Document 13271122

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AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY
OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR
NEWSLETTER
Arthur L. Funk. Chairman
Department of Histary
University of Florida
ISSN 0885-5668
Gainesville, Florida 32611
No. 36
Permanent Directors
Charles F. Delzell
Vanderbilt University
Fall 1986
Department of History
University of Califomia
General Information
2
Forrest C. Pogue
Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute
Terms expi"nH /986
Robin Higham, Archivist
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas 66506
CONTENTS
H. Stuart Hughes
at San Diego
Donald S. Detwiler, Secretary
and Newsletter Editor
Department of Histary
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale, Illinois 62901
The Newsletter
2
Annual Membership Dues and Support
2
Committee Election
2
The 1986 Annual Meeting (Chicago)
AHA/ACHSWW Joint Session: MAGIC, ULTRA,
and the Second World War: New Insights
from the Sources
ACHSWW Annual Business Meeting
3
International Book
Rel'ieu.' Coordination
Arthur L. Funk
Department of Histary
University of Florida
Gainesville. Florida :12611
Stephen Eo Ambrose
University of New Orleans
Washington, D.C.
William H. Cunliffe
Nationa] Archives
Harold C. Deutsch
Army War College
Stanley L. Falk
Center of Military History (ret.)
Maurice MatJoff
Center of Military History (ret.)
Ernest R. May
The ACHSWW is affiliated with:
American Historical Association
Martin Blumenson
400 A Street, S.E.
Washingtan, D.C. 2000:3
Comi~
3
3
International
d'Histoire de la Deuxi~me
Guerre Mondiale
Jean Vanwelkenhuyzen, President
Belgian Centre for Research
and Studies on the History
of the Second World War
Place de Louvain 4 - bte 20
1000 Brussels, Belgium
Harvard University
Gerhard L. Weinberg
University of North Carolina
Henri Michel, 1907-1986
3
Earl F. Ziemke
University of Georgia
Announcements and Queries
National Registry of the Association for the
Dean C. Allard
Bibliography of History
Naval History Division
ABH Military History Bibliography panel (27 Dec. 1986)
Philip A. Crowl
Naval War College (ret.)
Enquiry from an Historian of Medicine
Brig. Gen. A. F. Hurley, USAF (ret.)
Fellowships
North Texas State Unive....ity
U. S. Army Center of Military History
David Kahn
Great Neck, N.Y.
Marine Corps Historical Center
Warren F. Kimball
Naval
Historical Center
Rutgers Uoiversity
1't>rms expiring 1987
Richard H. Kohn
Office of Air Force History
Roberta Wohlstetter
Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles
Robert Wolfe
National Archives
,Janet Ziegler
University of California
at Los Angeles
Terms expiring /988
Brig. Gen James L. Collins, Jr.
Chief of Military History (ret.)
John Lewis Gaddis
Ohio University
Rohin Higham
KumHl~
State University
D. Cluyton Jume.
Mississippi State University
~'. Peterson
H()()Vl'r Institutiun
Allll£>S
Brill.
(~lln.
Edwin II.
~immonu
MHrint' ('urp" IHNtory IIml
MUHl'UInH
David F. Trask
Center of Military History
Russell F. Weigley
Temple University
4
5
5
5
6
6
Archival and Bibliographical Resources
Cumulative Listing of NSA/CSS Cryptologic Documents
U.S. National Archives Accessions and Declassifications
Bibliography
Anglo-American Relations with Spain During World War II
The Last Years of the War on the German Home Front
An American Introduction to ULTRA .
The War Against Japan--and the Southeast Asian Sequel
6
7
8
8
9
11
Attachments:
List of NSA/CSS Cryptologic Documents at National Archives
ACHSWW Membership Information & Renewal Form
Annual ACHSWW Election Ballot
GENERAL INFORMATION
Established in 1967 "to promote historical research in the period
of World War II in all its aspects," the American Committee on the
History of the Second World War is affiliated with the American
Historical Association, the International Committee for the His­
tory of the Second World War, and corresponding national commit­
tees in many other countries, including Austria, Belgium, Canada,
France, East and West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania,
the Soviet Union, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
Membership is
open to anyorie interested in the Second World War.
THE NEWSLETTER
The ACHSWW issues a semiannual newsletter.
The National Serial
Data Program of the Library of Congress has assigned it Interna­
tional Standard Serial Number (ISSN) 0885-5668. Back issues of
the newsletter are available through the ACHSWW Archivist (at the
address on the letterhead) from MA/AH Publishing (now an imprint
of Sunflower University Press). The first eighteen issues (1968­
1978) are available as a spiral-bound, 360-page xerox paperback
(ISBN 0-89126-060-9) for $36.00. Subsequent back numbers are
available as single, unbound issues for $3.00 each.
(There is no
postal charge for prepaid orders to U. S. addresses, but a $4.00
shipping charge for orders to foreign and Canadian addresses.)
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP DUES AND SUPPORT
Annual membership dues of $10.00 ($2.00 for students) for calen­
dar year 1987 are payable at the beginning of January directly to
the secretary (not through an agency or subscription service).
Please complete and return by mid-January the membership renewal
and information form attached to the newsletter, together with
your remittance.
Members abroad are asked to remit dues in U. S. funds.
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.
As noted in the renewal form, members are invited, as in the
past, to make contributions, beyond the amount of their member­
ship dues, to defray operating costs not covered by regular dues.
COMMITTEE ELECTION
Attached to this newsletter is the ballot for election of commit­
tee directors for three-year terms from 1987 through 1989. The
ballot, which may be mailed with the membership renewal form and
remittance, or sent separately, should be returned to the secre­
tary by 15 January 1987.
2
THE 1986 ANNUAL MEETING
The annual meeting of the ACHSWW will be held in conjunction with
that of the American Historical Association at the Chicago Hyatt
Regency Hotel, 151 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60601, 27-30
December 1986.
The Joint Session with the American Historical Association
The ACHSWW/AHA joint session is scheduled for Monday, 29 December
1986, 2:30-4:30 p.m., in Columbus Hall E-F, East Tower, Ballroom
Level, at the Chicago Hyatt:
MAGIC, ULTRA, and the Second World War:
New Insights from New Sources
Alexander S. Cochran, Jr., U.S. Army Center of
Military History
Chair:
"MAGIC, the Japanese, and the Betrayal of Hitler"
Carl Boyd, Old Dominion University
"ULTRA, Patch, and the Alpine Passes, 1944"
Arthur L. Funk, University of Florida
Comment:
Gerhard L. Weinberg, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Alexander S. Cochran, Jr.
Annual Business Meeting
The 1986 business meeting is scheduled for Sunday, 28 December,
5:00-7:00 p.m., in Columbus Hall A-B, East Tower, Ballroom Level,
at the Chicago Hyatt. The agenda will include reports by the
chairman of the ACHSWW, Arthur L. Funk, on the activities of the
International Committee, of which he is vice president, and on
plans for the annual meeting in December 1987 in Washington, D.C.
The 1987 session is to be on the late Henri Michel, former presi­
dent of the International Committee.
HENRI MICHEL, 1907-1986
by Arthur L. Funk
Henri Michel, the distinguished French historian of the Second
World War, died on 5 June 1986 at the age of 79. His early life
was spent teaching at the Lycee of Toulon, and during the war he
3
became active in the Resistance of the Var department. After the
war, as secretary-general of the French Comite d'Histoire de la
Deuxieme Guerre Mondial, he undertook, with correspondents in
every department, to assemble documentary materials on the French
Resistance. This Committee depended directly on the Prime Minis­
ter's Office, and was associated with the Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique. M. Michel became France's outstanding
authority on the Resistance, and in 1950 published a brief sur­
vey, Histoire de la Resistance (1940-1944), which has gone through
nine editions and has been translated into English, Japanese, Span­
ish, and Portuguese. He founded in 1950 and became first editor
of the Revue d'histoire de la deuxieme guerre mondiale, the only
periodical in the world devoted especially to the war.
Its 142nd
issue has just appeared.
In the course of his long career Henri Michel has published over
fifteen books on the war, of which The Second World War (1969) and
The Shadow War: European Resistance, 1939-1945 (1972) are avail­
able in English. Notable among his works are La drole de guerre
(1971), Et Varsovie fut detruite (1984), Les courants de pensee de
la Resistance (1963), Jean Moulin l'Unificateur (1984), Paris
allemand and Paris resistant (1981, 1982). Before he died, he
had just completed a book on Admiral Darlan, which will be pub­
lished posthumously by Albin Michel.
In 1968 M. Michel was instrumental in founding the International
Committee for the History of the Second World War, of which he was
first the secretary, then for many years the president, and final­
ly, during the last year of his life, honorary president. stu­
dents of World War II allover the world will miss the enthusiasm,
the devotion, and the leadership of this great French scholar who
devoted a lifetime to the study and interpretation of the war.
ANNOUNCEMENTS AND QUERIES
National Registry for the Bibliography of History
The Association for the Bibliography of History, an affiliate of
the American Historical Association, wishes to remind historical
bibliographers of the National Registry for the Bibliography of
History, an ongoing listing of bibliographical projects in pro­
gress in all fields of history. The Registry is published annual­
ly in American History: A Bibliographic Review (see vol. II,
1986). Compilers of bibliographies are urged to register their
work in progress. For information and registration forms write
to the Director of the ABH National Registry, Professor Thomas T.
Helde, Department of History, Georgetown University, Washington,
DC 20057.
4
A Panel on Military History Bibliography
In conjunction with the annual meeting of the Association for the
Bibliography of History, beginning in the morning of Saturday, 27
December 1986 (just prior to the AHA meeting) in Chicago at the
Hyatt Regency, a panel on "Military History Bibliography: New Ef­
forts, New Issues" is being held in the New Orleans Room, West
Tower, Ballroom Level, from 9:00 to 10:55 a.m., under the chair­
manship of Alan Aimone, U.S. Military Academy, with the follow­
ing panelists: Dale Floyd, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; Robin
Higham, Kansas State University; Donald Mrozek, Kansas State Uni­
versity; and Elizabeth Snook, U.S. Army Command & General Staff
College, Ft. Leavenworth.
An Enquiry from an Historian of Medicine
Dr. Charles G. Roland, Jason A. Hannah Professor of the History
of Medicine at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, is engaged
in a study of health and medical conditions affecting Allied sol­
diers in World War II POW camps, both in Europe and Asia. He
writes that he wishes to locate World War II scholars in the
United States and Japan who have an interest in prisoner-of-war
camps. He is particularly eager to "locate Japanese nationals-­
whether resident in Asia or in North America--who may have been
involved in that country's medical services during the war, and
who may thus have had some involvement with Allied POWs in the
Far East." He does not know Japanese. His address: C. G. Roland,
M.D., History of Medicine, Room 3N10, McMaster Univ., Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada L8N 3Z5.
Fellowship Announcements
U. S. Army Center of Military History
To stimulate scholarly research and writing among qualified civil­
ian graduate students preparing dissertations in American military
history, especially U.S. Army history, the Center of Military His­
tory offers two "Dissertation Year Fellowships" for 1987-1988,
each with a stipend of $6000 and access to the Center's facilities
and technical expertise. Applicants must be civilian citizens or
nationals of the United States and must have completed, by Septem­
ber 1987, all requirements for the PhD degree, except for the dis­
sertation. Information and application forms for 1987-88 fellow­
ships are available from the Chief Historian, U.S. Army Center of
Military History, Pulaski Building, Washington, D.C. 20314-0200,
phone (202) 272-0293. Applications and all supporting materials
must be postmarked no later than 12 January 1987.
[Newsletter Edi­
tor's Note: This is an established program for which tentative
plans for future applications may reasonably be made.
For infor­
mation, including forthcoming announcements and application forms,
contact the Chief Historian, Dr. David F. Trask, at the Center.]
5
Marine Corps Historical Center
The U.S. Marine Corps offers one $7500 dissertation fellowship
and a number of $2500 master's thesis fellowships each year to
qualified graduate students working on topics pertinent to Marine
Corps history. The stipends are funded by the Marine Corps His­
torical Foundation and the program is administered by the Direc­
tor of Marine Corps History and Museums, Brig. Gen. Edwin Simmons.
At least part of the research is to be done in Washington, where
fellows are given desk space in the Marine Corps Historical Center
and receive personal assistance in gaining access to archival and
library sources in the Washington area. Applicants must be U.S.
citizens enrolled in recognized graduate schools; dissertation fel­
lowship holders must also have completed, not later than September
of the academic year of the award, all requirements for the doctor­
ate except the dissertation. The deadline for filing applications
and all supporting documents is 1 May each year. For information
and application forms, contact Dr. V. Keith Fleming, Jr., Coordina­
tor, Fellowship Program, Marine Corps Historical Center, Bldg. 58,
Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC 20374-0580, telephone (202)
433-3840.
Naval Historical Center
The Naval Historical Center, U.S. Department of the Navy, has an­
nounced a $7500 fellowship for doctoral candidates undertaking a
dissertation in the field of U.S. naval history. Applicants should
be U.S. citizens enrolled in an accredited graduate school, and
have completed all requirements for the PhD except the dissertation
by September 1987. The deadline for applications is 1 March 1987.
For detailed information on the fellowship and for application
forms, individuals are invited to address a letter (including ap­
proved dissertation title) to Dr. Ronald H. Spector, Director of
Naval History, Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC 20374.
ARCHIVAL AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL RESOURCES
Cumulative Listing of NSA/CSS Crytologic Documents
Attached to this newsletter is the cumulative listing through May
1986 of National ~ecurity Agency cryptologic documents offered to
and accepted by the National Archives, now available for research
in Record Group 457 in the Military Reference Branch. Additions
since the last listing (in fall 1985) include the 502-page second
volume of the history of the Signal Security Agency (SRH-361, 15
January 1947, on page 27 of the attached list); several substantial
JICPOA [Joint Intelligence Center, Pacific Ocean Area] documents,
6
listed on page 29, including SRMD-007 with 963 pages on ULTRA traf­
fic r and SRMN-013 on page 30, 1,593 pages of CINCPAC [Commander-in­
Chief, Pacific] intelligence bulletins (#78-#345, 1942-43, Parts
I-VI). More specific information is available from Mr. John E.
Taylor, Military Reference Branch, U.S. National Archives, Washing­
ton, DC 20408, who may be reached by phone at (202) 523-3340.
National Archives Accessions and Declassifications
Records of the United States High Commissioner for Germany
Eighty-three cubic feet of files in Record Group 466 have been de­
classified, including material from the Office of the Land Commis­
sioner for Bavaria, 1946-1951.
Department of State Records on East Asia and the Pacific (1943-1958)
The Diplomatic Branch has accessioned 102 cubic feet of State De­
partment "Lot Files" relating to East Asia and the Pacific: records
of the Director of the Office of Northeast Asia Affairs, U. Alexis
Johnson, 1945-1953; briefing books, reference materials, and alpha­
numeric subject files of the Office of Northeast Asia Affairs relat­
ing to Japan and Korea, 1943-1957; subject file, dated 1945-1951,
of the Office of Northeast Asia Affairs relating to the treaty of
peace with Japan; and files of John Foster Dulles relating to the
treaty of peace with Japan, dated primarily 1950-52, but including
some material dated as early as 1946. Also included are records of
the Bureau of Far Eastern Affairs, among them records relating to
economic aid programs, 1948-1958. The declassification review of
these materials, in Record Group 59, has not yet been completed.
State Department News Conferences (1942-1965)
The Diplomatic Branch has accessioned nine cubic feet of unclas­
sified transcripts of background press and radio news conferences
of senior officers of the State Department, other than the Secre­
tary of State, available in Record Group 59. These conferences,
which were held at frequent, though irregular, intervals, related
to all aspects of U.S. foreign relations.
Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer (1941-1954)
The Still Pictures Branch of the Special Archives Division has ac­
cessioned from the U.S. Army more than 400,000 images, mostly dat­
ing from 1941 through 1954. These records of the U.S. Army Signal
Corps, in Record Group 111, include more than 6,600 albums of black­
7
and-white prints, hundreds of thousands of black-and-white
negatives, color photographs, card indexes, and other find­
ing aids. The main reference photograph files, arranged geo­
graphically and by subject, illustrate peacetime and war-re­
lated activities in the United states and abroad ("from Aber­
deen Proving Grounds, Maryland, through Yuma Test Station,
Arizona, and • • . from the Admiralty Islands to Yugoslav­
ia"). Files on the different branches of service include
Artillery, Infantry, Cavalry, Medical Corps, Military Police,
Quartermaster Corps, and Signal Corps. The collection also
provides documentation on subjects such as D-Day and the
Battle of the Bulge, Japanese-American troops, and the Wom­
en's Armed Forces.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Anglo-American Relations with Spain During World War II
Willard L. Beaulac, Franco: Silent Ally in World War II. Carbon­
dale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press, 1986.
ix & 233 pp. Bibliography and index. Willard Beaulac is a re­
tired diplomat (and former Deputy Commandant for Foreign Af­
fairs at the National War College) who served at the American
Embassy in Madrid from June 1941 to May 1944. This book {his
fifth) is an historical memoir on Anglo-American relations with
Spain during World War II, focussing on the effort to keep Fran­
co out of the war in the West, notwithstanding Axis plans and
pressure. Drawing on American, British, and Spanish memoirs,
studies, and documentation, as well as his own experience and
observations, Beaulac tells the story in the form of an account
(in seven core chapters) of the seven principal actors in­
volved: Franco, whose resistance to Hitler made him, Beaulac ar­
gues, virtually a ilsilent ally" of the Western powers; the three
Spanish foreign ministers of the period, Colonel Beigbeder,
Serrano Suner, and Count Jordana; the two American ambassadors
under whom Beaulac served as Counselor of Embassy, Alexander
Weddell and Carlton Hayes; and the British ambassador through­
out the war, Sir Samuel Hoare. The result is a uniquely au­
thoritative, concise, and very readable account of Spain's dif­
ficult, widely misunderstood, yet vital role during World War
II--and of the help without which that role could hardly have
been played.
The Last Years of the War on the German Home Front
Earl R. Beck, Under the Bombs: The German Home Front, 1942-1945.
Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1986). xi & 252 pp.
Bibliography and index. The postwar U.S. Strategic Bombing Sur­
vey showed that the impact on German war production of almost
8
1,700,000 tons of bombs dropped during the Second World War was
'far less than had been expected. Even the number of deaths was
not as great as anticipated. But what had life been like on
the German home front for those who had lived "under the bombs"
from 1942 to 1945? How had the people managed to cope with the
hardship and catastrophic disruption the bombings and related
hardships entailed? Forty years after seeing the German cities
in ruins, Professor Earl Beck of Florida State University has
defined and dealt with these questions, focussing on the last
two years of the war. His monograph offers considerable in­
sight into the interaction of the civil government and National
Socialist party authorities at the regional and local level dur­
ing the protracted crisis.
It also describes the terrible
stress on the social fabric and on individuals (Beck presents
his material in the broad historical context without losing
sight of the human dimension); the impact of large-scale evac­
uations from the threatened border regions, west as well as
east (by Christmas 1944, there were 590,918 requartered per­
sons in the southwest German district of Wilrttemberg-Hohen­
zollern, 736,488 one month later); and the effects of a number
of individual bombings on individual cities. Beck's 200-page
narrative is complemented by extensive backnotes, a good biblio­
graphy, a detailed index, and sixteen (unpaginated) pages of
photographs.
An American Introduction to ULTRA
Thomas Parrish, The Ultra Americans: The U.S. Role in Breaking
the Nazi Codes. New York: Stein and Day, 1986. 338 pp. Biblio­
graphy and index. As brought out perhaps most effectively by
Jozef Garlinski in The Enigma War, foreword by R. V. Jones (N.Y.:
Scribner's, 1980), it was the Poles who broke the top-level Ger­
man Enigma code and shared it with the French and British early
in the Second World War. A growing body of literature is provid­
ing' an increas,ingly full picture of the institutional role of
signal [i.e., communications] intelligence operations; and a
vast, growing body of declassified materials (see the attached
NSA/CSS document listing) now offers a hitherto unavailable di­
mension of historical documentation on the era of the Second
World War. Thomas Parrish, editor of The Simon and Schuster
Encyclopedia of World War II (N.Y., 1978), has provided, in The
Ultra Americans, a fine account of the introduction of Americans
to the ultra-secret codebreaking operation centered at the Gov­
ernment Codes and Ciphers School at Bletchley Park near London.
It is also a book that can be recommended to the general read­
er as a thoroughly competent, yet readily understandable intro­
duction to a subject of considerable complexity, not only tech­
nologically, but also politically. As the war progressed, the
U.S. contribution to the joint Anglo-American effort, seen as a
whole, gradually became predominant, resulting in an increasing­
ly dominating U.S. role in the transatlantic partnership. There
9
was one sector in which this did not apply, however:
signal in­
telligence. As Parrish stresses, the U.S. Chief of Staff, Gen­
eral George C. Marshall, was keenly aware that his country was
the junior partner in this vital sector of the joint Anglo-Amer­
ican undertaking. This was clearly reflected in the instruc­
tions he gave Eisenhower, on the eve of the invasion of Norman­
dy, regarding the extraordinary precautions to be taken in the
use of ultra-secret intelligence in the field, including the as­
signment of Special Security Officers (SSOs) as a link between
Bletchley Park and the field commanders. As cited by Parrish
on page 190:
IiIn order to safeguard the continued availability of
this enormously important source of intelligence,1I Gener­
al Marshall said--i.e., to keep the British goose that
produced the golden eggs satisfied with American precau­
tions-- lI it is vital that these security regulations be
meticulously observed," and he went on to discuss the
procedures in detail. But the generals had to be told
not only how they must keep the secret but what to make
of these young men [the SSOs] who were going to appear
at their headquarters. Marshall made it plain: IITheir
primary responsibility will be to evaluate Ultra intel­
ligence, present it in useable form to the Commanding
Officer and to such of his senior staff officers as are"
authorized Ultra recipients, assist in fusing Ultra in­
telligence with intelligence derived from other sources,
and give advice in connection with making operational
use of Ultra intelligence in such fashion that the se­
curity of the source is not endangered~'
A powerful charter for the young Ultra representa­
tives who were to deal in an advisory way on a level
with veteran, high-ranking officers--telling them what
the information meant and then watching them to make
sure they did not misuse it and thus give the game away.
The unusually rigorous restrictions on dissemination of this sig­
nal intelligence information, epitomized by the role of SSOs (the
British had no such position) were partly responsiple for the
fact that the wartime role of signal intelligence--and the Ameri­
can role in it--was underestimated for so long. Any imbalance re­
garding the American role has probably been redressed by Parrish's
account, which is based on substantive interviews and correspond­
ence with McGeorge and William Bundy, Selmer Norland, Lewis Powell,
Adolph Rosengarten, Telford Taylor, Paul Whitaker, and many others
(several shown on sixteen pages of illustrations), as well as on
extensive archival research (the sources include, incidentally,
thirty-one of the SRH-series documents listed in the appendix to
this newsletter). For a responsible, well-documented account of
continuing Anglo-American intelligence cooperation after World War
II, see Jeffrey T. Richelson and Desmond Ball, The Ties That Bind:
Intelligence Cooperation Between the UKUSA Countries--the United
Kingdom, the United States of America, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand (Boston, London, Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1985).
10
The War Against Japan--and the Southeast Asian Seguel
Ronald H. Spector, Eagle Against the Sun: The American War with
Japan. New York: Free Press, 1985; paperback repr., N.Y.: Vin­
tage Books, 1985. xvi & 589 pp. Bibliography and index. This is
a superb one-volume account of the war in the Pacific, with cover­
age also of the China-Burma-India Theater, extensive annotation,
and a bibliographical essay, by the new Director of Naval History.
For the background of the Vietnam conflict during World War II
and the postwar period, see Spector's Advice and Support: The
Early Years, 1941-1960, vol. 1 of The United States Army in Viet­
nam (Washington: United States Army Center of Military History,
1983; paperback repr., N.Y: Free Press, 1985).
11
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INDEX OF NSA/CSS CRYPTOLOGIC DOCUMENTS
OFFERED TO
THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES OF THE UNITED STATES
(Record Group 457, Modern Military Headquarters Branch,
Mili~ary Archives Division)
As of May 1986
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SR-
Individual Translations,
Ja~anese
SRA-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Military Attache Messages
SRDG-
Individual Translations,
German Diplomatic Messages
SRDJ-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Diplomatic Messages
SRF-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Air Messages
SRGL-
Individual Translations,
German Navy Liaison Berlin/Tokyo Msgs.
SRGN-
Individual Translations,
German U Boat Messages
SRH-
Histories
SRIA-
Individual Translations,
German Abwehr Messages
SRIB-
Individual Translations,
Messages between Germany and clandestine
agents operating in Europe and Africa
SRIC-
Individual Translations,
Messages between Germany and clandestine
agents operating in the ~estern Hemispher
SRID-
Individual Translations,
Messages between German clandestine
agents operating in the Far East
SRMA-
Discrete records of historical cryptologic import
the U.S. Army
SR.."1D­
Discrete records of historical cryptologic import involving joint
service and/or U.S. Gov't cryptologic agencies or joint service
and/or U.S. Gov't agencies
SRMF-
Discrete records of historical cryptologic import originated by
the U.S. Air Force
SRMN-
Discrete records of historical cryptologic import originated by
the U.S. Navy
SRN-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Navy Messages
SRNA-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Naval Attache Messages
SRNM-
Miscellaneous records
SRNS-
Summaries
SRQ-
Unclassified Technical Documents
SRR-
Individual Translations,
Japanese Water Transport Messages
SRS-
Summaries
For netailed
this index
~ertaining
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Army Messages
origina~ed
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Japanese Naval Radio Intelligence
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Translation Reports of Japanese Intercept­
World War II - Mar 1942 to Sep 1944, Five
Volumes
(1,306 pages)
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SR-~183
thru
SR-~221
Translations of Japanese Army Messages,
June 1943 to Nov 1944 (4,113 pages)
SR-522 thru SR-l&679
Translations of Japanese Army Messages,
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945,
(13,428 pages)
SR-l~680
SR-26~04
SR-2~119
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(6,334 pages)
thru SR-24180
thru SR-2~600
thru SR-29653
,
SR-36,806 thru SR-43,314
SR-49,708 thru SR-54,894
SR-55,529 thru SR-55,755
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(11,923 pages)
SR-22,181
SR-28,601
SR-29,654
SR-43,315
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(18,137 pages)
thru
thru
thru
thru
SR-26,303
SR-29,118
SR-3&805
SR-49,707
thru SR-55?28
thru SR-58p18
SR-58$89 thru SR-63p51
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(Total pages: 7,560)
SR-64~39
SR-66~62
SR-65~24
SR-66~84
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Jaoanese Ground Forces) Dates: 194~-1~45
(Total pages: 509)
thru SR-58~88
thru SR-6~838
SR-6S152 thru SR-6~761
SR-6&985 thru SR-77p09
Translations of Japanese Army Messages
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(Total pages: 13,818)
SR-54S~5
SR-55~56
thru
thru
SR-5~520
SR-6~52
SR-77~OlO
thru SR-136,869
(Less SR-I01,605 thru
103,799, and SR-105,640
thru 105,900 - NOT USED)
Translations of Japanese Army MessaggS
(Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945
(Total pages: 57,404)
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SRA-1 thru SRA-6,946
Japanese Army Attache Translations,
June 1943 to Aug 1945
(6,946 pages)
SRA-6,947 thru 18,500
Japanese Army Attache Translations,
June 1943 to Aug 1945 (Total pages: 11,553)
z
SRDG-001 thru 1,170
SRDJ-001 thru 9,360
Japanese-German Diplomatic Messages
Dates: 1940-1941 (Total pages: 10,528)
SRDJ-9,361 thru 19,978
SRDG-1,171 thru 4,872
Japanese-German Diplomatic Messages
Dates: Apr 1941 to Jan 1942 (Total
pages: 14,320)
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SRDG-4,873 thru 7,195
SRDJ-19,978 thru 32,199
Japanese-German Diplomatic Messages
Dates: Feb 1942 to Feb 1943 (Total
pages: 14,544)
SRDG-7,196 thru 18,750
SRDJ-32,201 thru 43,166
Japanese-German Diplomatic Messages
Dates: Feb to Sep 1943 (Total pages: 22,520)
SRDJ-43,167 thru 113,784
SRDG-18,751 thru 30,304
SRDG-24,378A thru 24,378F
SRDJ-74,434A thru 74,434DT
Japanese-German Diplomatic Translations
Dates: Sep 1943 to Mar 1946 (Total
pages: 82,299)
SRDJ-113,785 thru 114,399
SRDJ-115,132 thru 115,614
~nese
SRDJ-115,615 thru 126,893
Japanese Diplomatic Messages and Gists
Dates: 1943-1945 (Total pages: 11,278)
SRF-001
thr~
SRF-55,792
Dates:
pages:
Diplomatic Translations
Sep 1939 to Mar 1945 (Total
1,823)
Translations of Japanese Air Force Messages
Dates: 1943-1944 (Total pages: 55,792)
SRGL-OOOl thru 2,964
German Navy Liaison: Berlin/Tokyo Msgs,
Individual Translations, 1 Jun 1942 to
22 May 1945 (Total pages: 2,964)
SRGN-001 thru 49,461
SRHN-49,462 thru 49,668
German Navy/U-Boat Message Translations &
Summaries, 2 Feb 1941 to 9 Ju1 1945 (U.S.)
10 Aug 1944 to 6 May 1945 (British) (Total
pages:
49,668)
SRIA-OOOI thru 1,550
German Abwehr Translations,
1944
(Total pages: 1,550)
SRIB-OOOI thru 7,361
German Clandestine Translations,
Dates: 1942-1945
(Total pages: 7,361)
SRIC-OOOI thru 4,164
German Clandestine Translations,
Dates: 1940-1945
(Total pages: 4,164)
SRID-Ol thru 73
German Clandestine Translations,
Dates: 1944-1945
(Total pages: 73)
G
2
Dates: 1942­
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SRN-OOI thru SR~-125,093 and
SR~A-OOI thru SR~A-5,324
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Translations of Japanese Navy Messages,
Japanese Naval Forces. Dates: 1940-1946
(Total pages: 130,416)
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SRN-125,'094 thru 129,615
. Jaoan~se Navy Messages, 1942-1946 (4,521 pages)~
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SRN-129,6l6 thru 133,367
SRN-133,368 thru 165, 038
Translation of Japanese Navy Messages,
Japanese Naval Forces,S Dec 41 - 25 Mar 42,
Naval Communications DIV-OP-20-G (3,752 pages)
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Translation of Jaoanese Naval Forces, m~II,
19 Dec 42 - 31 Dec 43, CINCPAC (Total pages:
31,670)
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SR~-165,039
thru 290,908
Translations of Jaoanese Naval Forces, M~II
CINCPAC, 1 Jan 44 - 15 Nov 45 (Total pages:
125,869)
SRNM-l thru SRNM-l,292
Miscellaneous Records Pertaining to Japanese
Naval Communications, WWII, 13 Mar 42 ­
4 Jun 42, DIV-OP-20-G (Total pages: 1,292)
SRl\lS-0001
thru SR.l\lS-l,289
Jaoanese Naval Radio Intelligence Summaries
Dates: 1942 - 1946 (Total pages: 2,882)
SRNS-l,290
thru SRNS-l,458
Su~~aries of Jauanese Warship/Fleet/Aircraft
Locations and Intentions. Dates: 1942 ­
1945 (Total pages: 2,296)
SRNS-l,459 thru
SR~S-l,5l6
Declassified Traffic Intelligence Summaries
of Ja~ane~e Naval Forces, 1942 - 1946
(Total pages: 12, 239)
SRO-OOI
Japanese Romanization of World Wide Place
Names. Vols I & II. Date: Dec 1945
(Total pages: 1,029)
SRQ-Ol
English Language Statistics Based on a Couit
of 2,022,000 Letters, Callimahos, July 1973
(32 pages)
SRQ-02
Recollections Concerning the Bi;th of One­
Time Tape and Printing-Telegrapn Machine
Cryptography, Parker, 1956 [covers period
1916-1920] (Total pages: 12)
SRR-OOI thru SRR-44,326
Japanese Water Transport. Dates: 6 Apr 43 ­
17 Jun 44 (Total pages: 44,326)
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SRS-Ol/04/19/25/26/35/39/
44/52/56/60/65/70/75/81/
87/94/101/108/115/129/157/
183 thru 547
"MAGIC" Summaries, Japanese Army Supplement!
Far East Summaries, 19 Sep 1944 - 2 Oct 45
(Total pages: 3,998)
SRS-170 (less 01/04/19/25/
26/35/39/44/52/56/60/65/70.
SRS-71 thru 133 (less 75/81/
87/94/101/108/115/129.
SRS-134 thru 182 (less SRS­
thru 157)
"MAGIC II Far East Summaries, 12 Feb 44 ­
18 Sep 44 (Total pages: 1,845)
SRS-548
B-BERICHTE & X-BERICHTE, 18 Seo 39 23 May 1945 (Excluding period from 23 Apr 44
to 6 Jan 45) German Naval Intelligence Sum­
maries, 18 Vols., Original bond paper docu­
ments & one diazo set of microfiche
(Total pages: 11,861)
SRS-549 thru SRS-823
(less 604 & 726)
IlMAGIC" Summaries, Asst. cIs, G-2,
20 March 1942 - 31 Dec 42 (Total pages: 3,112)
SRS-824 thru 1165 (less
SRS-850 thru 857 [error in
numbering documents])
IlMAGIC" Diplomatic Surhrnaries, Vol 1, Jan 43,
Vol. II, Feb 43, Vol. III, Mar 43, Vol. IV,
A9r 43, Vol. V, May 43, Vol. VI, Jun 43,
Vol. VII, Jul 43, Vol. VIII, Aug 43, Vol. IX,
Sep 43, Vol. X, Oct 43, Vol. XI, Dec 43;
Nov 43 Vol. not available.
(Total pps 4,252)
SRS-1166
TICOM B-BERICHTF., Vol #19 (5 May 44 - 20 Aug
44), Vol 20 (20 Aug 44-24Dec44): German
Naval Intelligence Summaries; reproductions of
originals (held by British) & one diazo set
of microfiche, completely declassified.
(Total pages: 1,457)
SRS-1167 thru SRS-1533
IlMAGIC Il Diolomatic Summaries, 1 Jan 44 ­
31 Dec 44 (Total pages: 4,222)
SRS-1534 thru SRS-1837
"MAGIC" Diplomatic Summaries, MIS, ~~ar Dept,
1 Jan 45 _*3 Nov 45. (Total pages: 3,204)
SRS-1838
MAGIC" Summary No. 609. Date: 25 Nov 43.
(Total pages: 16) duplicated document, see
SRS-1863.
SRS-1839 thru SRS-1868
"MAGIC" Summary }Irs. 585 thru 614. Date:
1 November - 30 November 1943.
(Total
pages: 145)
SRS-186,9
SUNSET Daily Intelligence Re~orts
1942-1945 (some missing), European Theater.
(Total pages: 1,680)
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SRH-OOI
Historical Background of the Signal Security Agency
Vol. I "Codes & Ciphers Prior to World War I (1776­
1917). (139 pages) Vol II "World War I (1917-1919)"
(353 pages) Vol. III "The Peace (1919-1939)" (416
pages) (Total pages: 908)
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SRH-002
SRH-003
SRH-004
War Secrets in the Ether, Wm. F. Flicke (312 pages)
Influence of U.S. Cryptologic Organizations on the
Digital Computer Industry, Samuel S. Snyder (38 pages)
Six Lectures on Cryptology, Wm. F. Friedman, 1965
(186 pages) Declassified Copy (Replaces Sanitized"
Released 30 June 1977)
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SRH-005
Use of (CX!MSS ULTRA) by the united States War Dept.
(1943-1945)
(82pages)
SRH-006
Synthesis of Experiences in the Use of ULTRA Intell.
by the U.S. Army Field Commands in the European Theatre
of Operations (29 pages)
SRH-007
Staff Study on Converter M-325 (Short Title: SIGFOY)
(4 pages)
SRH-008
Battle of the Atlantic, Vol II "u Boat Operations"
(Dec 1942 - end of War) (411 pages)
See SRH-024 and SRH-025 for Vols. III and IV
SRH-009
Battle of the Atlantic, Vol. I, Allied Communication
Intelligence, Dec 1942 ~ May 1945 (94 pages)
See SRH-024 and SRH-025 for Vols. III and IV
SRH-OIO
History of Converter M-325 (Short Title: SIGFOY)
Project History, 1946 (48 pages)
SRH-Oll
The Role of Co~~unications Intelligence in Submarine
Warfare in the Pacific (Jan 43 - Oct 43); Vol I 19 Nov 45;
Vol II 26 Nov 45; Vol III 29 Nov 45; Vol IV 10 Dec 45;
Vol V 1 Dec 45; Vol VIII Jan 46; Vol VII 15 Jan 46;
Vol VIII 28 Dec 45. (Total pages all volumes 2,442)
.SRH-012
The Role of Radio Intelligence in the American-Japanese
,.Naval'War. Four volumes, Aug 1941 to Sep 42 (2,128 pages)
See'also SRH-036, SRH-136, SRH-144.
SRH-013
History of U. S. Strategic Air Force Europe vs German
Air Force, June 1945 (386 pages)
SRH-014
Final Report on the Radio Intelligence Section, General
Staff Headquarters American Expeditionary Forces 1918 ­
1919. 1 Vol. (56 pages)
SRH-Ol5
Notes on German Fuel position, G-2 SHAEF, War Dept.
Memoranda and studies concerning the use of the ULTRA in
evaluating the German fuel position. 31 Mar 45 (44 pages)
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SRH-016
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The Need for New Legislation Against Unauthorized
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Disclosure of Communication Intelligence Activities,
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9 June 1944, a study of disclosures of cryptologic
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successes during ~~II and their impact.
(Total pps 110)~
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SRH-017
Allied Strategic Air Force Target Planning
(c. Aug 1945), 1 Vol.
(66 pages)
SRH-018
Collection of Japanese Diplomatic Messages, 12 Jul 38 21 Jan 42, Dept of the Army Intelligence Files, One
Volume.
(97 pages)
SRH-019
Blockade-Running Between Europe and the Far East by
Submarines. 1942-1944, 1 Dec 1944 (33 pages)
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SRH-020
Narrative Combat Intelligence Center Joint Intelli­
gence Center Pacific Ocean Area. 8 Nov 1945 (20 pages)
SRH-02l
Controlled Agent Communications Activities, 1944 ­
1945. One Volume.
(462 pages)
SRH-022
ULTRA and the U. S. Seventh Army. Author: Donald
S. Bussey, Major, Inf., 12 May 1945.
(7 pages)
SRH-022 Cancelled. Bussey report incorporated in
SRH-023.
SRH-023
Reports by U.S. Army ULTRA Representatives with Army
Field Commands in the European Theatre of Operations
1945. These documents were prepared during May 1945.
(Part I, 66 pages) (Part II, 118 pages). (Total pages 184
SRH-024 and
SRH-025
Battle of the Atlantic, Vols III & IV. Author unknown.
Date by deduction: May 1945.
(Vol III, 69 pages)
(Vol IV, 78 pages)
(Total pages 147)
See SRH-008 and SRH-009 for Vols II and I.
. SRH-026
Marshall Letter to Eisenhower on the Use of ULTRA Intel­
ligence, Author: G. C. Marshall, 15 Mar 44.
(4 pages)
SRH-027
"MAGIC" Background of Pearl Harbor. Volumes I thru V,
Dates: 14 Feb 1941 - 7 Dec 1941.
(Total: 8 bound books,
3,064 pages)
SRH-028
Code & Signal Memoranda, Navy Department Code & Signal
Section, Division of Operations. Date 1917. 1 book.
(35 pages)
SRH-029
A Brief History of the Signal Intelligence Service,
by William F. Friedman, 29 Jun 1942.
(18 pages)
SRH-030
A History of the Code and Cipher Section during the
First World War, by Major Herbert o. Yardley. Date-1919.
(12 pages)
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SRH-031
Trip Reports Concerning Use of ULTRA in the Mediter­
ranean Theatre. 1943-1944. 1 book (141 pages)
SRH-032
Reports by U. S. Army ULTRA Representatives with Field
Commands in the Southwest Pacific, Pacific Ocean and
China Burma India Theaters of Operation, 1944-1945.
(87 pages)
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SRH-033
SRH-034
History of the Operations of Special Security Officers
Attached to Field Commands, 1943-1945.
(7 pages)
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Marshall Letter to MacArthur on the Use of ULTRA
Intelligence, dated 23 May 1944.
(20 pages)
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'SRH-035
History of the Special Rranch, MIS, War Department.
Date, 1942-1944.
(63 pages)
·SRH-036
Radio Intelligence in World War II Tactical Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas. Date January 1943.
(688
pps) See also SRH-012, SRH-136 and SRH-144.
'SRH-037
Reports Received by U. S. War Dpt. on the Use of ULTRA
in European Theater, ~~II. Date October 1945.
(33 pages)
'SRH-038
SRH-039
A Selection of Papers pertaining to Herbert
Dates 1918-1950.
(192 pages)
"MAGIC" DiplOMatic Extracts.
·SRH-041
MIS Contribution to the War Effort.
(22 pages)
SRH-043
Yardley.
Unit History, 2d Army Air Force Radio Squadron Mobile.
Dates: April 1945 - June 1946.
(20 pages)
'SRH-040
SRH-042
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Date July 1945.
(80 pps)
Date Dec 1945.
Third Army Radio Intel1i\lence History in Campaign of
Western Europe. SIS, Thlrd U. S. Army, Date: Oct 1945.
(82 pages)
Statement for Record of Participation of Brig.Gen.Carter
Clarke, GSC, in the Transmittal of Letters from Gen.
George C. Marshall to Gov Thomas E. Dewey, Sep 1944.
(14 pages)
w.
SRH-044
War npt Regulations Governing the Dissemination and
Security of Communications Intelligence. Dates: 1943­
1945.
(88 pages)
SRH-045
Reminiscences of LTC Howard W. Brown, Sig Corps, Signal
security Agency, Washington, DC. Date 4 Aug 45 (57 pps)
SRH-046
Procedures for Handling ULTRA DEXTER Intelligence in the
CRI.
Rear Echelon, HO U. S. Army Forces, China, Burma,
India Theater.
Date:
22 Mar 1944.
(13 pages)
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SRH-047
Unit History, 3rd Radio Squadron Mobile, U,S. Army
Air Corps. Dates, April
(155 pages)
SRH-048
Summary of Operational Activity of Signal Security
Detachment "0," 12th Army Group, ETO. Dates, 1 Sep 44
to 1 Apr 45. (77 pages)
SRH-049
Technical Signal Intelligence Transmitted Directly to
G-2, 12th Army Group, ETO. Dates, 14 Aug 1944 - 7 May
1945. (218 pages)
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SRH-050
Riverbank Laboratory Correspondence, from G. Fabyan,
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BrigGen M. Churchill, H.O. Yardley. Date, 1919. (12 pages)~
SRH-05l
Interview with Mr. Ralph T. Briggs, by the Historian,
Naval Security Group. Dated 13 Jan 1977. (17 pages)
SRH-052
Estima'ted Aircraft Locations. Dates: July 43 - Aug 45.
(397 pages)
SRH-053
Soecial Report by Joint ~rmy - Navy Committee on the
Japanese Air Forces Estimate of the Japanese Situation.
Date 23 June 1945. (4 pages)
SRH-054
Effects of B-29 Operations in Support of ukinawa
Campaign. Dates: 18 Mar 45 - 22 Jun 45. (16 pages)
SRH-055
Estimated Unit Locations of Japanese Navy and Armi
Air Forces. Date 20 July 1945. (40 pages)
SRF.-0515
Preliminary Report to Pacific Order of Battle
Conference. 15 Aug 45. (233 pages)
SRH-057 and
SRH-058
"This is Our War," 1943 (200 pages). "The Legendary
William F. Friedman," Oct 74 (10 pages)
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. SRH-059
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Selected Examples of Commendations and Related Corres­ pondence Highlighting the Achievements of U. S. Signal
Intelligence during ~mII, 10 Jan 46. (67 pages)
SRH-060
Notes on the Japanese Theater Coordination Section,
Signal Security Agency, 16 Nov 43 - 25 Feb 44. (110 pages)
SRH-06l
Allocation of Special Security Officers to Special
Branch Military Intelligence Service, War Opt, 1943­ 1945. (33 pages)
. SRH-062
SRH-063
SRH-064
History of Military Intelligence Service, MIS, War Opt •
Sep 1945. (116 pages)
Japanese Surface and Air Operation, 1 Jan 42 - 31 Jan 42,
CNO, 21 Feb 45 (47 pa~es)
~Japanese
Submarine Ooerations, 23 Jan - 25 Mar 42, CNO.
28 Mar 45 (33 pages)
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SRH-065
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Japanese Surface and Air Operations, CNO, 1 Feb 42 ­
31 Mar 42, 6 Apr 45.
(54 pages)
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.SRH-066
SRH-067
SRH-068
Examples of Intelligence Obtained from Cryptoana1ysis,
1 Aug 46. (11 pages)
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Japan as Mediator in the Russo-German Conflict, Pacific ~
Strategic Intelligence Section and CNO, 29 Dec 44. (20 pps~
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Japanese Estimates of Germany's Ability to Continue the >
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Struggle, 22 Jan 45, COMINCH/CNO.
SRH-069
(25 pages)
The Problem of the Prolongation of the Soviet-Japanese
Neutrality Pact, dtd 12 Feb 45, COMINCH/CNO. (37 pages)
SRH-070
Notes on the Crimea (Yalta) Conference, 23 Mar 45,
COMINCH/CNO.
(11 pages)
SRH-07l
Abrogation of the Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact,
23 Apr 45, COMINCH/CNO.
(17 pages)
SRH-072
Recent Political Developments in Thailand (Siam),
1 May 45, COMINCH/CNO.
(23 pages)
SRH-073
White Russians in Manchukuo, 8 May 45, Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section CINC US Fleet and CNO. (11 pages)
SRH-074
Japanese - Burmese Relations, 9 May 45, Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section COMINCH/CNO.
(17 pages)
SRH-075
Japanese Reaction to German Defeat, 21 May 45, Pacific
Strategic Intelligence Section COMINCH/CNO. (16 pages)
SRH-076
Japanese - Portuguese Relations and the "Macao Problem"
Feb - May 45. Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section
COMINCH/CNO.
(13 pages)
SRH-077
Sino-Soviet Relations, June 45. Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section COMINCH/CNO.
(11 pages)
SRH-078
Russo-Japanese Relations, 18 Jun 45. Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section COMINCH/CNO.
(14 pages)
SRH-079
Russo-Japanese Relations, 2 Jul 45.
Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO.
. SRH-O 80
Pacific Strategic
(20 pages)
Compilation of Intelligence Data, Japanese Submarine
Forces, 9 Feb 45, Capt W. R. Smedberg, III. (3 pages)
SRH-08l
Information from George W. Linn, Capt, USNR (Ret) 23 Oct
80. Capt Linn.
(15 pages)
SRH-082
Situation in Thailand (Apr-Jun 45) 9 Jul 45, Pacific
strategic Intelligence Section COMINCH/CNO. (9 pages)
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SRH-083
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The Chungking-Yenan Controversy, 10 May 45, Pacific
Strate9ic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (18 pages)
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SRH-084
Russo-Japanese Relations (1-12 Jul 45), 14 Jul 45,
Pacific strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO.
(11 pages)
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SRH-085
SRH-086
SRH-087
(13-20 Jul 45) Pacific Strategic
Jul 45. (24 pages)
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Russo-Japanese Relations (21-27 Jul 45) 2 Aug 45,
Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO (22 pages)
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nongolian Independence, 3 Aug 45, Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (14 pages)
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SRH-088
. SRH-089
Russo-Japanese Relations, 28 Jul - 6 Aug 45, Pacific
Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (20 pages)
Military and Political Plans for the Southern Pacific
Area Formulated by the Japanese prior to 14 Aug 45,
Pacific Strategic Intelligence section, COMINCH!CNO,
24 Aug 45. (14 pages)
SRH-090
Japan's Surrender Maneuvers, 29 Aug 45 Pacific Strategic
Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (48 pages)
SRE-091
The Chungking-Yenan Controversy, Chronological Report,
8 Sep 45, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section,
COMINCH/CNO. (18 pages)
SRH-092
Japan (Reaction to Defeat and Current Problems), 28 Sep
45: Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO.
(37 pages)
SRH-093
Sino-Japanese Relations (Japan's China Policy) 2 Oct 45,
Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO.
(21 pages)
SRH-094
French Indo-China (Political Situation), 11 Oct 45,
Pacific Strategic Intelligen~e Section, COMINCH/CNO.
(24 pages)
SRH-095
Recent Political Develooments in French Indo-China,
6 Apr 45, Pacific Strat~gic Intelligence Section,
COMINCH/CNO. (19 pages)
SRH-096
Japanese Relations with the Remaining "Listening Posts"
in Europe, (May-mid July 1945), 1 Aug 45, Pacific Stra­
tegic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (14 pages)
SRH-097
Proceedings of Pacific Order of Battle Conference, 3-19
Jul 44, Col E. H. F. Svenson, USA. (133 pages)
SRH-098
Re ort of Pacific Order of Battle Conference (Ground
Forces), 15-18 Aug 45, MIS War Department. 363 pages)
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SRH-099
SRH-IOO
SRH-lOl
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History of the Intelligence G;oup MIS (MID) W.D.G.S.
7 Dec 41 - 6 Sep 45, Graphic Presentation of Intelli­
gence, 6 Sep 45, MIS, War Opt. (ISS pages)
The Aftermath of Japanese Occupation of French
Indo-China, (Mar-May 45), May 1945, Pacific Stiit~gic
Intelligence Section. (12 pages)
Estimated Disposition of Japanese Fleet Naval Aircraft
and Merchant Shipping, Seventh Fleet Intelligence Center,
13 Aug 44. (20 pages)
SRH-I02
Identifications, Locations and Command Functions of
Significant Japanese Army/Navy Personnel, CINCPAC,
CINCPOA (15 Feb - 1 Aug 45).
(40 pages)
SRH-I03
Suicide Attack Squadron Organization, CINCPAC, CINCPOA,
July 45. (22 pages)
SRH-I04
Enemy Combat Ship Losses, CINCPAC, CINCPOA, 1 Aug 45.
(15 pages)
SRP.-I05
Japanese Swept Channels and Sunken Vessels as Indicated
in ULTRA (MAPS), 18 Aug 45, CINCPAC, CINCPOA. (24 pages)
-SRH-106
Specific Instructions for the Handling and Dissemination
of Special Intelligence, 25 Jan 41, G2, DA, DNI, USN
12 pages)
. SRH-I07
Problems of the SSO System World War II, Aug 52, MIS,
War Dpt, U. S. Army. (40 pages)
SRH-I08
SRH-I09
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... Maj Warrack ~~allace, USA. (8 pages)
Organization and Operations of the German Specialists,
MIS, War Dpt. 2 Jul 45. (12 pages)
. SRH-IIO
Ooerations of the Military Intelligence Service, War
Opt, London, 11 Jun 45, F. W. Rilles, LtCol GSC. (57 pages
. SRH-lll
MAGIC Reports for the Attention of the President, 1943­
1944, MIS, War Department. (32 pages)
SRH-112
Post Mortem Writings on Indications of Ardennes Offen­
sive, 1945, Dpt of Army and NSA. (44 pages)
-J
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SRH-ll3
Selected Documents Concerning O.S.S. Operations in Lisbon,
MIS War Dpt. 5 May - 13 Jul 43. (27 pages)
/
SRH-114
China's Position Today, COMINCH, CNO, 19 Aug 45. (25 pages
. SRH-llS
U. S. Army Investig~tions Into the Handling of Certain
Communications Prior to the Attack on Pearl Harbor, 1944­
1945, MIS. ~1ar Dpt. (387 pages)
11
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SRH-116
'SRH-1l7
Origin, Functions and Problems of the Special
Branch, M.I.S. (55 pages)
History of Special Branch M.I.S. June 1944 September 1945 (11 pages)
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SRH-llB
Incidental Exhibits re Pearl Harbor Investigation
(MIS WDGS) (481 pages)
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Military Intelligence Service War Department Special Security Officer and Other Correspondence
Relating to Special Intellige'nce in the" Pa'Cific
Ocean Area (92 pages)
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SRH-120
Utilization of American Indians as Communication
Linguists (107 pages)
SRH-12l
Japanese Ship List "Know Your Enemy:" 18 Dec 1944
(38 pages)
SRH-122
Japanese Messages Concerning the Hoshi Maru and the
Awa Maru - December 1944 thru August 1945 (143 pages)
SRH-123
Brownell Committee Report (212 pages)
·SRH-l24
Ooerational History of the 849th Signal Intelligence
Service, Mediterranean ~heater of Operations, USA
(210 pages)
SRH-125
Certain Asoects of "Magic" in the Cryptologic Backqround of the Various Official Investigations Into
tl.e Pearl Harbor Attack, by Nm. F. Friedman (74 pages)
SRH-126
History and Organization of Pacific Military Intelligence Research Section '(PACMIRS), Camp Ritchie, Maryland,
6 Sep 1944 - 14 Aug 1945.
(55 pages)
SRH-127
Use and Dissemination of ULTRA in the Southwest
Pacific Area, 1943-1945. (195 pages)
'SRH-128
Study of Pearl Harbor Hearings, Military Intelligence
Service, War Department General Staff, 1947 (39 pages)
SRH-129
Japanese Order of Battle, Bulletins, Military Intelligence Service, March - June 1944. (171 pages)
SRH-130
History of the Intelligence Group, MIS, MID, WDGS,
Scientific Branch, 1945 (80 9ages)
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Military Branch:
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Part II, Pacific Order of Battle Section
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(225 pages)
Part III, Pacific Order of Battle Section, Continued
(217 pages)
Part IV, Pacific Order of Battle Section, Continued
(151 pages)
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(159 pages)
(Total pps92.9
SRH-132
History of the Special Distribution Branch,
MIS, WDGS (7 pages)
SRH-133
Report of Mission to Hawaii and Marianas to Study
Security of 21st Bomber Command Communications, MIS,
WDGS, March 1945. (53 pages)
'SRH-134
SRH-135
. SRH-136
Expansion of the Signal Intelligence Service from 1930 7 December 1941,by V~. F. Friedman (29 pages)
History of the Second Signal Service Battalion, 1939 1945. Army Security Agency, Dept. of Army. (186 pages)
Radio Intelligence in World War II, Tactical Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas, December 1942. (707 pages)
SRH-137
Unit History. 1st Radio Sguadron~ Mobil~r U. S. Air
Force Security Service. 1-31 August 1949 - 1 March 30 April 1950. (24 pages)
SRH-138
Unit History. 2nd Radio Squadron, Mobile, United States
Air Force Security Service. 1 February 1949 to 31 July
1949. (56 pages)
SRH-139
Unit Historv, 3rd Radio Squadron, Mobile, United States
Air Force Security Service. 1 January to 31 December
1950. (184 pages)
SRH-140
History of the "Language Liaison GrouPl- 1I Military
Intelligence Service, War Department, 22 September 1945.
(16 pages)
.. SRH-141
Part 1 and Part 2. Papers from the Personal Files of
Alfred McCormack, Colonel, AUS. Special Branch, G-2
Military Intelligence Branch, War Dpt. (Part 1 - 223
pages; Part 2 - 347 pages.)
(Total page!: 570)
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ULTRA and the Campaigns Against the U-Boats in
World War II. (42 pages)
SRH-143
ULTRA in the Battle of Britain:
Success? (72 pages)
"'SRH-144
SRH-145
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The Real Key to
Intelligence in World War II, Tactical Operations
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Part 2.) (642 pages)
See also SRH-012, SRH... 036 and SRH-136.
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Collection of Memoranda on Operations of'SIS
Intercept Activities and Dissemination, 1942 - 1945.
(293 pages)
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· SRH-146
Handling of ULTRA within the Military Intelligence
Service. 1941 - 1945. (7 pages)
· SRH-147
Communication Intelligence Summaries, 1 November 6 December 1941, Commandant, 14th Naval District,
United States Navy. (44 pages)
SRH-148
.' SRH-14 9
General Information on Local ULTRA Picture as
Background for Signal Intelligence Conference.
6 March 1944. (10 pages)
A Brief History of Communications Intelliqence in
the United States, by Laurance F. Safford, Captain,
USN (Ret) (22 pages)
SRH-150
· SRE-15l
The Birthday of the Naval Security GrouE (6 pages)
~ilitary
Study Communication Intelligence Research
Activities, United States Navy, 30 June 1937. (25 pages)
. SRH-152
Histor.,Y Review of OP-20-G, United States Navy
(13 pages)
· SRH-153
MIS, War DeEartment Liaison Activities in the UK,
1943 - 1945~ (20 pages)
. SRH-154
~ignal
Intelligence Disclosures in the Pearl Harbor
Investigations. (47 pages)
SRH-155
Intelligence Summaries, Japanese Shipping, January February 1943. (59 pages)
SRH-156
Weekly Listings of Merchant Vessels Sunk in Far
Eastern Waters. 14 December 1944 - 14 March 1945.
PSIS 120-2- PSIS 120-14. (97 pages)
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SRH-157
Monthly Listing of Sinkings of Japanese Ships
April - September 1945. PSIS 121-1 - 121-6 (66 pps)
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SRH-158
A List of Japanese Merchant Ships, Second Edition
PSIS 100-1, 1 February 1945. Part I - Abe M. to
Kyu-Urakaze M.
(327 pps) Part II - Lai Hsing to
Zyno M.
(362 pps) (Total pages 689)
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SRH-159
Preliminary Historical Report on the Solution of
the IIB II Machine (10 pages)
SRH-160
History of Weather Unit.
(33 pages)
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SRH-16l
Permanent Organization for Code and Cipher Investigation
and Attack (Plans for M.I. 8)
(8 pages)
SRH-162
History of Security Monitoring WWI to,1955.
SRH-163
Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee (JANAC) Miscellaneous
Memoranda 1943 - 1947.
(109 pages)
SRH-164
Memoranda from COMINCH (F20) to Joint Army-Navy Assessment
Committee (JANAC) 1944 - 1945
(163 pages)
SRH-165
Memoranda from Office of Naval Communications to Joint
Army-Navy Assessment Committee (J.~AC). Parts I, II and
III.
(852 pages)
SRH-166
Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee (JANAC) Memoranda
to Office of Naval Communications. September 19~4 (643 pages)
May 1946. Parts I and II.
SRH-167
Memoranda from Army Signal Corps to Joint Army-Navy
Assessment Committee (JANAC), 1945 -1946.
(33 pages)
SRH-168
Agenda Minutes/Assessments, Joint Army-Navy Assessment
Committee (JANAC), Parts I thru IX, Meetings 1 - 66,
1943 - 1947.
(2,800 pages)
. SRH-169
SRH-170
(13 pages)
Centralized Control of U. S. Army Signal Intelligence
Activities.
(91 pages)
Shipping and Economic Notes, Military Intelligence Service,
War Department. Part I - Indices. Part II thru XIII,
18 October 1944 - 28 September 1945.
(5,544 pages)
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SRH-171
SRH-172
SRE-173
Navy Department, Office of Chief of Naval Operations,
Secondary Course in Cryptanalysis. (63 pages)
OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Army Order of
Battle Information (5 Oct - 7 Dec 43), Parts I thru IV.
(l,558 pages)
OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle,
First Edition (15 Mar 44), Parts I and II. (776 pages)
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OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle, ~
Second Edition (15 May 44), Parts I and II. (845 pages)
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SRH-175
Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle,
(26 May - 17 Nov 44), Parts I and II. (943 pages)
SRH-176
OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of
Battle, Fifth Edition (12 January 1945), Parts I
thru III. (927 pages)
SRH-177
Interrogation of Jaoanese Concerning Possible Broadcast
or the "Winds Execute" Messages (Oct-Nov 1945).
(15 pages)
SRH-178
Radio Security Station, Marine Detachment, Peiping,
China, 1927-1935.
(8 pages)
SRH-179
Radio Securit Station, Fourth Marine Re iment, Shan hai,
China, 1924-1929 1935-1940. (50 pages)
. SRH-180
SRH-lSl
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S. Naval Pre-World War II Radio Intelligence Activities
in the Philippine Islands, 1931-1942. (100 pages)
OCSIG04 Si9 na1 Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle,
Fourth Edition (10 October 1944), Parts I thru V. (1,328
~ages)
SRH-182
u. S. Naval Communications Suoplementary Activity,
Vaitogi, Samoa, 1939 - 1947. (29 pages)
SRH-lS3
OCSIGO, Signal Security Aqency, Location of Japanese
Military Installations, 14 December 1944. (31 pages)
SRH-184
CND Pacific Strateqic Intelligence Section, Allied Claims
and ~nemy Confirmation of Damage to Japanese Ships
(January 1943 February 1945), Parts I thru X. (2,909 pages
SRH-185
~ar
SRH-186
u. S. Naval SUP~lementary Radio Station, Iwo Jima,
March
December 1945. (32 ~ages)
SRH-187
u.
Experience of Alfred McCormack.
(83 pages)
S. Naval Supn1ementary Radio Station, Palmyra
Island, Territory of Hawaii. (7 pages)
16
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SRH-188
SRH-189
SRH-190
u.
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DirecC~6n
S.
Strategic Radio
Finder Station,
Guadalcanal, November 1942 - 4 December 1944 (6 pages)
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S. Navy Strategic Radio Direction Finder Station,
Tarawa Atoll, 13 - 19 December 1943 - 27 November 1944.
(6 pages)
u.
SRH-192
u.
SRH-193
u.
SRH-194
n.
SRH-195
War Department (MID), Military Intelligence Service,
Japanese Ground Forces Order of Battle Bulletins (7 April11 August 1945). Parts I and II.
(799 pages)
SRH-196
Reports of the Activities of Dr. Marshall Stone in the
China, Burma and India Theaters, 29 January-3l March
1945.
(23 pages)
S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Kwajalein,
29 February 1944 - 8 December 1945.
(6 pages)
S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Manus Island,
17 June 1944 - 10 October 1945.
(30 pages)
S. Naval Radio Direction Finder Station, Morotai
Island, 24 January - 3 February 1945.
(18 pages)
S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Leyte, Philippine
Islands, 16 July 1945 - 17 September 1945.
(5 pages)
u.
S. Navy Communication Intelligence organization,
Liaison and Collaboration, 1941-1945.
(39 pages)
u.
SRH-198
File of Messages Exchanged with
to Moscow.
(46 pages)
SRH-199
Japanese Army Shipping Organization, 1 March 1945,
Military Intelligence Service, War Department.
(121
pages)
- SRH-200
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1 December 1942 - 1 January 1946.
(17 pages)
SRH-19l
. SRH-197
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OP-20-G File on Army/Navy Collaboration 1931-1945.
OP-20-G, (Part 1, 345 pages; Part 2, 294 pages)
Part 1 - 18 July 1931 - 31 May 1944
Part 2 - 1 June 1944 - 22 August 1945 (Total pages 3,639)
SRI-l-20l
A Collection of German U-Boat Admonition/Experience
Messages, 1943-1945 (OP-20-G) (208 pages)
SRH-202
Location of Principal Combat Ships (Japanese),
22 September - 29 December 1944 (OP-20-G) (16 pages)
17
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,SRH-203
SRH-204
SRH-205
General Headquarters, Southwest Pacific Area, Military
Intelligence Section, General Staff, Special Intelligence Bulletins, Nr. 1 - 390; 2 May 1943 - 31 May 1944.
Parts 1,2 and 3. (923 pages)
A List of Japanese Merchant Ships, First Edition July 1944 and First Supplement - August 1944, OP-20-G.
'(599 pages)
OP-20-G, A Compendium of Available World War II Italian
Submarine Message Translations (30 January - 10 September
1943). (47 pages)
SRH-206
U. S. Navy (OP-20) Report on Orange Navy's Reaction
to Changkufeng Incident - August 193B. (16 pages)
SRH-207
Evacuation of USN COMINT Personnel from Corregidor in
World War II. (99 pages)
SRH-20B
United States Navy, Submarine Warfare Message Reports,
COMINCH to Admiralty, 3 June 1942-9 June 1945, Serials 1 458, Parts I, II, III and IV. (495 pages)
SRH-209
OP20G Traffic and Decrvption Intelligence Charts
'(Japanese Navy) 20 January - 1 May 1942. (249 pages)
, SRH-2l0
Colle.ction of Papers Related to the "Winds Execute"
Message, U. S. Navy, 1945. (BO pages) ,-
SRH-2ll
Japanese Radio Communications and Radio Intelligence,
CINCPAC-CINCPOA Bulletin 5-45, 1 Jan 1945. (34 pa~es)
SRH-212
Elementary Cipher Solution, Navy Depar~ment, Office of
Chief of Naval Operations, 1930. (24 pages)
SRH-2l3
Office of Operations Bulletins, Office of Chief of Naval
Operations, Navy Department, 1935 - 1941. (40 pages)
SRH-2l4
Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis, Office of Chief of,
Naval Operations, Navy Department, c. 1939. (42 pages)
SRH-2l5
u. S. Navy, Communication Security Group Training
Pamphlet No. 17, Ciohers, 1937. (49 pages)
SRH-2l6
Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis, Office of Chief of
Naval Operations, Navy Department, c. 1940. (70 pages)
SRH-217
USN Basic Course in Elementary Cryptanalysis, 1941 1942. (164 pages)
SRH-2lB
Navy Department Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis,
1946. (96 pages)
18
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ULTRA Material in
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Blarney Papers.
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SRH-·220
Messaqes between U.S./?hilippine Guerilla Forces and HQ,
S~PA (December 1942 - November 1943).
Parts I thru VI.
(7,112 :9ages)
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SRH-22l
SRE-222
SIS Activities of Caotain Harrison and Captain Koerner,
ETO 1944 - 1945.
(19 pages)
Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (May June 1930):
(OP-20)
(221 pages)
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Various Reports on Jaoanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (June August 1933).
(278 pages)
SRP.-224
Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (August October 1934).
(119 pages)
SRH-225
Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (July September 1935).
(80 pages)
SRE-226
Japanese Naval Reserve Communications Intelligence
Specialists (1941 - 1945).
(16 pages)
SRR-227
Unit Eist0rJL,- l26~~.Sianal Radio Intelliqence
Fe~ruary 1941 - Seotemher 1945.
(103 :9ages)
- s ~:-~.- 2 2S
Co~oanv
Histories of Radio Intelliqence Units, ~urooean Theatre,
Septem.ber 1944 to ~arch 1915, Volume I and II. (Vol. I
397 ~a(jes, Vol -"':1 2390ages) (Total pages 636)
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1942 - 30 April 1946. (209 pages)
. SRH-230
The Role of COMINT in the Battle of Midway .
(9 pages)
SRE-23l
Japanese Reports on Monitorinq of Allied Wireless Cowmunications in the Philipnines (January - December 1943).
(113 pages)
SRH-232
U.S. Navy COMINCH Radio Intelligence Appreciation
Concern ina German U-Boat Activity in the Far East
(January - April 1945).
(9 pages)
SR.H-233
U.S. Navy Director of Naval Communications Memor~nda on
the Congressional Investigations of the Attack on Pearl
Harbor.
(43 pages)
SR!-:!-234
The Zimmermann Telegram and Related Pa?ers.
SRE-235
COMINT Contributions, Submarine Warfare in
17 June 1947.
(4 pages)
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u.s.
Navy, Submarine l'Jarfare Message Reports, A.dmiralty
to COMINCH, 24 May 1942 - 12 June 1945, Parts I-X,
British Admiralty.
(2,869 pages)
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SRH-237
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Geiger-Muller Counter for Detection of Radioactive
Secret Ink, 1941 - 1945, Signal Security Agency.
(34 pages)
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MIS/SSA Axis Analysis of Over-The-Hump u.S. Air Transport
Traffic, 15 June 1945, MIS/SSA.
(23 ~ages)
,
SRH-239
War Department, MIS, Japanese Army Signal Centers'and
Officer Lists, 1 September 1945, MIS.
(27 pages) ,( <
SRH-·240
Detachment B, 5th Radio Scruadron Mobile Weekly R/T
Technical Summary, 19 - 25 November 1944 and 17 - 23
December 194~. (29 pages)
SRH-241
Historical Data Report, 26th Radio Squadron Mobile,
1 January 1953 - 30 June 1954.
(188 pages)
SRH-242
History of the 12th Radio Squadron Mobile, 1 January 31 March 1953.
(314 pages)
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Pistorical ReDort, 15t~ Radio Souadron Hohile, 1 April December 195JL,--1 Auaust~r-Decernber 1954.
(100 pages)
30
SRE-2<11
~istorical
Reuort, 8th Radio Rauadron Mobile, 21
1947 - 28 February 1954.
(268 pages)
Nove~ber
~istorical
Data Fenor-t, 6961st Co~unications Squadron,
1 January - 31 December 1~53.
(120 ~ages)
SR!-I-246
Historical Data Report, 6962nd Supply Squadron, 1 Se9tember 31 December 1953.
(27 pages)
SF.:H-247
Historical pata Report, 34th Radio Squadron Mobile,
1 January - 30 Se~tember 1953.
(68 pages)
SRH-248
Historical Data Report, 31st Communications Security
Sauadron, 8 December - 31 December 1953.
(110 pages)
SRH'-249
~istor¥_~~f
the 32nd Communications Security Sauadron,
(51 pa0es)
1 July - 31 December 1953.
SRS-250
Historical Data Report, 84th Radio Squadron Mobile,
1 January 1953 - 31 December 1954.
(48 pages)
SRH-251
Historv of Communications Security in Korea, Serytember
1950 - JUly 1953.
(9 pages)
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SRH-253
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Intelligence Service (Later Signal Security Agency)
1930 - 1945, by John B. Hurt.
(218 pages)
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Historical Data Report, 85th Radio Squadron Mobile,
8 - 31 December 1953.
(6 pages)
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The Japanese Intelligence System, MIS/WDGS, 4 September
1945.
(171 pages)
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SRH-254
SRH-255
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(82 pages)
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SRH-256
Attack on the U.S.S. Liberty.
SRH-257
Analysis of Japanese Air Operations During Okinawa
Campaign, 1 October 1945.
(327 pages)
SRH-258
Japanese Army Air Forces Order of Battle, 1945.
(360 pages)
SRH-259
OP-20-G File on Reports on Japanese Naval Air Order of
Battle (World War II).
(98 pages)
SRH-260
OP-20-G File of Memoranda, Reports and Messages on German
Rlockade Runners (World War II).
1943 - 1944 (238 pages)
SRH-26l
Analysis of a Mechanico-Electrical Cryptograph, Part II.
(66 pages)
SRH-262
Japanese Minor Combatant Vessels Used For Deep-Sea Escort,
1 June 1945 (PSIS, OP-20).
(42 pages)
SRH-263
Japanese Submarine Sinkings During WWII, OP-23, 25 October
1945 - 29 November 1945.
(18 pages)
. SRH-264
(71 pages)
(J)
A Lecture on Communications Intelligence by Capt. J. N.
Wenger, USN, 14 August 1946.
(91 pages)
SRH-265
Status of Japanese Naval Vessels as of November 1945,
CINCPAC/CINCPOA.
(91 pages)
SRH-266
Japanese Signal Intelligence Service, SSA, 1 Nov 44.
(66 pages)
SRH .... 267
History of Engineering Research Associates, 16 Aug 46.
<36 pages)
, SRH-268
Advanced Intelligence Centers in the U. S. Navy, 1942.
(8 pages)
" SRH-269
U. S. Army Comint Policy:
1942.
(6 pages)
. SRH-270
Army-Navy-FBI Comint Agreements of 1942.
21
Pearl Harbor to Summer
(5 pages)
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Presidential MemoranduM of Communications Intelligence
Activities, 24 October 1952. (8 pages)
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CINCPAC EneMy Activities File, April - May 1942.
024 pages)
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· SRH-273
· SRH-274
SRH-275
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Military Cryptanalytics, Part I, by William F. Friedman
and Lambros D. Callimahos, April 1956. (443 pages)
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Military Cryptanalytics, Part II, by Lambros D. Callimahos
and William F. Friedman, October 1959. (634 pages)
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OP-20-G file on Fleet Radio Unit, Melbourne (Frume1),
28 June 1943 - 2 SepteMber 1945. (156 pages)
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SRH-276
Centralized Control of U. S. Army Signal Intelligence
Activities, 30 January 1939 - 16 April 1945. (160 pages)
SRH-277
A Lecture on COMmunications Intelligence by Radm B. E.
Stone, DIRAFSA, 5 June 1951. (51 pages)
SRH-278
War Diary, Combat Intelligence Unit (Pacific, 1942).
(193 pages)
SRH-279
OP-20-G File, Communication Intelligence Organization,
1942 - 1946. (86 pages)
SRH-280
An Exhibit of the Important Types of Intelligence
Recovered Through Reading Japanese Cryptograms, WW Icr,
SSA, (239 pages)
.SRH-281
7
United States Navy File of Correspondence with
Department of State, 1919 - 1950. (208 pages)
. SRH-282
Military Cryptanalysis, Part I, by William F •
Friedman, War Department, Office of Chief Signal
Officer, 1938. (143 pages)
, SRH-283
Military Cryptanalysis, Part II, by William F.
Friedman, War Department, Office of Chief Signal
Officer, 1938. (120 pages)
SRH-284
Radio Intelligence in WW II: Submarine Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas - November 1943. (537
pages). See also SRH-Oll, SRH-285, SRH-286.
SRH-285
Radio Intelligence in WW II: SubMarine Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas - December 1943. (144
pages). See also SRH-011, SRH-284, SRH-286.
SRH-286
Radio Intelligence in WW II: Subnarine Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas - January - Pebruary 1944
(in part).
( 244 pages) See also SRH-Oll, SRH-284,
SRH-2A5.
22
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SRH-287
Radio Intelligence in \~v II: Tactical Operations in
the Pacific Ocean Areas - March 1943 (444 pages)
(Appendix only).
See SRH-012, SRH-036, SRH-136, SRH144 and SRH-288.
SRH-288
Radio Intelligence in WW II: Tactical Operations
in the Pacific Ocean Areas - April 1943, (516 pages).
See SRH-012, SRH-036, SRH-136, SRH-144 and SRH-287.
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SRH-289
The Employment of Mobile Radio Intelligence units By
COMMands Afloat During WW 11,1946, U. S. Navy (OP-20G),
(151 pages).
SRH-290
U. S. Naval Direction Finder StatioA, Soapstone Point,
Alaska, 1921-1938, NSG.
(5 pages)
SRH-29l
U. S. Naval Communications Station, Guam, Station B,
1929-1942, NSG.
(7 pages)
SRH-292
U. S. Naval Radio Direction Finder Station, Point St.
George, Crescent City, California, 1923-1944, NSG.
(26 pages)
SRH-293
U. S. Naval Radio Station, Astoria, Oregon, 1932-1939,
NSG.
(14 pages)
SRH-294
U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Chincoteague Island, Virginia,
1942-1943, NSG.
(6 pages)
SRH-295
U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Sitka, Alaska, 1938-1944,
NSG.
(30 pages)
SRH-296
U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Farallon Island, California,
1921-1942, NSG.
(10 pages)
SRH-297
U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Point Arguello, California,
1939-1943, NSG.
(27 pages)
SRH-298
u.
SRH-299
U. S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Jan Mayen
Island, November 1943 - December 1945, NSG.
(36 pages)
SRH-300
U. S. Naval Suprad station, Antigua, British West Indies,
1943-1944, NSG.
(7 pages)
SRH-30l
u. S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Port Isabel,
Texas, 1943-1945, NSG.
(33 pages)
SRH-302
u. S. Naval Supradsta, Poyner's Hill, Poplar Branch,
North Carolina, 1920-15 July 1945, NSG.
(59 pages)
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S. Naval HFDF Station, Cape Lookout, North Carolina,
1935-1942, NSG.
(7 pages)
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Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Otter Point,
Umnak Island, Alaska, 1941-1945, NSG.
(15 pages)
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U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico,
Mar 41-Feb 45, NSG.
(10 pages)
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'SRH-306
SRH-307
The Undeclared War "History of R. I.," 15 November
1943, by L. F. Safford, CAPT., U. S. Navy.
(29 pages)
OP20G, Exploits and Commendations World War II, 19421948, NSG.
(151 pages)
G.H.Q., SWPA, Special Intelligence Precis, G-2,
General Headquarters, South - West Pacific Area,
22 Feb 1943-22 Nov 1943.
(67 pages)
SRH-308
Fleet Radio Unit Detachment, Cooktown, Australia,
Sep 43-0ct 44, NSG.
(26 pages)
SRH-309
Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence Unit Reports,
1945.
(Parts I, II, III).
(848 pages)
SRH-310
German Military Ciphers from February to November,
1918.
(61 pages)
SRH-311
Principles of Solution of Military Field Codes Used
~the German Army in 1917, Office of the Chief
Signal Officer, 25 Jun 1934.
(35 pages)
SRH-312
U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Exmouth Gulf, Australia,
May 1943-November 1944, NSG.
(27 pages)
SRH-313
Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence Unit Reports,
1942.
(39 pages)
SRH-3l4
Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence Unit Reports,
1944.
(120 pages)
SRH-31s
American Army Field Codes in the American Expeditionary
Forces During the First World War.
(273 pages)
SRH-316
u.
SRH-317
Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence Unit Reports 1943.
(307 pages)
SRH-318
U. S. Navy Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers,
1936.
(392 pages)
SRH-319
Various Reports on Japanese Grand Pleet Maneuvers,
1937.
(12 pages)
S. Naval Supplementary Radio station, Adelaide
River, Northern Territory, Australia, 23 March 194321 Sept 1945, NSG.
(33 pages)
24
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SRH-321
Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers,
1927-1929.
(58 pages)
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Report of Code Compilation Section, General Headquarters,
American Expeditionary Forces, December 1917-November
1918.
(44 pages)
m
Statistical Methods in Cryptanalysis by Solomon
Kullback, Ph.D.
(194 pages)
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SRH-323
COHINCH Combat Intelligence Division File on Hospital
Ships, Part I - General File (192 pages), Part II Submarine Patrol Reports Pertaining to Hospital Ships
(3D5 pages), Part III - Misuse of Hospital Ships by
Japanese Navy (143 pages) (Total pages: 640).
SRH-324
Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence units, Related
Correspondence, 1943-1945.
(282 pages)
SRH-325
Historical Reports of Monitoring Stations MS-2 to
MS-10 From Date of Activation to June 1944.
(70 pages)
SRH-326
u. S. Naval Radio Station, Libugon, Guam.
SRH-327
Studies in German Diplomatic Codes Employed During the
World War, 1937.
(106 pages)
SRH-328
The Index of Coincidence and Its Applications in
Cryptanalysis, 1935.
(75 pages)
SRH-329
Combat Code No.1 (CC-l), 1942 Revision.
SRH-330
Principles of Solution of Cryptograms Produced by the
I. T. & T. Cipher Machine, 1934.
(19 pages)
SRH-331
General Solution for the ADFGVX Cipher System, 1934.
(21 pages)
SRH-332
Permutation Tables Involving a Feature of Non-Transposability, 1934.
(12 pages)
SRH-333
The Principles of Indirect Symmetry of Position in
Secondary Alphabets and Their Application in the
Solution of Polyalphabetic Substitution Ciphers,
1935.
(23 pages)
SRH-334
Further Applications of the Principles of Indirect
Symmetry of Position in Secondary Alphabets, 1935.
(32 pages)
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(57 pages)
(58 pages)
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The Contribution of the Cryptographic Bureaus in
the World War, 1935.
(88 pages)
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SRH-336
Treatise on Cryptography by Lange and Soudart, 1925.
(119 pages)
SRH-337
Course in Cryptography by General Marcel Givierge,
1934.
(165 pages)
SRH-·338
Manual of Cryptography by General Luigi Sacco, 1941.
(194 pages)
SRH-339
Elements of Cryptography by Captain Roger Baudouin.
(213 pages)
SRH-340
operating Instructions for M-16l-C, Short Title SIGLSV.
(24 pages)
SRH-34l
Latin American Clandestine Radio, 1942.
SRH-342
Cryptographic Division, German Word List, August 1942.
(198 pages)
SRH-343
Cryptographic Division, Spanish Word List, August 1942.
(198 pages)
SRH-344
General Address and Signature Code No.2.
SRH-345
Elements of Cryptanalysis Training Pamphlet No.3,
May 1923.
(163 pages)
SRH-346
Special Text No. 165, Elementary Military Cryptography,
1935 Edition.
(83 pages)
SRH-347
Cryptographic Division, Italian Word List, August 1942.
(213 pages)
SRH-348
U. S. Navy Mobile Radio Intelligence in the European
Theater, WW II, 1944-1945.
(29 pages)
SRH-349
The Achievements of the Signal Security Agency in World
War II, Feb 1946.
(115 pages)
SRH-350
Elementary Course in Probability, Second Edition, February
1957.
(166 pages)
SRH-351
American Army Field Codes Used in World War I, Vol. I
(146 pages) Vol. II (80 pages) Vol. III (82 pages).
(Total pages:
308)
26
(60 pages)
(76 pages)
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SRH-352
U. S. Naval Radio Station Dutch Harbor, Unalaska Island,
Alaska, 19AO.
(27 pages)
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SRH-353
Elementary Military Cryptography War Department Technical
Manual, TM 11-484, March 1945.
(92 pages)
SRH-354
Special Text No. 166 Advanced Military Cryptography,
1935 Edition.
(113 pages)
SRH-355
Naval Security Group History to Mill, Part I (464 pages)
Part II (180 pages).
(Total pages: 644)
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. SRH-357
Special Text No. 166 Advanced Military Cryptography,
Second (1943) Edition.
(117 pages)
History, Signal Intelligence Division (ETO), June 1942July 1945.
(234 pages)
SRH-358
History of Training in Signal Security Agency and
Training Branch, SSA, 15 April 1945.
(175 pages)
SRH-359
History of Converter M-134-C,
SRH-360
History of Invention and Development of the Mark II
ECM (Electric Cipher Machine), 30 October 1943.
(189 pages)
. SRH-361
Volume I.
(267 pages)
History of the Signal security Agency, Volume Two, The
General Cryptanalytic Problems, 15 January 1947.
(502 pages)
27
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Polygraphic Coincidence Counter With Alphabetic Mixer.
(16 pages)
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SRMA-002
Staff Study on
SRMA-003
U. S. Army Converter M-228 (Short Title:
(10 pages)
SRMA-004
SRMA-005
Cryptographic Plan.
(5 pages)
SIGCUM).
Policy on Classification of Cryptographic and
Cryptanalytic Devices.
(2 pages)
Enemy Analysis of Allied Communications, 15 December
1944 • ( 36 pa g e s )
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SRMA-006
Use of Balloons By Japanese, WWII.
SRMA-007
War Department Technical Manual, Fire-Control Code
TM6-230, May 12, 1941.
(55 pages)
SRMA-008
War Department, The Combat Code, Tentative Edition,
January 26, 1942.
(134 pages)
SRMA-009
Basic Cryptography Department of the Army Technical
Manual TM32-·220, April 1950.
(187 pages)
SRMA-OIO
French Knowledge of German Cryptanalysis, 1927.
(5 pages)
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(7 pages)
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SRMD-OOI
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Estimates of Empire Air Distribution, 5 June-IS August
1945.
(136 pages)
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SRMD-002
War Plans Section Comments on Communication Intelligence
Summaries Joint Intelligence Center Pacific Ocean Area
(JICPOA), 21 June-2 December 1942.
(160 pages)
SRMD-003
Summary of Orange Ship Traffic By Ports For December,
1942.
(43 pages)
SRMD-004
Combined Communications Board, Washington Subtractor
Table For Combined Field Code, Pacific and Australian
Edition, 1 June 1944.
(30 pages)
SRMD-005
United States Navy File of SIGTOT Messages from JICPOA
Estimates Section to CINCPAC Advanced Headquarters,
March - August 1945.
(519 pages)
SRMD-006
United States Navy File of SIGTOT Messages from CINCPAC
Advanced Headquarters to JICPOA Estimates section,
March - August 1945.
(285 pages)
SRMD-007
JICPOA Summary of Ultra Traffic, 11 September 1944 30 June 1945, Parts I-IV.
(Total pps 963)
SRMD-008
JICPOA Analysis of Enemy Shipping, Mining and Mine
Counter-Measures, 15 February - 17 August 1945.
(262 pages)
SRMD-009
JICPOA/F-22 File of Administrative Letters/Corresponqenc~,
;January 1942 - September 1945.
(447 pages)
SRMD-OlO
JICPOA Estimate of Enemy Distribution and Intentions r
April 1943 - August 1945, Parts I-II.
(Total pps 634)
SRMD-Ol1
JICPOA Estimate of Japanese Army and Navy Fighter
Deployment, 8 August 1944 - 23 April 1945.
(269 pages)
SRMO-012
JICPOA Enemy Combat Ship Losses, 1 January 1944 1 August 1945.
(230 pages)
29
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SRMN-OOI
Military Study of Facsimile By Lieut. J.N. Wenger, USN,
19387 (13 pages)
SRMN-002
Convoy Routes of Japanese Merchant, Tanker and Combatant
Ships in the Pacific Area, Dec 1943 - Oct 1944.
(9 pages)
SRr1N-003
Instructions For Safeguarding and Using Navy Cipher Box,
Mark II, 1918.
(8 pages)
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SRMN-004
. SRMN-OOS
OP-20-G File of CINCPAC Intelligence Bulletins,
March-l June 1942)
(111 pages)
(16
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OP-20-G File of Memoranda and Reports Relating to the
Battle of Midway, 1942-1946.
(267 pages)
SRMN-006
Royal Australian Navy Support to United States Navy
Through Australian Commonwealth Naval Board Summaries/
Translations of Japanese Messages, February-December
1942.
(286 pages)
SRMN-007
Japanese Espionage Activities in the United States,
1941-1943.
(lB8 pages)
SRt1N-008
United States Navy CINCPAC and Comfourteen CI Bulletins/
R~dio Digests, 1 March-31 December 1942.
(370 pages)
SRMN-009
United States Navy CINCPAC Fleet Intelligence Summaries,
22 June 1942-8 May 1943.
(383 pages)
SRMN-OlO
United States Navy Course in Elementary Cryptanalysis,
1941-1942.
(141 pages)
SRMN-Oll
United States Navy Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis,
1948-1950.
(385 pages)
SRMN-012
Combat Intelligence Unit, Fourteenth Naval District,
Traffic Intelligence Summaries with Comments by CINCPAC
War Plans/Fleet Intelligence sections, 16 July 194130 June 1942.
Parts I-III (Total pps 1,726)
SRMN-013
United States Navy, CINCPAC Intelligence Bulletins
(#78-#345), 1 June 1942 - 31 Dec 1943. Parts I-VI
(Total pps 1,593)
SRMN-014
U.S. Navy FRUPAC "GI Manual," 3 February 1944.
pages)
SRMN-015
U.S. Navy, The Establishment of Advanced Intelligence
Centers, May 1942 - August 1943.
(42 pages)
30
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SRMN-016
SR~'N-Ol
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Navy COMINCH (F-22) File of Intelligence and
Liaison, Pacific Area (BESAW), 10 September 1943 21 November 1945e (202 pages)
u.S. Navy CINCPAC/CINCPOA Japanese Repatriation Ship
Movements, 30 September ~ 15 February 1946, Parts III. (Total pps 639)
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u.s. Navy (OP-20-G) West Coast Communications Intelligence
Activities Policies and Procedures, 20 June 1942 26 December 1943. (20 pages)
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SRMN-019
U.S. Navy (CINCPAC/CINCPOA) Estimate of Enemy Situation,
30 June 1944 - 27 August 1945e (80 pages)
SRMN-020
u.s. Navy (CINCPAC/CINCPOA) Estimate of Enemy Strength
in The Carolines - Marianas and Adjacent Areas, 20 March 31 July 1944. (76 pages)
SRMN-02l
(CINCPAC/CINCPOA) Estimate of Enemy Strength in the
Marshalls, Gilberts and Adjacent Areas, 6 September 27 December 1943e (103 pages)
SRMN-022
u.s. Navy (COMINCH, F-21) Log of Attacks On U-Boats,
6 November 1942 - 30 December 1943e (311 pages)
SRMN-023
U.S. Navy (COMINCH, F-21) Logo! U-Boat Attacks, 4
November 1942 - 10 May 1945, Parts I-II. (Total
pps 578)
SRMN-024
u. s.
SRMN-025
UeS. Navy (CINCPAC!CINCPOA) Post War Summaries of Status
of ~apanese Naval Vessels (Sunk and Afloat), Novembe~<j
1945. (105 pages)
SRMN-026
u.s.
SRMN-027
U.Se Navy Estimated Disposition of Japanese Fleet, Aircraft,
Merchant Shipping and Economic Notes, 2 December 1944 3 August 1945.
(511 pages)
SRMN-029
U.S. Navy Daily Radio Intelligence Summaries Net Control,
West Coast R.I. Net, 22 August - 1 September 1943.
(64 pages)
Nav.1: (CINCPAC!CINCPOA) Enemy Reaction to Nanse i
Shoto and Formosa Air Strikes (Special Report),
20 October 1944. (6 pages)
Navy (CINCPAC/CINCPOA) Estimate of Empire Approaches
and Combat Air Strength, 20 December 1944. (12 pages)
31
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mo ran da Co nce rni ng Enemy
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10 Ma rch 19 45 . (26 pa ge s)
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32
AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY
OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR
Arthur J., Funk, Chairman
ACHSWW ELECTION BALLOT FOR THE 1987-89 TERM
J )epurtment of II ietory
UniverHity of Florida
Gainesville. Florida 32611
Permanent Directors
Charles F. Delzell
Vanderhilt University
H. Stuart Hughes
University of California
at San Diego
Forrest C. Pogue
Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute
Terms expiring 1,986
Stephen E. Ambrose
University of New Orleans
Martin Blumenson
Washington, D.C.
William H. Cunliffe
National Archives
Harold C. Deutsch
Army War College
Stanley L. Falk
Center of Military History (ret.)
Maurice MaUoff
Center of Military History (ret.)
R. May
Harvard University
~;rnesl
Uerhard L. Weinberg
llnivert~ity of North Carolina
ElIrl I". Zi.'mk,'
llni\'l'TtIoity of lJt>uft{ia
Tf'rms ('xpiring 1987
Dean C. Allard
Naval History Division
Philip A. Crowl
Naval War College (ret.)
Brig. Gen. A. F. Hurley, USAF (ret.)
North Texas State University
David Kahn
Great Neck, N.Y.
Warren F. Kimball
RutJ{ers University
Richard H. Kohn
Office of Air Force
Hi~tory
Roherta Wohlstetter
Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles
Robert Wolfe
National Archives
Jant>t Ziegler
University of California
at Los Angeles
Terms expirin.g 1988
Brig. Gen James L. Collins) Jr.
Chief of Military History (ret.)
John Lewis Gaddis
Ohio University
Robin Higham
Kansas State University
D. Clayton James
Mississippi State University
Agnes F. Peterson
Hoover Institution
Brig. Gen. Edwin H. Simmons
Marine Corps History and
Museums
David F. Trask
Center of Military History
Russell F. Weigley
Temple University
As a nominating committee, the present directors recommend that the members of the ACHSWW
elect eight directors from the slate below
for three-year terms ending in December 1989.
Please indicate on this ballot your choice of
no more than eight directors (including the
names of those you may care to write in) and
return the ballot with your membership renewal or under separate cover to the secretary
by 15 January 1987.
Donald S. Detwiler, S,,,,,etary
and Newsletter Editor
Department of History
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale, Illinois 62901
Robin Higham, Archivist
Department of History
Kansas State University
Manhattan. Kansas 66506
International Book
Review Coordination
Arthur L. Funk
Department of History
University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida 32611
The ACHSWW is affiliated with:
American Historical Association
400 A Street, S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20003
Comit.e International
dlHistoire de la Deuxieme
Guerre Mondiale
Jean Vanwelkenhuyzen. President
Belgian Centre for Research
and Studies on the History
of the Second World War
Place de Louvain 4 - bte 20
1000 Brussels, Belgium
stephen E. Ambrose, Univ. of New Orleans
Martin Blumenson, Washington, D.C.
Alvin D. Coox, San Diego State University
William H. Cunliffe, National Archives
Harold C. Deutsch, Army War College & University of Minnesota (emer.)
Stanley L. Falk, Center of Military History (ret.)
Roy K. Flint, U.S. Military Academy
Alfred Goldberg, Arlington, Va.
George C. Herring, University of Kentucky
Charles B. MacDonald, Arlington, Va.
Maurice Matloff, Center of Military History (ret.)
Ernest R. May, Harvard University
Ronald H. Spector, Naval Historical Center
Telford Taylor, New York City
Gerhard L. Weinberg, University of North Carolina
Alan Wilt, Iowa State University
Earl F. Ziemke, University of Georgia
AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY
OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR
Arthur L. Funk, Chairman
I Jepartment of liist()ry
1987 MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION, DUES, AND SUPPORT
Donald S. Detwiler. Secretary
and Newsletter Editor
Department of History
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale, Illinois 62901
UniVNHity of ~'l(lridn
Gainesville, Flurida 32611
Permanent Directors
Charles F. Delzell
Vanderbilt University
H. Stuart Hughes
University of California
at San Diego
Forrest C. Pogue
Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute
Terms expiring 1986
Stephen E. Ambrose
University of New Orleans
Martin Blumenson
Washington, D.C.
William H. Cunliffe
Nalional Archives
Harold C. Deutsch
Army War College
Stanley L. Falk
(:enter of Military History (ret)
Maurice Matloff
Center of Military History (ret.)
Ernest H. May
Harvard University
Gt'rhard L. Weinberg
University of North Carolina
Annual dues of $10.00 ($2.00 for students) are
payable at the beginning of January 1987 to the
American Committee on the History of the Second
World War (ACHSWW). There is no surcharge for
members abroad, but it is requested that dues be
remitted in U.S. funds.
Advance payments of
dues for up to three years may be made.
Robin Higham l Archivist
Department of History
Kansas State University
Manhattan, Kansas 66506
International Book
Review Coordination
Arthur L. Funk
Department of History
University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida 32611
The ACHSWW is affiliated with:
To defray committee expenses not covered by regular membership dues or available institutional
support, tax-deductible contributions are invited to a Southern Illinois University grant-inaid account, the administrative cost of which
is fully borne by the institution. Donations by
separate check or by money order, made out.to
SIU Grant-in-Aid Account 6-23358 may be sent to
the committee secretary together with dues and
the membership form below.
American Historical Association
400 A Street, S.E.
Washington, D.C. WOOJ
Comire International
d'Histoire de la Deuxi~me
Guerre Mondiale
Jean Vanwelkenhuyzen, President
Belgian Centre for Researr.h
and Studies on the History
of the Second World War'
Place de Louvain 4 - ble 20
1000 Brussels, Belgium
~;arl
F.7.iemke
llniven:lity of Georgia
Term,,,' expiring 1987
Please return to:
Ilean C. Allard
Naval Hi8tory Division
Philip A. Crowl
Naval War College (ret.)
Brig. Gen. A. F. Hurley, USAF (reL)
North Texas State University
David Kahn
Great Neck, N.Y.
Warren F. Kimball
Rutgers University
Richard H. Kuhn
Office of Air Force History
Ruberta Wohlstetter
Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles
Name:
----------------Address:
--------------Particular field(s):
Prof. D. S. Detwiler
Secretary, ACHSWW
Hist. Dept., SIUC
Carbondale, IL 62901
------------------------
Robert Wolfe
National Archives
Janet Ziegler
University of California
at Los Angeles
Terms expirinn. 1988
BriK. Gen James L. Collins, Jr.
Chief of Military History (ret)
John Lewis Gaddis
Ohio University
Robin Higham
Kansas State University
D. Clayton Jame,
Mississippi State University
Agnes F. Peterson
Hoover Institution
Brig. Gen. Edwin H. Simmons
Marine Corps History and
Museums
David F. Trask
Center of Military History
Russell F. Weigley
Temple University
Enclosures:
Membership dues for 1987:
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1988 :
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Donation to SIU Grant-in-Aid Acct. 6-23358:
1989: - - - -
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(As noted in the newsletter, members may also enclose
the committee election ballot.)
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