
business was the presentation of the call
for papers by ICHSWW SecretaryGeneral Pieter Lagrou for the 20th
International Congress of Historical
Sciences, to be held in Sydney, 3-9 July
2005, which the chairman had been
appended to his report. Printed copies of
the call for papers
discussion about the situation with the
international committee and what might
be done to improve relations. There was
general understanding of the
association’s call for patience in
response to the actions of the
international committee’s leadership.
The meeting adjourned after noting that
Fall 2004 - 5
the next business meeting will be held in
association with the Society for Military
History conference in Charleston, South
Carolina in February 2005.
Appendix: Chairman’s Report on
Relations with the ICHSWW and the
2005 Conference
During the year since our last business
meeting, held in Knoxville, Tennessee,
in May 2003, the president, treasurer,
and secretary-general of the International
Committee for the History of the Second
World War have continued the practice,
reported in detail in the Spring 2003
newsletter (No. 69, pp. 4-5), of
excluding the other members of the
executive committee from fulfilling their
statutory responsibilities, and the World
War Two Studies Association, the
Russian Association of Second World
War Historians, the British National
Committee for the History of the Second
World War, and the Canadian
Committee for the History of the Second
World War are continuing to withhold
payment of annual dues.
The ICHSWW’s three principal officers
have in the meantime issued a new call
for papers for the conference being held
in Sydney, Australia, in July 2005.
Initially they had proposed, as reported
at our annual meeting last year and in
our Spring 2003 newsletter (No, 69, pp.
5-6), a round table on “Norms of
legitimate warfare in history” since
antiquity. The ICHSWW has now
“decided on the following proposal for a
general debate and discussion: ‘Racism
and the barbarisation of warfare in the
Twentieth Century.’ This theme will
allow us to explore the continuities
between both world wars and colonial
and post-colonial conflicts.” Although
the new theme does not focus sharply on
the ICHSWW’s mandate “to promote
historical research on the period of the
Second World War in all its aspects,” it
does far more adequately provide for
consideration of World War II in
conjunction with World War I and other
twentieth-century conflicts.
This new call for papers, a copy of
which is appended to this report, states
that one-page proposals should be sent to
the ICHSWW Secretary-General, Pieter
Lagrou, at <lagrou@ihtp.cnrs.fr>, by 31
May 2004. Because this announcement,
sent by surface mail, reached us too late
to be included in the Spring 2004 issue
of the WWTSA Newsletter (No. 71), I
wrote to the Secretary-General asking
whether the 31 May 2004 deadline could
be extended for a few weeks. He
responded that the ICHSWW has to
communicate its program to the
organizers of the International Historical
Congress by 30 June, but if that were
“not possible . . . , we might envisage
either some blanc entries in the
programme, or a later addendum to the
on-line version on the Sydney Congress
site.”
Unfortunately, as in the case of the
ICHSWW conference held in
conjunction with the quinquennial
Historical Congress in Oslo in 2000,
there is no prospect for reimbursement
of travel expenses from the WWTSA or
from the International Committee for
any colleague giving a paper at Sydney.
In 2000 it was understood from the
beginning that Prof. Mark Stoler’s paper
on ‘The Second War in American
History and Memory’ would appear in
the conference volume, “The Second
World War in the 20th Century History”
(ICHSWW Bulletin No. 30/31, 1999/
6 - Fall 2004
2000, pp. 161-174), even though he
might be unable to attend. Not having
been involved in the planning of the
2005 conference, as I was in the last one,
I do not know whether a paper prepared
for the symposium next year would be
considered for publication in the
proceedings if its author were unable to
travel to Sydney, but the SecretaryGeneral’s response to my recent enquiry
does suggest that American proposals
would be welcome. In view of the time
constraint, I would recommend that any
colleague with a proposal send it by email, airmail, or fax directly to the
Secretary-General with an information
copy to me.
Donald S. Detwiler
Chairman, WWTSA
Vice-President, ICHSWW
22 May 2004
APPENDIX:
International Committee for the History
of the Second World War
Institut d’histoire du temps present
(CNRS)
Ecole normale superieure de Cachan
61 Avenue du President Wilson
F-94235 CACHAN cedex
tel. (33) 01 47 40 68 00
fax (33) 01 47 40 68 03
lagrou@ihtp.cnrs.fr
Website:
<www.ihtp.cnrs.fr/cih2gm/cih2gm.html>
The Secretary-General
Paris, 3 February, 2004
CALL FOR PAPERS
At the occasion of the 20th International
Congress of Historical Sciences, to be
held in Sydney, 3-9 July 2005, the
International Committee for the History
of the Second World War will organize a
one-day conference on the following
theme: “Racism and the barbarisation of
warfare in the twentieth century.”
World War II was the culmination of the
escalation of the violence of war in the
twentieth century, but it was neither the
start nor, tragically, the end of it. In the
course of the century, warfare expanded
in scale but it also transgressed new
thresholds of brutality in the treatment of
both combatants and civilian
populations. The “barbarisation” of
warfare was however not a
homogeneous, undifferentiated process,
driven primarily by new technologies.
Belligerents behaved very differently
with different enemies and distinguished
particularly between opponents
belonging to what they perceived as the
“civilised nations” and all others. Racial
stereotype very often proved to be a
rationale for military and political
leaders, but it also motivated the
behaviour on the battlefield of individual
soldiers. For example, the horror caused
by the use of combat gas during the first
World War contributed to the
establishment of a new interdiction in
the warfare “between civilised nations”,
but not in conflicts opposing a colonial
power and colonised populations, such
as the British Army in Iraq and the
Italian Army in Ethiopia. During World
War II, German soldiers reserved a
radically different treatment for British
and Soviet PoWs and American soldiers
behaved very differently in the Pacific
and European theatres of war. In postwar France, the indignation over torture
by the German occupier and the
glorification of the resistance fight was
not incompatible with similar policies
Fall 2004 - 7
pursued by the French army in Algeria.
Racism, clearly, lies at the heart of
representations of the enemy; it fuels
propaganda and ideology, but it also
produces terrifying effects on the
battlefield and in occupied societies.
In this conference, we will focus on the
following questions:
- What are the continuities and
discontinuities from the First World War
to the Second World War and the wars
of independence in the colonies, in the
racial stereotyping of the enemy?
- What was the impact of the colonial
experience on belligerent behaviour and
post-war conceptions?
- Was the international law of armed
conflict circumvented, or simply not
formulated to include “uncivilised”
nations?
- What was the part of “spontaneous”
racism and what that of army
instructions, field manuals and war
propaganda in the behaviour of
combatants?
- The conference strives for the most
diverse geographical and chronological
coverage possible and especially
encourages contributions on lesser
known aspects and conflicts.
A one-page proposal should be sent by
31 May 2004 to the Secretary General:
<lagrou@ihtp.cnrs.fr>
8 - Fall 2004
Recent Accessions of the National Archives and Records Administration
From July 2003 to July 2004
Records of the U.S. Coast Guard
(Record Group 26), 17 cubic feet
District publications, 1941-98. Materials
open. Contact the Old Military and Civil
Records Staff, 202-501-5385.
Records of the U.S. Geological Survey
(Record Group 57), 1 cubic foot
Civilian Conservation Corps Camps,
Twelfth Period 101-01a(s)
History/Organizational Records 1938–
39. Materials unprocessed. Contact the
Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301837-3480.
General Records of the Department of
State (Record Group 59), 802 cubic
feet
Records Relating to Maritime Affairs
and Port Security, 1949–75; Records
Relating to Owen Lattimore, 1939–86;
John Carter Vincent Security Case File,
1944–64; Records of the Berlin Task
Force, 1944–88; limited number of
Bilateral Political Relations Subject
Files, 1921–73; Records relating to
Hungary, 1941–77; Subject & Program
Files for Bureau of Intelligence &
Research INR, 1943–80; Selected
Logs—Conversations with USSR
officials, and index to President and
SecState Diplomatic Correspondence;
and others. Materials open. Contact the
Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301837-3480.
Records of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (Record Group 65),
2,047 cubic feet
Headquarters Files from Classification
121 (Loyalty of Government
Employees) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1947–73;
Headquarters Files from Classification 9
(Extortion) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1944–80;
Headquarters Files from Classification
123 (Special Inquiry—Dept. of State,
Voice of America) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1948–66;
Headquarters Files from Classification
117 (Atomic Energy Act) released under
the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1948–47; Headquarters Files from
Classification 114 (Alien Property
Custodian Matters) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1945–67;
Headquarters Files from Classification
113 (Foreign Military and Naval
Matters) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1944–50;
Headquarters Files from Classification
112 (Foreign Funds) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1944–73;
Headquarters Files from Classification
124 (European Recovery Program)
released under the Nazi War Crimes and
Japanese Imperial Government
Disclosure Acts, 1948–71; Headquarters
Files from Classification 111 (Foreign
Social Conditions) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1944–88;
Indexes to Headquarters Files released
under the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Fall 2004 - 9
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1938–2002; Headquarters Files from
Classification 110 (Foreign Economic
Matters) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1943–56;
Miscellaneous Records Relating to
Raoul Wallenberg released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1945–93;
Headquarters Files from Classification
97 (Foreign Agents Registration Act)
released under the Nazi War Crimes and
Japanese Imperial Government
Disclosure Acts, 1939–94; Headquarters
Files from Classification 65 (Espionage)
released under the Nazi War Crimes and
Japanese Imperial Government
Disclosure Acts, 1923–82; Headquarters
Files from Classification 96 (Alien
Applicants) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1941–43;
Headquarters Files from Classification
101 (Hatch Act) released under the Nazi
War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1942–48;
Headquarters Files from Classification
98 (Sabotage) released under the Nazi
War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1940–68;
Headquarters Files from Classification
100 (Domestic Security) released under
the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1931–92; Headquarters Files from
Classification 105 (Foreign
Counterintelligence) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1942–96;
Headquarters Files from Classification
106 (Alien Enemy Control) released
under the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1943–69; Headquarters Files from
Classification 15 (Theft From Interstate
Shipment) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1944–45;
Headquarters Files from Classification
107 (Denaturalization Proceedings)
released under the Nazi War Crimes and
Japanese Imperial Government
Disclosure Acts, 1943–44; Headquarters
Files from Classification 109 (Foreign
Political Matters) released under the
Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1945–66;
Headquarters Files from Classification
39 (Falsely Claiming Citizenship)
released under the Nazi War Crimes and
Japanese Imperial Government
Disclosure Acts, 1945–45; Headquarters
Files from Classification 64 (Foreign
Miscellaneous) released under the Nazi
War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1941–89;
Headquarters Files from Classification
19 (Censorship Matters) released under
the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1942–46; Headquarters Files from
Classification 40 (Passport and Visa
Matters) released under the Nazi War
Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1941–78;
Headquarters Files from Classification
45 (Crime on the High Seas) released
under the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1947–49; Headquarters Files from
Classification 52 (Theft or Destruction
of Government Property) released under
the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1947–49; Headquarters Files from
Classification 61 (Treason) released
under the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese
Imperial Government Disclosure Acts,
1925–84; Headquarters Files from
Classification 62 (Administrative
Inquiry—Misc. Subversive &
10 - Fall 2004
Nonsubversive) released under the Nazi
War Crimes and Japanese Imperial
Government Disclosure Acts, 1917–87.
Materials open. Contact the Archives II
Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480.
Records of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (Record Group
85), Less than one cubic foot
Name index to Bureau of Naturalization
Correspondence Files, 1906–46.
Materials open. Contact the Old Military
and Civil Records Staff, 202-501-5385.
Records of the U.S. Marine Corps
(Record Group 127), 364 cubic feet
Korean War Air/Ground Units, 1946–
62; First Marine Division, Korean War
Records. Materials unprocessed. Contact
the Archives II Military Records Staff,
301-837-3510.
Records of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Record
Group 138), 12 cubic feet
Energy Regulatory Commission Docket
Sheets, 1920–78; Commission
Publications, 1942–90; and others.
Materials unprocessed. Contact the
Archives II Civilian Records Staff, 301837-3480.
Records of the Office of Employment
Security (Record Group 183), 24 cubic
feet
Central Files of the War Manpower
Commission 1941–47. Materials
unprocessed. Contact the Archives II
Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480.
Records of the Central Intelligence
Agency (Record Group 263), 35 cubic
feet
Finished Intelligence/Analysis re:
Former Soviet Union CIA Directorate
6/14/46–8/3/1990, materials
unprocessed; Finished intelligence
analyses on the Soviet Union;
Authoritative Statements, 1951–92,
materials security classified. Contact the
Archives II Military Records Staff, 301837-3510.
Records of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (Record Group
311), 8 cubic feet
EOM-2-2 Emergency Mobilization
Preparedness Plans, 1940–82; and
others. Materials unprocessed. Contact
the Archives II Civilian Records Staff,
301-837-3480.
Records of the Army Staff (Record
Group 319), 4 cubic feet
Foreign Personnel and Organizational
Files, 1945–78; POW/MIA/Detainee
Intelligence, 1948–67. Materials
unprocessed and some security
classified. Contact the Archives II
Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510.
Records of the Atomic Energy
Commission (Record Group 326), 19
cubic feet
Oak Ridge Operation Office: classified
portions—various collections, 1942–65.
Materials unprocessed and security
classified. Contact the Archives II
Civilian Records Staff, 301-837-3480.
Records of the Office of the Secretary
of Defense (Record Group 330), 1
cubic foot
"Broad-Narrow Debate." Materials
security classified. Contact the Archives
II Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510.
Records of U.S. Army Operational,
Tactical, and Support Organizations
(World War II and Thereafter)
(Record Group 338), 986 cubic feet
Materials unprocessed and security
Fall 2004 - 11
classified. I Corps, Adjutant General
Section; War Diaries, 1950; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Formerly
Classified General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1942–45; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1950–
54; I Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Incoming and Outgoing Radio
Messages, 1949–50; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1946–
50; I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G4; Journals, 1950–53; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Command Reports of
Supporting Units, 1950–52; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Command
Reports, 1950–53; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Subject Letters, 1945–
50; I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G4; Command Reports, 1952; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section;
Administrative Orders, 1944–53; I
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
General Correspondence (Decimal File),
1942–45; I Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Message Files, 1942–50; I
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Message Files, 1950–53; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Standing
Operating Procedures, 1950–51; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Unit
Histories, 1944–53; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Korean Case Files,
1950–52; I Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Special Orders, 1941–50; I
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Miscellaneous Reports, Directives,
Circulars, and Bulletins, 1940–51; I
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Courts–Martial Orders, 1941–50; I
Corps, Adjutant General Section; Field
Orders, 1941–48; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Daily Bulletins, 1946–
52; I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G3; Exercise Maps and Overlays, 1942–
44; I Corps, Adjutant General Section;
General Orders, 1940–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2;
Intelligence Summaries, 1950; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Registers
of Documents in Operations Journals,
1950–51; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-1; Command Reports, 1950–53;
I Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Numbered Memorandums, 1941–50; I
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2;
Command Reports, 1950–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Periodic
Intelligence Reports, 1950–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Periodic
Reports, 1946–50; I Corps, Assistant
Chief of Staff, G-2; Intelligence
Administrative Files, 1951–52; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2;
Correspondence Log, 1943; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Secret and
Confidential Correspondence, 1953; I
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2;
Operations Journals, 1950–52; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1; Personnel
Periodic Reports, 1951–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Records
Relating to Task Force JACKSON and
the Relief of 1st Marine Division and
2nd Infantry Division, 1950–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Operations
Reports, 1942–50; I Corps, Assistant
Chief of Staff, G-2; Prisoner of War
Preliminary Interrogation Reports,
1951–53; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-2; World War II Intelligence
Reports, 1941–45; I Corps, Assistant
Chief of Staff, G-3; Training Materials,
Command and General Staff School,
1941–44; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-3; Command Reports, 1952–53;
I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3;
Operations Reports, 1945; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Periodic
Operations Reports, 1950–53; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Tactical
12 - Fall 2004
Operations Reports, 1951; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Operations
Orders and Directives, 1950–53; I
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3;
Operations Journals, 1950–51; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Advance
Auxiliary Operations Journal, 1950; I
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3;
Operational Plans, 1951; I Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Personnel
Security Files, 1953; I Corps, Special
Services Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-3; Classified Operations Plans,
1954–60; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-3; Classified Operations
Instructions, Reports, and Orders, 1954–
60; I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G2; Classified Intelligence Report Files,
1952; I Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff,
G-2; Classified Personnel Security Files,
1951–52; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-2; Classified Intelligence
Summaries, 1955–56; I Corps, Assistant
Chief of Staff, G-2; Classified G-2
Journals, 1955; I Corps, Transportation
Section; Journals, 1950–51; I Corps,
Ordnance Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Surgeon Section;
Annual Report, 1953; I Corps, Adjutant
General Section; General
Correspondence, 1955–56; I Corps,
Reconnaissance Battalion;
Correspondence, 1953; I Corps, Rear
Area Defense Section; Command
Reports, 1952; I Corps, Quartermaster
Section; Graves Registration Records,
1944–45; I Corps, Quartermaster
Section; Command Reports, 1952–53; I
Corps, Public Information Office;
Weekly Reports, 1950–53; I Corps,
Public Information Office; Command
Reports, 1950–53; I Corps, Provost
Marshal Section; Provost Court Case
Records, 1946–50; I Corps, Provost
Marshal Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Transportation
Section; Command Reports, 1950–53; I
Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; Classified S-2 Information
Logs, 1952; I Corps, Assistant Chief of
Staff, G-3; After Action Reports, 1950–
5-; I Corps, Armed Forces Assistance to
Korea; Project Files, 1954–55; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Staff
Memorandums, 1944–53; I Corps,
Surgeon Section; Annual Report, 1952; I
Corps, Signal Section; Signal Operation
Instructions, 1950–51; I Corps, Signal
Section; Command Reports, 1952–53; I
Corps, Engineer Section; Unit History
File (Staff Section Reports), 1952; I
Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; Classified S-4 Journals and
Summaries, 1951–52; I Corps, Artillery
Section/I Corps Artillery; Classified S-1
Journals, 1952; I Corps, Artillery
Section/I Corps Artillery; Command
Reports, 1952; I Corps, Armor Section;
Classified Unit History Files, 1951–52; I
Corps, Transportation Section; Staff
Section Report, 1952; I Corps, Artillery
Section/I Corps Artillery; Classified S-3
Unit History Files, 1952; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery; S-2
Logs, Journals, and Reports, 1951, 1953;
I Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; 147th Field Artillery General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1941–
43; I Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; 147th Field Artillery Orders,
Journals, and Messages, 1940–43; I
Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; Fort Bragg Orders, 1950–51; I
Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; Message Cites, 1951; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery;
Periodic Unit Reports, 1951–53; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery;
Artillery Status Reports, 1951; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery;
Headquarters Battery Correspondence,
Fall 2004 - 13
1953; I Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; S-4 Journal, 1953; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery; 147th
Field Artillery Correspondence Files,
1941–43; I Corps, Artillery Section/I
Corps Artillery; S-3 Journals, 1951,
1953; I Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Station and Troop Lists, 1950–53; I
Corps, Artillery Section/I Corps
Artillery; S-1 Journals and Command
Reports, 1951, 1953; I Corps, Artillery
Section/I Corps Artillery; S-1 Subject
Files, 1952–53; I Corps, Armor Section;
Journals, 1950; I Corps, Armor Section;
Command Reports, 1952–53; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Unnumbered
Memorandums, 1946–50; I Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Specialized
Memorandums, 1940–50; I Corps, NonCommissioned Officer Academy;
Command Report File, 1953; I Corps,
Artillery Section/I Corps Artillery; S-3
Correspondence, 1953; I Corps,
Headquarters Company; Correspondence
File, 1940–41; I Corps, Chaplain
Section; Command Reports, 1952–53; I
Corps, Judge Advocate Section; Special
Court Martial Orders, 1949–50; I Corps,
Inspector General Section;
Investigations Files, 1944–53; I Corps,
Inspector General Section; Complaints
Files, 1947–50; I Corps, Headquarters
Company; Extracts from Service
Records, 1949–50; I Corps, Judge
Advocate Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Military Police
Platoon; Orders and Correspondence,
1947–50; I Corps, Headquarters
Company; Company Orders and
Investigations, 1947–50; I Corps,
Chemical Section; Intelligence Reports,
1950–52; I Corps, Finance Section;
Command Reports, 1950–53; I Corps,
Engineer Section; Operations Orders,
1950–53; I Corps, Engineer Section;
Command Reports, 1952–53; I Corps,
Command Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Chemical Section;
Command Reports, 1951–53; I Corps,
Civil Affairs Section; Command
Reports, 1952–53; I Corps, Inspector
General Section; Command Reports,
1952–53; I Corps, Chemical Section;
Activities Reports, 1950–52; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Circulars,
1941–50; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Bulletins, July–December 1952;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Bulletins, 1941–50; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Personnel Assignment
Orders, 1950–54; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Operations Orders,
1951–54; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Administrative Orders, 1951–
54; IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Numbered Memorandums, 1941–50; IX
Corps, Adjutant General Section; Court
Martial Orders, 1941–50; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Special
Orders, 1940–50; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Field and
Administrative Orders, 1941–49; IX
Corps, Adjutant General Section; Staff
Memorandums, 1941–50; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Operational
Memorandums, 1945–49; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Training
Memorandums, 1940–49; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section;
Memorandums, 1951; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Movement
Orders, 1945–47; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Training Letters and
Directives, 1944–47; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Outgoing Message
Files, 1950–52; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Standing Operating
Procedures, September–October
1950;IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Staff Section Reports, January–
June 1953; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Travel Letters, 1941–43; IX
14 - Fall 2004
Corps, Adjutant General Section; Unit
Inspection Files, 1944; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Letter Files,
1953; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Memorandums, 1951–54; IX
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
General Correspondence Files, 1940–46;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
General Correspondence Files, 1947–50;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Classified General Correspondence
Files, 1944–50; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Unclassified Message
Files, 1950–52; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; General
Correspondence Files, 1951–October
1954; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Letter Orders, 1948–49; IX
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Historical Program Files (Command
Reports), September 1950–October
1954; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Artillery Command Reports,
March 1952–September 1953; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Occupation
Histories, January 1949–January 1950;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Quarterly and Final Historical Reports,
January–21 October 1954; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Unit
Command Reports, 1950–53; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Operational
Policy Records, 1951–55; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Incoming
Message Files, 1950–51; IX Corps,
Adjutant General Section; General
Orders, 1940–53; IX Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Secret General Orders,
1952; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Unclassified General
Correspondence Files, 1950–53; IX
Corps, Inspector General Section;
Subject Files, 1950–51; IX Corps, IX
Corps Artillery; Orders, 1941–53; IX
Corps, IX Corps Artillery;
Memorandums and Procedures, 1941–
43; IX Corps, IX Corps Artillery;
Administrative Records, 1941–44; IX
Corps, IX Corps Artillery; S-2 Daily
Journals, October–December 1953; IX
Corps, Command and Chief of Staff
Section; Daily Journals, January–
December 1951; IX Corps, Command
and Chief of Staff Section; Classified
Daily Journals, August 1950–January
1952; IX Corps, Engineer Section;
Engineer Periodic Operations Reports,
January 1951–August 1954; IX Corps,
Headquarters and Headquarters
Company; Company Correspondence
Files, 1942–53; IX Corps, Headquarters
and Headquarters Company; Orders,
1941–49; IX Corps, Headquarters and
Headquarters Company; Historical
Report, 24 September 1940–28 March
1950; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Radio Messages, January–
March 1950; IX Corps, Inspector
General Section; Civil Affairs Teams
Annual General Inspection Reports,
1948–49; IX Corps, IX Corps Artillery;
Intelligence and Operations Reports,
1953; IX Corps, Inspector General
Section; Reports of Investigations,
1951–54; IX Corps, Judge Advocate
Section; Records of Special Court
Martial Proceedings, 1944–49; IX
Corps, Medical Section; Monthly
Reports, 1945–40; IX Corps, Medical
Section; Annual Reports, 1950–51; IX
Corps, Medical Section; Morbidity
Reports, 1953; IX Corps, Public
Information Section; Correspondence
Files, 1951–52; IX Corps, Public
Information Section; Command Reports,
January–June 1952; IX Corps, Public
Information Section; Historical Program
Files, October–December 1951; IX
Corps, Transportation Section;
Correspondence Files, 18–25 June 1952;
IX Corps, Troop Information and
Education Section; Publications, 1951–
Fall 2004 - 15
53; IX Corps, Troop Information and
Education Section; Publications, 1953–
59; IX Corps, Headquarters and
Headquarters Company; Table of
Organization, August 1950; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2;
Intelligence Estimates, May 1954–
March 1955; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Standing Operating Procedures,
1951–55; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Letters of Instruction, 1951–55;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Staff Section Reports, October 1950–
June 1952; IX Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Subject Files, 1950–51; IX
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1; G-1
Periodic Reports, January 1947–January
1950; IX Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff,
G-1; Extracts from Service Records
(WD Form 25), 1945–49; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1; Roster,
August 1950; IX Corps, Assistant Chief
of Staff, G-1; Staff Section Reports,
January–March 1951; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1; Personnel
Daily Summary Reports, October 1950–
December 1951; IX Corps, Assistant
Chief of Staff, G-2; G-2 Periodic
Reports, September 1945–February
1950; IX Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff,
G-2; Periodic Intelligence Reports,
September 1950–July 1953; IX Corps,
IX Corps Artillery; Subject Files, 1950–
53; IX Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff,
G-2; Daily Intelligence Summaries, 31
July 1953–14 July 1954; IX Corps, IX
Corps Artillery; Letter of Appreciation,
October 1954; IX Corps, Assistant Chief
of Staff, G-2; Intelligence Bulletins and
Special Reports, 1950–51; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; G-3
Periodic Reports, 1947–March 1950; IX
Corps, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3;
Operations Reports, 1940; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Cub
Locator Platoon Operations
Memorandums, 1945; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3; Periodic
Operations Reports, September 1950–
October 1954; IX Corps, Assistant Chief
of Staff, G-3; Briefing Notes, March–
August 1951; IX Corps, Assistant Chief
of Staff, G-3; After Action Report,
October 1952; IX Corps, Assistant Chief
of Staff, G-3; Armed Forces Day Report,
May 1955; IX Corps, IX Corps Artillery;
General Correspondence Files, 1940–44;
IX Corps, IX Corps Artillery; General
Correspondence Files, 1951–53; IX
Corps, IX Corps Artillery; Classified
General Correspondence Files, 1950–53;
IX Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Staff Directory, 1949; IX Corps,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2; Weekly
Intelligence Summaries, August 1953–
October 1954; X Corps, Adjutant
General Section; General Orders, 1942–
54; X Corps, G-3; Operation Plans,
1952–53; X Corps, G-3; Outgoing Radio
Message Files, 1952; X Corps, G-4;
Periodic Logistics Reports, 1945; X
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
General Correspondence Files, 1942–54;
X Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Publications Files, 1942–54; X Corps,
Adjutant General Section; Policy Files,
1953; X Corps, G-3; Combat Notes,
1950–53; X Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Outgoing Radio Messages,
1952; X Corps, G-3; Periodic Operations
Reports, 1944–53; X Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Daily Bulletins, 1950–
54; X Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Records Transfer and Destruction
Reports, 1945–46; X Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Statistical Summary,
1953; X Corps, G-3; Operation
Instructions, 1950–52; X Corps, G-3;
Operations Summaries and Special
Reports, 1950; X Corps, Adjutant
General Section; Command Reports,
1951–52; X Corps, G-3; Journal Files,
16 - Fall 2004
1950–53; X Corps, G-3; Nightly
Summaries, 1945–46; X Corps, G-2;
Intelligence Summaries, 1950–52; X
Corps, G-2; Outgoing Intelligence
Summaries, 1951–53; X Corps, G-2;
Journals, 1951–54; X Corps, G-2;
Periodic Intelligence Reports, 1945–54;
X Corps, G-2; Subject Files, 1945–46; X
Corps, G-1; Personnel Periodic Reports,
1944–53; X Corps, G-1; Journals, 1944–
46; X Corps, G-1; Subject Files, 1945–
46; X Corps, G-3; Operation Orders,
1950–53; X Corps, Judge Advocate
Section; Administrative Records, 1952;
X Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Incoming and Outgoing Records Files,
1944; X Corps, Finance Section; General
Correspondence Files, 1943–46; X
Corps, Headquarters and Headquarters
Company; Morning Reports, 1953–54;
X Corps, Headquarters and Headquarters
Company; Correspondence Files, 1943–
46; X Corps, Headquarters and
Headquarters Company; Company
Orders, 1943–46; X Corps, Headquarters
and Headquarters Company;
Correspondence Related to Line of Duty
Status, 1952–53; X Corps, Engineer
Section; Program and Operational Files,
1951–52; X Corps, Inspector General
Section; Investigations Files, 1950–53;
X Corps, Engineer Section; Staff Study,
1950;X Corps, Judge Advocate Section;
Special Court Martial Records, 1942–46;
X Corps, Ordnance Section;
Administrative Records, 1951–52; X
Corps, Provost Marshal Section;
Journals, 1954; X Corps, Provost
Marshal Section; Investigative and
Related Records, 1943–46; X Corps,
Public Information Office; General Press
Releases, 1954; X Corps, Signal Section;
Standing Signal Instructions, 1953–54;
X Corps, Inspector General Section;
Inspections Files, 1942–46; X Corps, X
Corps Artillery; Ammunition Reports,
1951–52; X Corps, Adjutant General
Section; Account Books, 1943–46; X
Corps, X Corps Artillery; Command
Reports, 1950–54; X Corps, X Corps
Artillery; Orders, 1942–54; X Corps, X
Corps Artillery; Journals, 1950–53; X
Corps, X Corps Artillery; Intelligence
Bulletins, 1951–53; X Corps, X Corps
Artillery; Sector Reconnaissance
Studies, 1951; X Corps, Engineer
Section; Periodic Operations Reports,
1951–52; X Corps, X Corps Artillery;
Correspondence Files, 1952–54; X
Corps, Adjutant General Section;
Special Orders, 1942–46; X Corps, X
Corps Artillery; Survey Data File, 1950–
51; X Corps, X Corps Artillery; Unit
Chronologies, 1954; X Corps, X Corps
Artillery; Morning Reports, 1954; X
Corps, X Corps Artillery; Subject Files,
1941–46; X Corps, Engineer Section;
Progress Analysis Files, 1953; X Corps,
Engineer Section; Personnel Control
Files, 1952–53; X Corps, X Corps
Artillery; General Correspondence Files,
1941–54; and others. Materials open.
Contact the Archives II Military Records
Staff, 301-837-3510.
Records of U.S. Air Force Commands,
Activities and Organizations (Record
Group 342), 830 cubic feet
Continental U.S. Numbered Air
Forces—including World War II and
Cold War records, 1940–65; and others.
Materials unprocessed. Contact the
Archives II Military Records Staff, 301837-3510.
Records of the Defense Intelligence
Agency (Record Group 373), 4 cubic
feet
Intelligence Reports of the Defense
Intelligence Agency, 1944–57. Materials
unprocessed and security classified.
Fall 2004 - 17
Contact the Archives II Military Records
Staff, 301-837-3510.
Records of United States Army,
Europe (Record Group 549), 812 cubic
feet
Some materials unprocessed. Contact the
Old Military and Civil Records Staff,
202-501-5385. Judge Advocate General,
General Correspondence, 1944–51;
Judge Advocate General, Miscellaneous
Records, 1949–51; Judge Advocate
General, Classified Decimal Files, 1948–
50; Judge Advocate General, Special
Court Martial Case Files, 1947–48;
Judge Advocate General, Reading File,
1950–51; Judge Advocate General, Case
Files, 1950–51; Judge Advocate
General, Claims Investigation Files,
1945–48; Judge Advocate General,
Claims Investigation Files, 1945–49;
Judge Advocate General, Index to
Claims Investigation Files, 1945–49;
Judge Advocate General, Claims
Investigation Files, 1948; Judge
Advocate General, Claims Investigation
Files, 1945–49; Judge Advocate
General, Confidential Investigation
Reports, 1946–49; Judge Advocate
General, Index to the Confidential
Criminal Investigation Reports, 1946–
49; Judge Advocate General, Other
Claims Units Investigation Files, 1945–
49; Judge Advocate General, Index to
the General Correspondence, 1951;
Judge Advocate General, Classified War
Criminal Case Files, 1949–51; Historical
Division, Correspondence Files, 1946–
49; Judge Advocate General, General
Correspondence, 1947–51; 7966
European Command Detachment,
Miscellaneous Records, 1950;
Headquarters Commandant, General
Correspondence, 1947–52; Headquarters
Commandant, Command Publications,
1947–48; Headquarters Commandant,
Correspondence Relating to Visitors,
1949; Historical Division, General
Correspondence, 1947–51; Historical
Division, Classified Correspondence,
1947–51; Historical Division,
Publication Record Set, 1951; Historical
Division, Classified Records Regarding
Field Training Exercise TTX–51, 1951;
Historical Division, Correspondence
Regarding World War II Museums and
Museum Projects, 1948–50; Historical
Division, Records Pertaining to a Study
on Psychological Warfare, 1946–48;
Historical Division, Records Pertaining
to the Hoffman Photographic File, 1948–
50; Historical Division, Concurrences
Pertaining to Historical Studies Received
from Other Service Branches, 1946–49;
Historical Division, Historian's
Background Files, 1945–52; Historical
Division, Monthly Reports, 1951; Judge
Advocate General, General
Correspondence, 1947–51; Historical
Division, Reports, 1949–50; 7756 Audit
Agency, Publication Record Set, 1949;
Inspector General Division, Classified
Historical Reports, 1950–51; Inspector
General Division, General
Correspondence, 1951; Inspector
General Division, Correspondence
Regarding Complaints, 1949–50;
Inspector General Division, Inspection
Reports, 1949; Inspector General
Division, Quarterly Reports of
Complaints, 1950; Inspector General
Division, Investigation Reports, 1948;
Inspector General Division, Name Index
of Individuals Mentioned in Inspector
General Reports, 1947; Inspector
General Division, Complaint Files,
1947; Inspector General Division,
Miscellaneous Records, 1947–51;
Historical Division, Miscellaneous
Records, 1946–49; Liaison Mission to
the French Forces of Occupation,
Records of Serious Incidents, 1949–51;
18 - Fall 2004
7756 Audit Agency, Reports, 1949;
7965 Area Command, Classified
Correspondence, 1951; Headquarters,
European Command (Rear Echelon),
General Correspondence, 1948; 7966
European Command Detachment,
Classified Messages, 1951; 7966
European Command Detachment,
General Correspondence, 1951–52; 7933
Airlift Support Command,
Correspondence, Reports, and
Logbooks, 1948–49; 7888 Special
Troops, Correspondence, 1950–51; 7888
Special Troops, Miscellaneous Records,
1951; 7888 Special Troops, Orders,
1948–51; 7888 Special Troops, Daily
Journals, 1951; 7891 Headquarters
Command, Correspondence, 1948; 7756
Audit Agency, General Correspondence,
1949; Headquarters, European
Command (Rear Echelon),
Miscellaneous Records, 1948; 7888
Special Troops, General
Correspondence, 1948–49; Records of
the Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Relating to One Time
and Rescinded Reports, 1946–49;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Correspondence Relating to
Reports Control, 1947–49; Records of
the Adjutant General Division,
Classified Actual Strength Reports,
1948–49; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Army Strength
Reports, 1947–48; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1949–
50; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Military Applications for
Permission to Visit Germany, 1948–50;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Invitational Travel Orders,
1950; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Classified Strength Reports,
1950; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Berlin Airlift Food and
Materiel Position Charts, 1948–49;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Staff Studies, 1949–51;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Standing Operating
Procedures, 1947–50; Records of the
Adjutant General Division,
Miscellaneous Historical Documents,
1944–52; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Cable Registers,
1948–49; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Inspection Reports by
Personnel Records Audit Teams, 1948–
50; Records of the Personnel and
Administration Division,
Correspondence, Staff Studies, and
Personnel Records, 1947–48; Records of
the Adjutant General Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1947–
51; Records of the Personnel and
Administration Division, Confidential
Investigation Case Files, 1951; Records
of the Personnel and Administration
Division, Confidential Correspondence,
1949–50; Records of the Personnel and
Administration Division, Accident
Reports, 1949–51; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1947–
51; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Correspondence Regarding
General Orders, 1947–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Special
Orders, 1948–52; Organization and
Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1946–
49; Records of the Personnel and
Administration Division, Personnel
Correspondence, 1949–51; Records of
the Adjutant General Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1947–
51; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, General Correspondence,
1947–51; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Records Related to
Transportation of Mail, 1948–52;
Fall 2004 - 19
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Subject Card Index to the
Decimal Files, 1951; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Unit Address
Changes Reported to the Mail
Distribution Scheme, 1945–52; Records
of the Adjutant General Division,
Classified 201 Files of Military
Personnel Under Investigations, 1944–
48; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1947–49; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Personnel
Name Card Index to the Decimal Files,
1950–51; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Publications
Background Files, 1948–52; Records of
the Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Officer
Strength, 1949; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Letter Orders and
Endorsements, 1948; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Reports of
Individuals Ordered Out of the Occupied
Zone, 1948; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Name Index to
Classified Reports of Individuals, 1948;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Index to Persons Connected
with the European Command, 1948;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Records Related to Inspections
of Army Post Offices (APOs), 1948;
Records of the Military Posts Division,
Classified Decimal File, 1948–51;
Organization and Training Division,
Classified Historical Reports, 1947–49;
Organization and Training Division,
Memos, 1950–52; Organization and
Training Division, Classified Operations
Reports, 1951; Organization and
Training Division, General
Correspondence, 1948–51; Records of
the Military Posts Division, Classified
Correspondence, 1950; Records of the
Military Posts Division, Classified
Decimal File Publications, 1948;
Records of the Military Posts Division,
Classified Signal Decimal File Reports,
1949–50; Organization and Training
Division, General Correspondence
(Decimal Files), 1950; Records of the
Military Posts Division, Reports, 1951;
Organization and Training Division,
Correspondence, 1949–52; Records of
the Military Posts Division, Historical
Records, 1950–51; Records of the
Military Posts Division, Staff Visit
Reports, 1951; Records of the Military
Posts Division, Command Inspection
Reports, 1951; Records of the
Transportation Division, Publication
Background Files, 1947–52; Records of
the Transportation Division, General
Correspondence, 1947–51; European
Exchange System, Personnel
Correspondence, 1947–50; Records of
the Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Special
Orders, 1948–52; Records of the
Military Posts Division, Publication
Records Set, 1951; Organization and
Training Division, Miscellaneous
Subject Files, 1949–50; Records of the
Personnel and Administration Division,
Reports, 1948–50; Records of the
Personnel and Administration Division,
General Correspondence (Decimal File),
1948–51; Organization and Training
Division, Confidential Strength Reports,
1951; Organization and Training
Division, General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1949–51; Organization
and Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1950–
52; Organization and Training Division,
Correspondence, 1950–52; Organization
and Training Division, Exercise Reports,
1950–51; Organization and Training
Division, Records Pertaining to
Logistical War Maneuvers in Western
Europe, 1948–50; Organization and
20 - Fall 2004
Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1950;
Organization and Training Division,
Miscellaneous Classified Records,
1946–49; Organization and Training
Division, General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1949–50; Organization
and Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1949–
51; Organization and Training Division,
Equipment List Reports, 1951–52;
Organization and Training Division,
Case Files, 1949–50; Organization and
Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal Files, 1949–
52; Organization and Training Division,
Survey Reports, 1951; Organization and
Training Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal Files) 1950;
Records of the Personnel and
Administration Division, Office memos,
1949–51; Organization and Training
Division, General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1950–52; Records of the
Special Activities Division, Reports,
1946–48; European Exchange System,
General Correspondence (Decimal File),
1947–51; European Exchange System,
General Correspondence (Decimal File,
1950–51; European Exchange System,
Subject Correspondence, 1950–51;
Records of the Special Activities
Division, Cables, 1948–49; Records of
the Special Activities Division,
Narrative Report, 1949; Records of the
Special Activities Division, Publications
Record Set, 1950–51; Records of the
Special Activities Division, Annual
Narrative Report, 1950; Records of the
Special Activities Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951;
Records of the Special Activities
Division, Cables, 1949–51; Records of
the Special Activities Division, Touring
Celebrities Correspondence, 1948;
European Exchange System, Daily
Recapitulation of Outgoing Messages,
1949; Records of the Special Activities
Division, Correspondence Regarding
European Tours, 1949; Records of the
Special Activities Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951;
Records of the Special Activities
Division, Minutes of Meetings of the
Army Athletic Board, 1951; Records of
the Special Activities Division,
Correspondence, 1946–48; European
Exchange System, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951;
Records of the Special Activities
Division, Orders, Bulletins and Memos,
1947–51; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Letter Orders, 1949–
52; Records of the Special Activities
Division, Daily Journals, 1950; Records
of the Special Activities Division,
Correspondence with Military Posts,
1948–49; European Exchange System,
Organization Manuals, 1951; European
Exchange System, Personnel Rosters,
1950; European Exchange System,
Memos and Correspondence, 1946–51;
European Exchange System, Operational
Procedure Records, 1947–49; European
Exchange System, General
Correspondence, 1949–51; European
Exchange System, Publications Record
Set, 1949–51; European Exchange
System, General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1949–51; European
Exchange System, Subject
Correspondence, 1950; European
Exchange System, Financial Statements,
1949–51; European Exchange System,
Civilian Employee and Military Officers
Correspondence, 1950; European
Exchange System, Miscellaneous
Records, 1947–50; European Exchange
System, Daily Journals, 1950–51;
European Exchange System,
Regulations, 1949–51; European
Exchange System, Standard Operating
Fall 2004 - 21
Procedures, 1947–50; European
Exchange System, Monthly Installation
Status Reports, 1948–49; European
Exchange System, Clippings from "Stars
and Stripes", 1946–50; European
Exchange System, Graphs and Statistical
Charts, 1947–50; European Exchange
System, Reports, 1947–49; European
Exchange System, Minutes, 1947–51;
European Exchange System, Monthly
Agendas for Meetings of the European
Exchange Council, 1947–51; Records of
the Special Activities Division,
Operations Reports, 1946–49; European
Exchange System, Publications Record
Set, 1949–51; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Correspondence
Regarding Circulars, 1948–52; Records
of the Chaplain's Division, Journals,
1951–52; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Administrative
Memos, 1951; Records of the Special
Activities Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1948–
51; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Classified Publications, 1949–
51; Records of the Special Activities
Division, Reports, Circulars and
Technical Bulletins, 1948–51; Records
of the Adjutant General Division,
Classified Letters, 1951; Records of the
Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Training
Memos, 1947–50; Records of the
Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Weekly
Directives, 1948–52; Records of the
Chaplain's Division, Information Letters
and Reports, 1947–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Civilian
Personnel Circulars, 1947–49; Records
of the Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Other
Publications, 1947–51; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Circulars,
1947–52; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Troop Assignments
and Training Circulars, 1950–52;
Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Correspondence Regarding
Staff Memos, 1947–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Civilian
Personnel Memos, 1947–49; Records of
the Adjutant General Division,
Correspondence Regarding Unnumbered
Memos, 1949–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Unnumbered
Memos, 1950–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Court
Martial Orders, 1950–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, FTX–51
Orders, 1951; Records of the Adjutant
General Division, Endorsements to
Letter Orders, 1950–52; Records of the
Adjutant General Division, Weekly
Directives, 1948–52; Records of the
Provost Marshal's Division, Confidential
Investigation Reports, 1948; Records of
the Public Information Division, Reports
and Memos, 1951; Records of the Public
Information Division, Minutes of Press
Correspondence, 1947–49; Records of
the Public Information Division,
Historical Reports, 1949–51; Records of
the Public Information Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1947–
51; Records of the Adjutant General
Division, Directive Letters, 1949–52;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Serious Incident Investigation
Case Files, 1950; Records of the
Chaplain's Division, Historical Reports,
1947–50; Records of the Provost
Marshal's Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1947–
49; Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Daily Teletype Diary, 1951;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Letter Orders, 1950–51;
Records of the Chaplain's Division,
22 - Fall 2004
Statistical Charts and Reports, 1947–50;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Signal Center Messages, 1950;
Records of the Chaplain's Division,
Visual Aids and Briefing Notes, 1951–
52; Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Backup Special Orders, 1951–
52; Records of the Chaplain's Division,
Consolidated Monthly Personnel
Reports, 1948–51; Records of the
Provost Marshal's Division, General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1948–
51; Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Correspondence, 1950;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Daily Diaries, 1946–51;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Operations Reports, 1946–49;
Records of the Provost Marshal's
Division, Classified Command Reports,
1950–51; Records of the Provost
Marshal's Division, Memos and
Bulletins, 1948–50; Berlin Brigade
General Correspondence, 1951–53;
Berlin Brigade General Correspondence
(Decimal Files), 1947–52; Berlin
Brigade Correspondence, 1946–52;
Berlin Brigade Reports of Investigation,
1946–48; U.S. Constabulary 6th
Constabulary Regiment Publication
Record Set, 1947; U.S. Constabulary
Daily Staff Conference Notes, 1946–47;
U.S. Constabulary Investigation Reports
of Enlisted Personnel and Civilians,
1950; U.S. Constabulary Publication
Record Set, 1947–50; U.S. Constabulary
Serious Incident Case Files, 1950; Berlin
Brigade Reports, 1952–53; U.S.
Constabulary General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1948–50; Berlin Brigade
Surgeon General's Office Report Files,
1952–53; 7880th Military Intelligence
Detachment Intelligence General
Correspondence, 1950–53; U.S.
Constabulary Messages, 1948–50;
Western Area Command Military
Commission Case Files, 1949–52;
Western Area Command Organization
Planning Files, 1951–54; Headquarters
Area Command the Heidelberg Post,
1948–58; Advance Section,
Communications Zone, Adjutant
General Branch Correspondence, 1951–
53; Base Section, Communications
Zone, Medical Branch General
Correspondence (Decimal Files), 1951–
53; Base Section, Communications
Zone, Information and Education Branch
Basic Mission, 1953, Base Section,
Communications Zone, Adjutant
General Branch Correspondence, 1951–
52; Base Section, Communications
Zone, Adjutant General Branch
Publication Record Set, 1951–53, Base
Section, Communications Zone,
Adjutant General Branch Outgoing
Messages, 1951–52; Base Section,
Communications Zone, Adjutant
General Branch General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1951–53; Base Section,
Communications Zone, Comptroller's
Office Organizational records and
Efficiency Correspondence, 1952–53;
Advance Section, Communications
Zone, G-3 Division Unit History
Reports, 1953; Base Section,
Communications Zone, Signal Branch
General Correspondence (Decimal File),
1953; Advance Section,
Communications Zone, Adjutant
General Branch Publication Record Set,
1951–53; Advance Section,
Communications Zone, Adjutant
General Branch Correspondence, 1951;
Advance Section, Communications
Zone, Adjutant General Branch General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951–
53; Headquarters, Communications
Zone, Transportation Division messages,
1951–52; Headquarters,
Communications Zone, Transportation
Division General Correspondence
Fall 2004 - 23
(Decimal File), 1952–53; Headquarters,
Communications Zone, Signal Division
General Correspondence (Decimal File),
1951–53; Headquarters,
Communications Zone, Quartermaster
Division General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1951–53; Headquarters,
Communications Zone, Quartermaster
Division Subject Correspondence, 1951;
Base Section, Communications Zone, G3 Division Historical Document Slips
and Cards, 1953; Base Section,
Communications Zone, Provost Marshal
Branch Historical Records, 1952–53;
Seine Area Command Records Relating
to Security, 1953–54; Base Section,
Communications Zone, Quartermaster
Branch General Correspondence
(Decimal File), 1951–53; Seine Area
Command Publications Record Set,
Orleans Area Command, Verdun-Metz
District Engineer Office General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951–
52; Orleans Area Command, Adjutant
General's Office General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1952;
Headquarters, Communications Zone,
Provost Division General
Correspondence (Decimal File), 1951–
52; and others. Materials have been
reallocated from Record Group 338 and
are open. Contact the Archives II
Military Records Staff, 301-837-3510.
Editor’s Note: Descriptions of processing status are dated July 2004 or earlier. Accordingly, some
materials listed as unprocessed may now be open.
24 - Fall 2004
Recently Published and Reprinted Books in English on World War II
Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation
by Christina Fishback
Aalders, Gerard. Nazi Looting: The Plunder of Dutch Jewry during the Second World
War. Oxford, UK; New York: Berg, 2004.
Ailsby, Christopher. Hitler’s Renegades: Foreign Nationals in the Service of the Third
Reich. Dulles, Va.: Brassey’s, 2004.
Alexander, Jeffrey C. Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity. Berkeley, Cal.: University
of California Press, 2004.
Allen, Martin. The Hitler/Hess Deception: British Intelligence’s Best-Kept Secret of the
Second World War. London: HarperCollins, 2004.
Allinson, Gary D. Japan’s Postwar History. 2nd ed. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University
Press, 2004.
Aly, Götz, et al. The Nazi Census: Identification and Control in the Third Reich.
Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2004.
Arendt, Hannah, and Martin Heidegger. Letters, 1925-1975. 1st U.S. ed. Orlando:
Harcourt, 2004.
Badsey, Stephen. Normandy 1944: Allied Landings and Breakout. Westport, Conn.:
Praeger, 2004.
______. Battle Zone Normandy: Omaha Beach. Stroud, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 2004.
Bandel, Betty, and Sylvia J. Bugbee. An Officer and a Lady: The World War II Letters of
Lt. Col. Betty Bandel, Women’s Army Corps. Hanover; Arlington, Va.: University
Press of New England; In association with the Military Women’s Press of the
Women in Military Service For America Memorial Foundation, 2004.
Baranowski, Shelley. Strength Through Joy: Consumerism and Mass Tourism in the
Third Reich. Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Barenblatt, Daniel. A Plague upon Humanity: The Secret Genocide of Axis Japan’s Germ
Warfare Operation. New York: HarperCollins, 2004.
Barris, Ted. Juno: Canadians at D-Day. Ont.,Canada: Thomas Allen & Sons, 2004.
Beale, Peter. The Great Mistake: The Battle for Antwerp and the Beveland Peninsula,
September 1944. Stroud, U.K.: Sutton Publishing Ltd., 2004.
Fall 2004 - 25
Bell, Jonathan. The Liberal State on Trial: The Cold War and American Politics in the
Truman Years. New York: Columbia University Press, 2004.
Bennett, G.H. and R. Bennett. Hitler’s Admirals. Annapolis, M.D.: Naval Institute Press,
2004.
Bergstrom, Christer and Martin Pegg. Luftwaffe Colors, Volume Four, Section 3:
Jagdwaffe: The War in Russia, November 1942- December 1943. Crowborough,
U.K.: Classic Publications, 2004.
Berkhoff, Karel C. Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine under Nazi Rule.
Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2004.
Betts, Paul. The Authority of Everyday Objects: A Cultural History of West German
Industrial Design. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press, 2004.
Betts, Raymond F. Decolonization. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Birmingham, John. Weapons of Choice. New York: Ballantine, 2004.
Botting, Douglas, et al. The D-Day Invasion. London: Time Life, 2004.
Bougaardt, Richard. D-Day : Normandy Revisited: A Photographic Pilgrimage. London:
Chaucer Press, 2004.
Boyt, Eugene P., and David L. Burch. Bataan: A Survivor’s Story. Norman, Okla.:
University of Oklahoma Press, 2004.
Brinkley, Douglas, and Ronald J. Drez. Voices of Valor: D-Day, June 6, 1944. New
York: Bulfinch Press, 2004.
Browning, Christopher R., and Jürgen Matthäus. The Origins of the Final Solution: The
Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939-March 1942. Lincoln, Neb.:
University of Nebraska Press, 2004.
Calder, Robert. A Richer Dust: Family, Memory and the Second World War. Toronto:
Viking Canada, 2004.
Carroll, Tim. The Great Escapers: The Full Story of the Second World War’s Most
Remarkable Mass Escape. Edinburgh: Mainstream, 2004.
Carruthers, Bob, and Simon Trew. Servants of Evil: New First-Hand Accounts of the
Second World War from Survivors of Hitler’s Armed Forces. London: Carlton,
2004.
Cesarani, David, and Sarah Kavanaugh. Holocaust: Critical Concepts in Historical
Studies. London; New York: Routledge, 2004.
26 - Fall 2004
Chrostowski, Witold. Extermination Camp Treblinka. London; Portland, Ore.: Vallentine
Mitchell, 2004.
Cole, Robert. A Traveller’s History of Germany. 1st American ed. New York: Interlink
Books, 2004.
Commager, Henry Steele. The Story of the Second World War. Dulles, Va.; Poole:
Brassey’s; Chris Lloyd, 2004.
Connelly, Mark. We Can Take It! Britain and the Memory of the Second World War.
Harlow, England; New York: Pearson Longman, 2004.
DeMarco, Neil. The Second World War. 2nd Ed. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2004.
Dobbs, Michael. Saboteurs: The Nazi Raid on America. New York: Knopf, 2004.
Doherty, Richard. Ireland’s Generals in the Second World War. Dublin: Four Courts
Press, 2004.
______. Normandy 1944: The Road to Victory. Staplehurst: Spellmount, 2004.
Douglas, Deborah G., and Amy E. Foster. American Women and Flight since 1940.
Lexington, Ky: University Press of Kentucky, 2004.
Drooz, Daniel B. American Prisoners of War in German Death, Concentration, and Slave
Labor Camps: Germany’s Lethal Policy in the Second World War. Lewiston, N.Y.:
E. Mellen Press, 2004.
Duffy, James P. Target America: Hitler’s Plan to Attack the United States. Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Eisenhower, John S. D. General Ike: A Personal Reminiscence. New York: Free Press,
2004.
Eisner, Peter. The Freedom Line: The Brave Men and Women who Rescued Allied Pilots
from the Nazis during World War II. New York: W. Morrow, 2004.
Fischel, Jack, and Susan M. Ortmann. The Holocaust and Its Religious Impact : A
Critical Assessment and Annotated Bibliography. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Ford, Ken. D-Day 1944: Gold and Juno Beaches. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
______. D-Day 1944: Sword Beach and the British Airborne Landings. Westport, Conn.:
Praeger, 2004.
______. Battle Zone Normandy: Juno Beach. Stroud, U.K.: Sutton Publishing Ltd.,
2004.
Fall 2004 - 27
Foreman, John, Johannes Matthews, and Simon Parry. Luftwaffe Night Fighter Claims
1939-1945. Walton on Thames, U.K.: Red Kite/ Air Research Publications, 2004.
______. Fighter Command War Diaries, volume five: July 1944-May 1945. Walton on
Thames, U.K.: Air Research Publications, 2004.
Frey, Robert Seitz. The Genocidal Temptation: Auschwitz, Hiroshima, Rwanda, and
Beyond. Dallas, Tex.: University Press of America, 2004.
Freyhofer, Horst H. The Nuremberg Medical Trial: The Holocaust and the Origin of the
Nuremberg Medical Code. New York: P. Lang, 2004.
Gilbert, Martin. D-Day. Hoboken, N.J.: J. Wiley & Sons, 2004.
______. The Second World War: A Complete History. Rev. ed. New York: Henry Holt,
2004.
Glajar, Valentina. The German Legacy in East Central Europe as Recorded in Recent
German-Language Literature. New York: Camden House, 2004.
Glass, James M. Jewish Resistance during the Holocaust: Moral Uses of Violence and
Will. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Goldberg, Zosia, and Hilton Obenzinger. Running through Fire: How I Survived the
Holocaust. San Francisco: Mercury House, 2004.
Goodchild, Peter. Edward Teller: The Real Dr. Strangelove. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard
University Press, 2004.
Greenfield, Nathan M. The Battle of the St. Lawrence: The Second World War in
Canada. Toronto: HarperCollins, 2004.
Greenstein, Fred I. The Presidential Difference: Leadership Style from FDR to George
W. Bush. 2nd ed. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2004.
Hamby, Alonzo L. For the Survival of Democracy: Franklin Roosevelt and the World
Crisis of the 1930s. New York: Free Press, 2004.
Harrison, Mark. Medicine and Victory: British Military Medicine in the Second World
War. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Hart, R. Clash of Arms: How the Allies Won in Normandy. Norman, Okla.: University of
Oklahoma Press, 2004.
Hayashi, Brian Masaru. Democratizing the Enemy: The Japanese American Internment.
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2004.
Hepburn, Allan. Intrigue: Espionage and Culture. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University
Press, 2004.
28 - Fall 2004
Hirsch, Joshua Francis. Afterimage: Film, Trauma, and the Holocaust. Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 2004.
Hitz, Frederick Porter. The Great Game: The Myth and Reality of Espionage. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 2004.
Hochstadt, Steve. Sources of the Holocaust. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2004.
Hoffman, Eva. After Such Knowledge: Memory, History, and the Legacy of the
Holocaust. New York: Public Affairs, 2004.
Holmes, Richard. The D-Day Experience: From Operation Overlord to the Liberation of
Paris. London: Carlton, 2004.
Holt, Thaddeus. The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War.
New York: Scribner, 2004.
Hornfischer, James D. The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors. New York: Bantam Books,
2004.
Hue, André, and Ewen Southby-Tailyour. The Next Moon: The Remarkable True Story
of a British Agent Behind the Lines in Wartime France. London: Viking, 2004.
Jong, Ivo de. Mission 376: Battle Over the Reich, 28 May 1944. Crowborough, U.K.:
Hikoki Publications, 2004.
Judson, Karen. Chemical and Biological Warfare. Tarrytown, N.Y: Benchmark Books,
2004.
Junier, Alexander and Bart Smulders with Jaap Korlsoot. By Land, Sea, and Air: The
Story of the 2nd Battalion The South Staffordshire Regiment, 1940-1945. Renkum,
Netherlands: R.N. Sigmond, 2004.
Kahn, Robert A. Holocaust Denial and the Law: A Comparative Study. New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Kauders, Anthony. Democratization and the Jews: Munich, 1945-1965. Lincoln:
Published by the University of Nebraska Press for the Vidal Sasoon International
Center for the Study of Antisemitism (SICSA), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
2004.
Kempton, Chris. Loyalty & Honor: The Indian Army, September 1939-August 1947.
Milton Keynes, U.K.: Military Press, 2004.
Keshen, Jeff. Saints, Sinners, and Soldier: Canada’s Second World War. Vancouver:
University of British Columbia Press, 2004.
Fall 2004 - 29
Kirchubel, Robert. Operation Barbarossa 1941: Army Group South. Westport, Conn.:
Praeger, 2004.
Kranzler, David. Holocaust Hero: The Untold Story and Vignettes of Solomon
Schonfeld, an Extraordinary British Orthodox Rabbi who Rescued 4000 Jews during
the Holocaust. Jersey City, N.J.: KTAV Publishers, 2004.
Kurson, Robert. Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans who Risked
Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II. New York:
Random House, 2004.
Kwiet, Konrad, and Jürgen Matthäus. Contemporary Responses to the Holocaust.
Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Landas, Marc. The Fallen: A True Story of American POWs and Japanese Wartime
Atrocities. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2004.
Langbein, Hermann. People in Auschwitz. Chapel Hill, N.C.: The University of North
Carolina Press, in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,
2004.
Langerbein, Helmut. Hitler’s Death Squads: The Logic of Mass Murder. College Station,
Tex.: Texas A&M University Press, 2004
Large, David Clay. And the World Closed its Doors: The Story of One Family
Abandoned to the Holocaust. New York: Basic Books, 2004.
Lauer, Betty. Hiding in Plain Sight: The Incredible True Story of a German-Jewish
Teenager’s Struggle to Survive in Nazi-Occupied Poland. Hanover, N.H.: Smith and
Kraus, 2004.
Lawrence, Iain. B for Buster. New York: Delacorte Press, 2004.
Lawton, Clive. Hiroshima: The Story of the First Atom Bomb. 1st U.S. ed. Cambridge,
Mass.: Candlewick Press, 2004.
Leahy, Timothy J. The Achilles Heel of American Airpower. Carlisle Barracks, Pa.: U.S.
Army War College, 2004.
Lee, Jennifer, and Min Zhou. Asian American Youth: Culture, Identity, and Ethnicity.
New York: Routledge, 2004.
Leitz, Christian. Nazi Foreign Policy, 1933-1941: The Road to Global War. London;
New York: Routledge, 2004.
Lerner, Bernice. The Triumph of Wounded Souls: Seven Holocaust Survivors’ Lives.
Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press, 2004.
30 - Fall 2004
Levin, Itamar, and Rachel Neiman. Walls Around: The Plunder of Warsaw Jewry during
World War II and its Aftermath. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Lightbody, Bradley. The Second World War: Ambitions to Nemesis. London; New York:
Routledge, 2004.
Lucas, James Sidney. Storming Eagles: German Airborne Forces in World War II.
Edison, N.J.: Castle Books, 2004.
Ludwig, Paul. P-51 Mustang: Development of the Long Range Escort Fighter.
Crowborough, U.K.: Classic Publications, 2004.
Macksey, Kenneth. Armoured Crusader: The Biography of Major-General Sir Percy
‘Hobo’ Hobart, One of the most Influential Military Commanders of the Second
World War. London: Grub Street, 2004.
Mandle, William D. and David H. Whittier. Combat Record of the 504th Parachute
Infantry Regiment, April 1943-July 1945. Nashville, T.N.: Battery Press, 2004.
Marca, Daniela F. Preemption in U.S. Strategic Culture. Monterey, Cal.; Springfield, Va.:
Naval Postgraduate School; Available from National Technical Information Service,
2004.
McVeigh, Brian J. Nationalisms of Japan: Managing and Mystifying Identity. Lanham,
Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004.
Messenger, Charles. The Second World War in Europe. Washington D.C.; London:
Smithsonian Books; in association with Cassell, 2004.
Michalczyk, John J. Confront! Resistance in Nazi Germany. New York: P. Lang, 2004.
Miller, Arthur G. The Social Psychology of Good and Evil. New York: Guilford Press,
2004.
Miller, Russell. Codename Tricycle: The True Story of the Second World War’s Most
Extraordinary Double Agent. London: Secker & Warburg, 2004.
Ministere des Armees. Atlas des Situations Quotidiennes des Armees Alliees, Campagne
1939-1940. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1964, 2004.
Monroe, Kristen R. The Hand of Compassion: Portraits of Moral Choice during the
Holocaust. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2004.
Morgan, Martin K. A. Down to Earth: The 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment in
Normandy. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer Pub, 2004.
Myers, Jack R. Shot at and Missed: Recollections of a World War II Bombardier.
Norman, O.K.: University of Oklahoma Press, 2004.
Fall 2004 - 31
Nathan, Amy. Count on Us: American Women in the Military. Washington, D.C.:
National Geographic, 2004.
Newbery, Linda. Sisterland. 1st American ed. Oxford; New York: David Fickling Books,
2004.
O’Driscoll, Mervyn. Ireland, Germany and the Nazis: Politics and Diplomacy, 19191939. Dublin; Portland, Ore.: Four Courts Press, 2004.
Osgood, Charles. Defending Baltimore Against Enemy Attack: A Boyhood Year during
World War II. New York: Hyperion, 2004.
Overy, R. J. The Dictators: Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Russia. New York: W.W.
Norton & Company, 2004.
Owen, Roger. State, Power and Politics in the Making of the Modern Middle East. 3rd
ed. London; New York: Routledge, 2004.
Papiernik, Charles. Unbroken: From Auschwitz to Buenos Aires. Albuquerque:
University of New Mexico Press, 2004.
Parker, Matthew. Monte Cassino: The Hardest-Fought Battle of World War II. New
York: Doubleday, 2004.
Parra, Francisco R. Oil Politics: A Modern History of Petroleum. London: I. B. Tauris,
2004.
Paterson, Lawrence. U-Boat War Patrol: The Hidden Photographic Diary of U-564.
London: Greenhill, 2004.
Patterson, David, and John K. Roth. After-Words: Post-Holocaust Struggles with
Forgiveness, Reconciliation, Justice. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2004.
Penrose, Jane. The D-Day Companion: Leading Historians Explore History’s Greatest
Amphibious Assault. Oxford: Osprey, 2004.
Picart, Caroline Joan. The Holocaust Film Sourcebook. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Piehler, G. Kurt. Remembering War the American Way. Washington, D.C.; Chesham:
Smithsonian Institution, 2004.
Polian, P. M. Against Their Will: The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in
the USSR. Budapest; New York: Central European University Press, 2004.
Polmar, Norman. The Enola Gay: The B-29 that Dropped the Atomic Bomb on
Hiroshima. Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s, 2004.
32 - Fall 2004
Polonsky, Antony, and Joanna B. Michlic. The Neighbors Respond: The Controversy
Over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
2004.
Poprzeczny, Joseph. Odilo Globocnik, Hitler’s Man in the East. Jefferson, N.C.:
McFarland, 2004.
Redzic, Enver. Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War. London: Frank Cass,
2004.
Reisberg, Daniel, and Paula Hertel. Memory and Emotion. Oxford; New York: Oxford
University Press, 2004.
Riley, Peter. Wartime Warriors: Personal Memories of Men and Women who Fought in
the Second World War. Cheshire: P & D Riley, 2004.
Ritter, Maria. Return to Dresden. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, 2004.
Rosenbaum, Ron. Those Who Forget the Past: The Question of Anti-Semitism. New
York: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2004.
Roth, Milena. Lifesaving Letters: A Child’s Flight from the Holocaust. 1st US ed.
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2004.
Saidel, Rochelle G. The Jewish Women of Ravensbrück Concentration Camp. Madison,
Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004.
Samuel, Wolfgang W. E. American Raiders: The Race to Capture the Luftwaffe’s
Secrets. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, 2004.
Sanders, Charles J. The Boys of Winter: Life and Death in the U.S. Ski Troops during the
Second World War. Boulder, Colo.: University Press of Colorado, 2004.
Saunders, Tim. Juno Beach: 3rd Canadian and 79th Armoured Divisions. Montreal;
Ithaca, N.Y.: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2004.
Schafft, Gretchen Engle. From Racism to Genocide: Anthropology in the Third Reich.
Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2004.
Selden, Mark, and Alvin Y. So. War and State Terrorism: The United States, Japan, and
the Asia-Pacific in the Long Twentieth Century. Lanham, Md.: Rowman &
Littlefield, 2004.
Sheffield, R. Scott. The Red Man’s on the Warpath: The Image of the “Indian” and the
Second World War. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2004.
Shore, Christopher. Those Other Eagles. London: Grub Street, 2004.
Fall 2004 - 33
Sibley, Katherine A. S. Red Spies in America: Stolen Secrets and the Dawn of the Cold
War. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas, 2004.
Sicher, Efraim. Holocaust Novelists. Detroit: Gale, 2004.
Spick, Mike. Allied Fighter Aces: The Air Combat Tactics and Techniques of World
War II. Mechanicsburg, Pa.: Stackpole Books, 2004.
Stafford, David. Ten Days to D-Day: Citizens and Soldiers on the Eve of the Invasion.
1st U.S. ed. New York: Little, Brown, 2004.
Stauffer, Alvin P. The Quartermaster Corps: Operations in the War Against Japan.
Washington, D.C: U.S. G.P.O., 2004.
Stephan, Robert W. Stalin’s Secret War: Soviet Counterintelligence Against the Nazis,
1941-1945. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas, 2004.
Stolleis, Michael. A History of Public Law in Germany, 1914-1945. Oxford; New York:
Oxford University Press, 2004.
Stone, Dan. The Historiography of the Holocaust. Basingstoke, England; New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Struk, Janina. Photographing the Holocaust: Interpretations of the Evidence. London;
New York: I. B. Tauris, 2004.
Tal, Uriel. Religion, Politics and Ideology in the Third Reich: Selected Essays. London;
New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis, 2004.
Taylor, Brian. Barbarossa to Berlin, volume 1: The Long Drive East, 22 June 1941-18
November 1942. Staplehurst, U.K.: Spellmount Ltd., 2004.
______. Barbarossa to Berlin, volume 2: The Defeat of Germany, 19 November 194215 May 1945. Staplehurst, U.K.: Spellmount Ltd., 2004.
Thomas, Donald Serrell. The Enemy Within: Hucksters, Racketeers, Deserters and
Civilians during the Second World War. New York: New York University Press,
2004.
Tillman, Barrett. Brassey’s D-Day Encyclopedia: The Normandy Invasion A-Z.
Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s, 2004.
Truman, Harry S., et al. Defending the West: The Truman-Churchill Correspondence,
1945-1960. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
Trzcinska-Croydon, Lilka. Labyrinth of Dangerous Hours: A Memoir of the Second
World War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004.
34 - Fall 2004
Tucker, Richard P., and Edmund Russell. Natural Enemy, Natural Ally: Toward an
Environmental History of Warfare. Corvallis, Ore.: Oregon State University Press,
2004.
Tucker, Spencer. The Second World War. Houndmills, England; New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2004.
Vogel, Robert, and Brian P. Farrell. Leadership and Responsibility in the Second World
War: Essays in Honour of Robert Vogel. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University
Press, 2004.
von Luttwitz, Freiherr, and David C. Isby. Fighting the Breakout: The German Army in
Normandy from COBRA to the Falaise Gap. London: Greenhill, 2004.
von Zühlsdorff, Volkmar. Hitler’s Exiles: The German Cultural Resistance in America
and Europe. London; New York: Continuum, 2004.
Wachsmann, Nikolaus. Hitler’s Prisons: Legal Terror in Nazi Germany. New Haven,
Conn.: Yale University Press, 2004.
Waters, Michael R. Lone Star Stalag: German Prisoners of War at Camp Hearne. College
Station, Tex.: Texas A&M University Press, 2004.
Watkins, Robert A. Battle Colors: Insignia and Aircraft Markings of the Eighth Air
Force in World War II. Atglen, Pa.: Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2004.
Watson, Mark B. Sea Logistics: Keeping the Navy Ready Aye Ready. St. Catharines,
Ont.: Vanwell, 2004.
Weikart, Richard. From Darwin to Hitler: Evolutionary Ethics, Eugenics, and Racism in
Germany. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Weissman, Gary. Fantasies of Witnessing: Postwar Efforts to Experience the Holocaust.
Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2004.
Weissmark, Mona Sue. Justice Matters: Legacies of the Holocaust and World War II.
New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Whitaker, W. Denis, Shelagh Whitaker, and J. T. Copp. Normandy, the Real Story: How
Ordinary Allied Soldiers Defeated Hitler. New York: Presidio Press/Ballantine
Books, 2004.
Whitlock, Flint. The Fighting First: The Untold Story of the Big Red One on D-Day.
Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 2004.
Williams, David. Defending Japan’s Pacific War: The Kyoto School Philosophers and
Post-White Power. New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2004.
Fall 2004 - 35
Willmott, H. P. The Second World War in the Far East. Washington D.C.; London:
Smithsonian Books; in association with Cassell, 2004.
Wilt, Alan F., and Carlo D’Este. The Atlantic Wall, 1941-1944: Hitler’s Defenses for DDay. New York: Enigma Books, 2004.
Wolf, Joan B. Harnessing the Holocaust: The Politics of Memory in France. Stanford,
Cal.: Stanford University Press, 2004.
Wragg, David W. Second World War Carrier Campaigns. Barnsley: Leo Cooper, 2004.
Yablonka, Hanna. The State of Israel vs. Adolf Eichmann. 1st American ed. New York:
Schocken Books, 2004.
Yellin, Emily. Our Mothers’ War: American Women at Home and at the Front during
World War II. New York: Free Press, 2004.
Zaloga, Steve. D-Day 1944: Omaha Beach. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2004.
______. D-Day 1944: Utah Beach & U.S. Airborne Landings. Westport, Conn.: Praeger,
2004.
______. Operation Cobra 1944: Breakout from Normandy. Westport, Conn.: Praeger,
2004.
Zeiler, Thomas W. Unconditional Defeat: Japan, America, and the End of World War II.
Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources, 2004.
Zeman, Scott C., and Michael A. Amundson. Atomic Culture: How We Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Bomb. Boulder, Colo.: University Press of Colorado, 2004.
Zeng, Ka. Trade Threats, Trade Wars: Bargaining, Retaliation, and American Coercive
Diplomacy. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press, 2004.
Zuehlke, Mark. Juno Beach: Canada’s D-Day Victory. Vancouver, B.C.: Douglas &
McIntyre, 2004.
36 - Fall 2004
Recently Published Articles in English on World War II
Selected Titles from an Electronic Compilation
by Christina Fishback
Ambaras, David R. “Juvenile Delinquency and the National Defense State: Policing
Young Workers in Wartime Japan, 1937-1945.” Journal of Asian Studies 2004
63(1): 31-60.
Ashton, Nigel J. “Anglo-American Relations from World War to Cold War.” Journal of
Contemporary History [Great Britain] 2004 39(1): 117-125.
Baerwald, Hans. “The Best Overview of the Allied Occupation of Japan yet Written.”
Social Science Japan Journal [Great Britain] 2004 7(1): 117-122.
Battini, Michele. “Sins of a Memory: Reflections on the Lack of an Italian Nuremberg
and the Administration of International Justice after 1945.” Journal of Modern
Italian Studies 2004 9(3): 349-362
Bessel, Richard. “The Nazi Capture of Power.” Journal of Contemporary History [Great
Britain] 2004 39(2): 169-188.
Bischof, Gunter. “Victims? Perpetrators? ‘Punching Bags’ of European Historical
Memory? The Austrians and Their World War II Legacies.” German Studies Review
2004 27(1): 17-32.
Bowles, Brett. “Newsreels, Ideology, and Public Opinion Under Vichy: The Case of La
France En Marche.” French Historical Studies 2004 27(2): 419-463.
Burguyn, H. James. “General Roatta’s War against the Partisans in Yugoslavia: 1942.”
Journal of Modern Italian Studies 2004 9(3): 314-329.
Cavallero, Jonathan James. “Redefining Italianita: The Difference between Mussolini,
Italy, Germany, and Japan in Frank Capra’s ‘Why we Fight.’” Italian Americana
2004 22(1): 5-16.
Clement, Piet. “‘The Touchstone of German Credit’: Nazi Germany and the Service of
the Dawes and Young Loans.” Financial History Review [Great Britain] 2004 11(1):
33-50.
Corum, James S. “The Luftwaffe and Its Allied Air Forces in World War II: Parallel War
and the Failure of Strategic and Economic Cooperation.” Air Power History 2004
51(2): 4-19.
Fall 2004 - 37
Deletant, Dennis. “Ghetto Experience in Golta, Transnistria, 1942-1944.” Holocaust and
Genocide Studies 2004 18(1): 1-26.
Dingman, Roger V. “Language at War: U.S. Marine Corps Language Officers in the
Pacific War.” Journal of Military History 2004 68(3): 853-883.
Dinitto, Rachel. “Translating Prewar Culture into Film: The Double Vision of Suzuki
Seijun’s Zigeunerweisen.” Journal of Japanese Studies 2004 30(1): 35-63.
Focardi, Filippo, and Lutz Klinkhammer. “The Question of Fascist Italy’s War Crimes:
The Construction of a Self-Acquitting Myth, 1943-1948.” Journal of Modern Italian
Studies 2004 9(3): 330-348.
Förster, Jürgen, and Evan Mawdsley. “Hitler and Stalin in Perspective: Secret Speeches
on the Eve of Barbarossa.” War in History [Great Britain] 2004 11(1): 61-103.
Frey, Bruno S., and Daniel Waldenstrom. “Markets Work in War: World War II
Reflected in the Zurich and Stockholm Bond Markets.” Financial History Review
[Great Britain] 2004 11(1): 51-67.
Gerster, Robin. “Hiroshima No More: Forgetting ‘the Bomb.’” War & Society [Australia]
2004 22(1): 59-68.
Grabowski, Jan, and Zbigniew R. Grabowski. “Germans in the Eyes of the Gestapo: The
Ciechanow District, 1939-1945.” Contemporary European History [Great Britain]
2004 13(1): 21-43.
Hagen, Joshua. “The Most German of Towns: Creating an Ideal Nazi Community in
Rothenburg Ob Der Tauber.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers
94:1 (2004): 207-227.
Hauner, Milan. “Could Prague Have Defied Hitler? What Churchill’s Courier Learned.”
World Policy Journal 2004 21(1): 91-95.
Heide, Lars. “Monitoring People: Dynamics and Hazards of Record Management in
France, 1935-1944.” Technology and Culture 2004 45(1): 80-101.
Helstosky, Carol. “Fascist Food Politics: Mussolini’s Policy of Alimentary
Sovereignty.” Journal of Modern Italian Studies 2004 9(1): 1-26.
Hoffmann, Kay. “Propagandistic Problems of German Newsreels in World War II.”
Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television [Great Britain] 2004 24(1): 133142.
Horowitz, Manny. “Were There Strategic Oil Targets in Japan in 1945?” Air Power
History 2004 51(1): 26-35.
38 - Fall 2004
Hughes, J. T. “Hugh Cairns (1896-1952) and the Mobile Neurosurgical Units of World
War II.” Journal of Medical Biography [Great Britain] 2004 12(1): 18-24.
Jackman, Steven D. “Shoulder to Shoulder: Close Control and ‘Old Prussian Drill’ in
German Offensive Infantry Tactics, 1871-1914.” Journal of Military History 2004
68(1): 73-104.
Keren, Daniel, Jamie McCarthy, and Harry W. Mazal. “The Ruins of the Gas Chambers:
A Forensic Investigation of Crematoriums at Auschwitz I and Auschwitz-Birkenau.”
Holocaust and Genocide Studies 2004 18(1): 68-103.
Kershaw, Ian. “Hitler and the Uniqueness of Nazism.” Journal of Contemporary History
[Great Britain] 2004 39(2): 239-254.
Kersten, Rikki. “Coming to Terms with the Past: Japan.” History Today [Great Britain]
2004 54(3): 20-22.
Konig, Wolfgang. “Adolf Hitler vs. Henry Ford: The Volkswagen, the Role of America
as a Model, and the Failure of a Nazi Consumer Society.” German Studies Review
2004 27(2): 249-268.
Koshiro, Yukiko. “Eurasian Eclipse: Japan’s End Game in World War II.” American
Historical Review 2004 109(2): 417-444.
MacQueen, Michael. “The Conversion of Looted Jewish Assets to Run the German War
Machine.” Holocaust and Genocide Studies 2004 18(1): 27-45.
Margry, Karel. “Newsreels in Nazi-Occupied Czechoslovakia: Karel Peceny and His
Newsreel Company Aktualita.” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
[Great Britain] 2004 24(1): 69-117.
Mees, Bernard. “Hitler and Germanentum.” Journal of Contemporary History [Great
Britain] 2004 39(2): 255-270.
Noakes, Jeremy. “Leaders of the People? The Nazi Party and German Society.” Journal
of Contemporary History [Great Britain] 2004 39(2): 189-212.
Petrusewicz, Marta. “The Hidden Pages of Contemporary Italian History: War Crimes,
War Guilt and Collective Memory.” Journal of Modern Italian Studies 2004 9(3):
269-270.
Rohkramer, Thomas. “Visual Arts in Germany, 1849-1945.” European History Quarterly
[Great Britain] 2004 34(1): 99-106.
Rugg, Julie. “Managing ‘Civilian Deaths Due to War Operations’: Yorkshire Experiences
during World War II.” Twentieth Century British History [Great Britain] 2004 15(2):
152-173.
Fall 2004 - 39
Santarelli, Lidia. “Muted Violence: Italian War Crimes in Occupied Greece.” Journal of
Modern Italian Studies 2004 9(3): 280-299.
Schiller, Kay. “The Presence of the Nazi Past in the Early Decades of the Bonn
Republic.” Journal of Contemporary History [Great Britain] 2004 39(2): 285-294.
Searle, Alaric. “Was There a ‘Boney’ Fuller after the Second World War? Major-General
J. F. C. Fuller as Military Theorist and Commentator, 1945-1966.” War in History
[Great Britain] 2004 11(3): 327-357.
Shapiro, Frank. “The Unknown Safe Haven.” History Today [Great Britain] 2004 54(1):
11-16.
Spicer, Andrew. “Film Studies and the Turn to History.” Journal of Contemporary
History [Great Britain] 2004 39(1): 147-155.
Straus, Ulrich. “Selected Comments on Inside Ghq, a Prodigious Work.” Social Science
Japan Journal [Great Britain] 2004 7(1): 123-127.
Welch, David. “Nazi Propaganda and the Volksgemeinschaft: Constructing a People’s
Community.” Journal of Contemporary History [Great Britain] 2004 39(2): 213-238.
Winkel, Roel Vande. “Nazi Newsreels in Europe, 1939-1945: The Many Faces of Ufa’s
Foreign Weekly Newsreel (Auslandstonwoche) versus Germany’s Weekly Newsreel
(Deutsche Wochenschau).” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television [Great
Britain] 2004 24(1): 5-34.
Wittrock, Bjorn. “The Transformation of European Universities: Disciplines and
Professions in England, Germany and Russia since 1870.” Contemporary European
History [Great Britain] 2004 13(1): 101-116.
Zarnowska, Anna. “Women’s Political Participation in Inter-War Poland: Opportunities
and Limitations.” Women’s History Review [Great Britain] 2004 13(1): 57-68.