Document 13271138

advertisement
WORLD WAR TWO STUDIES ASSOCIATION
(formerly American Committee on the History ofthe Second World War)
Donald S. Detwiler, Chairman
Department of History
Southern IDinois University
at Carbondale
Carbondale, IDinoi, 62901
Board of Directors
Pernument DirectQrs
ISBN 0-89126-060-9
Charle' F. Delzell
Vanderbilt University
Robert Wolfe, Secretary
602 Crestwood Drive
Alexandria, VA 22302
Arthur L. Funk
Gainesville, Florida
H.
stuart Hughes
University of Cali fornia,
San Diego
Mark P. Parillo, Newsletter Editor
Department of Hi,tory
Kallllas State Uni,,,rsity
Manhatllln Kansas 66506
NE'WSLETTER.
Forrest C. Pogue
MUlTllY, Kentucky
ISSN
Terms expiring 1994
James L. Collins, Jr.
Middleburg, Virginia
John Lewis Gaddis
Ohio UniVCBity
Robin Higham
Kallllas SlJIte University
Warren F Kimball
Rutgers University, Newark
Agnes F. Peterson
Hoover Institution
Stanford
RllBsell F Weigley
Temple University
No.
Robin Higham, Archivist
Department of Hi,tory
Kallllas Slllle University
Manhattan, Kallll.. 66506
0885-5668
F a. ~ ~
52
.1 9 9 4
American Historical Association
400 A Street, S.E."
Washington, D.C. 20003
CONTENTS
World War Two Studies Association
General Information
The Newsletter
Annual Membership Dues
A Note of Thanks from the Chairman
WWTSA Annual Business
2
2
2
3
3
News and Notes
Princeton Library WWII Records Guide
Naval Historical Center Publications
New York SARA Presence on Internet
National Archives Gopher Server
WWII-L
H-War
ISEAS Personnel Change
3
3
4
5
5
6
6
RoberlJl Wohl'terter
Pan Heuristics,
Los Angeles
Janet Ziegler
University of California,
Los Angeles
Terms expiring 1995
Martin Blumcnson
Washington, D.C.
ITAnn Campbell
Allstin Peay SIll!e University
Stanley L. Fallr
Alexandria, Virginia
ErnestR. May
Harvard University
Dennis Showalter
Colorado College
Gerhard L Weinberg
Unive"ity of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Earl F. Ziemke
University ofGeOlgia
Terms expiring 1996
Dean C. Allard
Naval Hi,tori.cal Center
Stephen E. Ambrose
University of New Orleans
Harold c. Deutsch
St. Paul, Minnesolll
David Kahn
Greal Necl<, New York
Richard H. Kohn
University of North C..."lina
Upcoming Conferences
AHA Conference
WWTSA: America at War, Part II
American University of Paris Conference
National Archives Conference
U.S. Naval Institute Seminars
Conference on Teaching WWII
Conference on Memory and WWII
Business, Technology, & Science History
7
7
9
11
14
15
16
18
ass and CIA Sources
From Studies in Intelligence: Index
Reports of Office of R&E
OSS Records Accessioned from CIA
Additional OSS Records
Other Accessions and Declassifications
19
23
29
37
42
.1 Chapel Hill
Carol M. Petillo
Boston College
Ronald H. Speclor
George Washington University
David F. Trask
Washington, D.C.
Robert Wolfe
National Archives
Addresses of Federal Archival Collections
The WWTSA is affiliated with:
43
Comit£ international d'histoire
de ta Deuxieme Guerre mondialc
lnstitut d'histoire du temps pre.'ient
(Centre national de la recherche
scientifique)
44 rue de l'Amiral Mouchez
75014 Paris, France
\
\
General Information
Established in 1967 "to promote historical research in the
period of World War II in all its aspects," the World War Two
Studies Association, whose original name was the American Commit­
tee on the History of the Second World War, is a private organi­
zation supported by the dues and donations of its members. It is
affiliated with the American Historical Association, with the
International Committee for the History of the Second World War,
and with corresponding national committees in other countries,
including the Arab Historians Association, Australia, Austria,
Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany,
Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway,
Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, the United Kingdom,
and the Vatican.
The Newsletter
The WWTSA issues a semiannual newsletter, which is assigned
International Standard Serial Number [ISSN] 0885-5668 by the
Library of Congress. Back issues of ' the Newsletter are available
from Robin Higham, WWTSA Archivist, through Sunflower University
Press, 1531 Yuma (or Box 1009), Manhattan, KS 66502-4228.
Please send information and suggestions for the Newsletter
to:
Mark Parillo
Department of History
Kansas State University
Tel.: (913) 532-0374
Eisenhower Hall
Fax: (913) 532-7004
Manhattan, KS 66506-1002
parillo@ksu.ksu.edu
Annual Membership Dues
Membership is open to all who are interested in the era of
the Second World War. Annual membership dues of $15.00 are pay­
able at the beginning of each calendar year. Students with U.S.
addresses may, if their circumstances require it, pay annual dues
of $5.00 for up to six years. There is no surcharge for members
abroad, but it is requested that dues be remitted directly to the
secretary of the WWTSA (not through an agency or subscription
service) in U.S. dollars. The Newsletter, which is mailed at bulk
rates within the United States, will be sent by surface mail to
foreign addresses unless special arrangements are made to cover
the cost of airmail postage.
Spring 1994 - 3
A Note of Thanks
from the Chairman
At the beginning of 1994,
when Mark P. Parillo of Kansas
State University became newsletter editor, Robert Wolfe of
the National Archives agreed to
be nominated as secretary and
to serve for a year. As anticipated, he is relinquishing this
post as of the end of December.
The association's directors
have now nominated Prof. Parillo as his successor, and Dr.
Parillo has agreed, with the
support of his institution, to
assume the responsibilities of
secretary and treasurer in
addition to newsletter editor.
He is therefore listed on the
enclosed election ballot as
nominee for secretary until the
end of 1996, when the current
three-year terms for the officers end. On behalf of the
association, I wish to thank
Robert Wolfe, Mark Parillo, and
all those making their services
possible.
Donald S. Detwiler
WWTSA Annual Business
This issue contains the
WWTSA election ballot for the
1 99 5 - 1 997 t e r man d the WWT SA
membership renewal form for
1995. Please detach, fill in,
and send to the indicated
address.
N_vvs
a.~d
N<>t_s
Princeton Library WWII Records
Collection Guide
Melissa A. Johnson has authored Princeton. Forward March! :
A Guide to World War II Records
at Princeton, a 113-page directory published by the university library. The book describes
the library's 17 major collections of World War II materials, the 105 other collections
with significant portions devoted to the war, and the 600
relevant theses and dissertations written by Princeton students. The collections are
strongest in private propaganda
and fund-raising publications
from groups such as United China Relief and Fight for Freedom, materials on various figures connected with the wartime
economy, and records of individuals on the Council on Foreign
Relations. For a copy of the
guide, make ch,eck for $7 per
volume ordered, payable to
Princeton University Libraries,
and send to: Seeley G. Mudd
Library, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, NJ 08544.
Naval Historical Center
Publications
Books on World War Two
topics recently published by
the Naval Historical Center:
• !!ni.1~.d_ ~.1~.1~~_ N~y~l
Hi~.1Q.r.Y~_ A_ !!iQliQg.r.~.2.hy,
Seventh Edition, revised by
Barbara A. Lynch and John E.
Vajda. Contains citations of
official and secondary sources
4 - Spring 1994
on U. S. naval history, includ­
ing histories, biographies, and
periodical literature. 1993;
173 pp. GPO stock #008-046­
00153-7; $6.50.
• Cruise Books of the United
~ t a1.~ N~YL ill.- Wo r I d_ 'if..E:.I.-li ,
compiled by Dean L. Mawdsley. A
bibliographic description and
union listing of more than 700
printed cruise books of ships,
naval aviation squadrons, Sea­
bee battalions, and other naval
commands from the World War II
era. 1993; 143 pp.; GPO Stock
#008-046-00154-5; $6.00.
• Forged in War: The naval­
Industrial Complex and American
Submarine Construction, 1940­
1961, by Gary Weir. This volume
analyzes the partnership bet­
ween the Navy, industry, and
science forged by World War II
that was responsible for pro­
ducing American submarines in
the formative years of the Cold
War. 1993; 331 pp.;GPOStock
#008-046-00151-1; $14.00
• World War II Commemorative
Combat Narratives
• The Aleutians Campai~
June 1942-August 1943. Offi­
cers who participated in the
campaign describe those ar­
duous operations that began
with the initial Japanese
assault on Dutch Farbor on
June 3-4, 1942, and ended
with the ouster of the Jap­
anese from the islands fif­
teen months later. 1945,
1993 reprint;
142 pp.;
charts, maps, illustrations,
appendixes; GPO Stock #008­
046-00155-3; $8.00.
the Allied landings in North
Africa, was the first major
military operation under­
taken during the war by
American forces in the Euro­
pean theater and led to the
complete collapse of the
Axis forces in May 1943.
1945, 1993 reprint; 119 pp.;
charts, maps, illustrations,
appendixes; GPO Stock #008­
046-00159-6; $6.50.
Ih~_~i£ili~n_~~mQ~ign~
)uly 10-17 August 1943. The
Allied invasion of Sicily,
code named Operation Husky,
involved 3,300 ships and
seven Allied divisions. The
campaign entailed close
coordination and contact
between British and American
forces and became a true
test of the military com­
pat i bi Ii ty of these two
nations. 1945, 1993 reprint;
177 pp.; charts, maps,
illustrations, appendixes;
GPO Stock #008-046-00160-0;
$9.50.
New York SARA Establishes
Presence on Internet
The New York State Archives
and Records Administration
(SARA) is now using the Inter­
net to make information about
SARA holdings, exhibits, and
grant programs for records in
New York State instantly and
easily accessible. Researchers
can quickly learn about what
records are in SARA and how
they can be used, as well as
about other services supplied
by SARA. SARA established its
Ih~_ 1.~lHiinK§'_in_ NQ£1.h
Africa. November 1942. Oper­ presence on the Internet by
ation Torch, code name for
launching the SARA Gopher on
Spring 1994 - 5
July 29. Gopher is a very popu­
lar software tool that organ­
izes information and makes it
available through the Internet.
Anyone with access to the
Internet can view lists of all
the records preserved in the
State Archives and find out how
to gain access to state arch­
ival records. The gopher has
the full text-guides for mil i­
tary history records and other
materials held by the archives.
The SARA gopher is also an easy
and convenient way to connect
to the on-line public access
catalog of holdings of the
State Archives. The SARA Gopher
can be accessed by "gopher ing"
to UNIX6.NYSED.GOV. The service
is available twenty-four hours
a day. For further information
about the SARA Gopher, contact:
New York State Archives and
Records Administration
State Government Records
Programs
Cultural Education Center
Room 9C71
Albany, NY 12230
e-mail: gosys@unix6.nysed.gov
National Archives Gopher Server
The National Archives has
launched a pilot project to
provide a unified presentation
and method of access to Nation­
al Archives information for
Internet users. That project
has been initiated with the
establishment of an Internet
Gopher server that provides
descriptions of National Arch­
ives facilities nationwide,
information on agency holdings,
publications and general infor­
mation leaflets, and some Fed­
eral records regulations. The
Gopher menu structure, which
will be expanded as new items
become available, is designed
to reflect the breadth of the
National Archives organization.
Future plans call for a bulle­
tin board presentation for
dial-in access to the Gopher
menu.
Text-based information can
be accessed with a Gopher
client by connecting to the
address: gopher.nara. gOY. This
information, together with
future additions of hypertext
and multimedia documents, can
also be found on the World Wide
Web (WWW), using a client such
as Mosaic, at:
http://www.nara.gov/.
Research questions can be
directed bye-mail to:
inquire@nara.gov.
WWII-L
An electronic discussion
list on the Internet devoted to
World War I I topics is now in
operation. It is entitled WWII­
L and is based on the mainframe
at the University of Buffalo
(UBVM). To subscribe to the
list, send the following mes­
sage:
SUBSCRIBE WWII-L your name
to:
LISTSERV@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU
It is important to address the
message to LISTSERV and not to
the list itself.
Before subscribing, consider
the following. First of all,
traffic is fairly heavy. It
averages twenty or so messages
per day, meaning that your
6 -
Spring 1994
mailbox can fill up quickly if
you do not read your mail for a
few days. Second, membership on
the list is diverse and fairly
numerous. That is, contributors
to the ongoing discussions
range from serious scholars
(indeed, several WWTSA members
and other respected academi­
cians are subscribed) to hob­
byists and buffs. Thus, the
nature and quality of the post­
ings vary considerably. For
example, in a typical week one
might see discussions on the
German resistance movement,
media coverage of current fif­
ty-year commemorations, Ruman­
ian aircraft types and mark­
ings, assessments of the Imper­
ial Japanese Navy's performance
at Leyte Gulf, the pros and
cons of buckling chin straps on
helmets, and analyses of "what
if" scenarios.
There are a couple of ways
to wade through the stream of
traffic and eliminate the ir­
relevant or uninteresting. Most
mail programs allow the user to
delete messages from a menu
before reading them, so it is
possible to weed out postings
based on their subject head­
ings. Alternately, one could
set one's membership to the
"digest" option, whereby all
daily traffic is condensed into
a single message, with the
postings of the different
threads of discussion grouped
by subject. This allows the
recipient to read messages sel­
ectively and skip over what is
unwanted. Members can unsub­
scribe at any time.
H-War
H-Net, an Internet group
devoted to academic study of
the humanities, will soon be
launching H-War, a list for
general military history. The
list is still in the planning
stage but should be operational
by early 1995. There is a
strong possibility that this
list will have formal affili­
ation with scholarly military
history organizations. The mod­
erators of the list intend to
promote serious scholarly dis­
cussion of military history,
with less emphasis on technical
minutiae and popular history
than is sometimes found on many
electronic discussion lists.
For example, the moderators
hope to use the list to circu­
I ate book rev i ew s, announce­
ments concerning archival col­
lections, and bibliographical
notes. The next issue of this
publication will provide more
information about H-War, a
potentially invaluable research
tool for military historians.
ISEAS Personnel Change
Dr. Sharon SIDDIQUE has
resigned as the Director of the
Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies, which is the Republic
of Singapore's representative
for the International Committee
for the History of the Second
World War. The new contact per­
son for the ICHSWW in Singapore
is Dr. Diana Wong, Fellow, of
the ISEAS.
Spring 1994 - 7
AHA Conference, 6-7 January
WWTSA Annual Business Meeting, 5-7 p.m., Friday, January 6.
The World War Two Studies Association will hold its annual busi­
ness meeting in conjunction with the 109th annual meeting of the
American Historical Association, to be held in Chicago on January
5-8, 1995. The WWTSA business meeting will take place in Private
Dining Room #7 of the Palmer House Hilton (one of the two sites
of the AHA Conference), from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m., on Friday, Janu­
ary 6. The agenda includes a treasury report, a report on plans
for our upcoming conference in Washington, D.C. (see below for
the tentative program), a report on the participation by WWTSA
representatives in the symposium of the International Committee
of the History for the Second World War in Montreal in August
1995, consideration of proposals and plans for future meetings,
various announcements, and other business from the floor.
WWTSA Annual Session, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Saturday, January 7.
The World War Two Studies Association will host a scholarly panel
on World War II amphibious warfare in conjunction with the AHA
Conference. Panel composition is as follows:
Chair: Benis M. Frank, Marine Corps Historical Center
Phyllis A. Zimmerman, Ball State University:
"The Marine Raid on Makin, August 1942"
Edwin H. Simmons, Marine Corps Historical Center:
"The Bloody Reefs of Tarawa, November 1943"
Martin Blumenson, Washington, D.C.:
"The Controversial Landing at Anzio, January 1944"
Commentator: Allan R. Millett, The Ohio State University
The session will take place from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. on Satur­
day, January 7, in Private Dining Room #17, Palmer House Hilton.
,WWTSA members are reminded that the panel is not a joint session
with the AHA, and so admission is not limited to registrants for
the AHA conference.
WWTSA: America at War, 1941-1945, Part II, 25-26 May
From the "Beginning of the End" to the End, 1943-1945, 25-26
May 1995. This is the second of two conferences at the National
Archives conducted under the auspices of the World War Two
Studies Asociation. All sessions of the invitational conference
8 -
Spring 1994
of the WWTSA at the National Archives, 9:00 a.m., Thursday, 25
May, through 5:00 p.m., Friday, 26 May, 1995, will be held under
the direction of Robert Wolfe, Secretary, WWTSA, in the National
Archives' fifth-floor auditorium (north entrance, Pennsylvania
Avenue at 8th Street, N.W.). By virtue of their affiliation,
members of the association or of the Society for Military History
are invited to the conference. There is no registration charge,
but nonmembers of the WWTSA are invited to join by attaching to
the registration form a check for the annual dues of fifteen
dollars (five for students) made out to the association and to
give them to the WWTSA Secretary or to mail them to him at 602
Crestwood Drive, Alexandria, Virginia 22302 or to make a cor­
responding donation to help defray the expenses incurred by the
association in the organization of the conference.
Thursday, 25 May, Morning, 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon
Greetings
Donald S. Detwiler, Southern Illinois University at
Carbondale, Chairman, WWTSA
Introduction to the WWTSA's Second Conference on America
at War, 1941-1945
Robert Wolfe, Conference Director, , NARA (ret.),
Secretary, WWTSA
Session I: Newly Available Sources: A Presentation and a Panel
A Preview of A Guide to World War II Military Sourc es in
the National Archives by Timothy P. Mulligan
[ Break]
Panel on other newly available archival and bibliographic
sources
Discussion
Thursday, 25 May, Afternoon, 2:00 - 4:30 p.m.
Session II: Victory in Europe
Towards a Second Front in Europe: Controversies over Allied
Strategy
Bombing Fortress Europe
[ Break]
The Battle of Normandy: Commemoration Myths and Documented
•
Reality
Spring 1994 - 9
"Liberators and Conquerors": the American Crusade in Europe
from st. Lo to Prague
Discussion
Thursday, 25 May, Evening, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
Session III: Entertainment Supports and Exploits the War
(a panel of media historians presenting and commenting
on films and music)
Hollywood at War: Mix Well, Muscle and Sentiment
Music Reflects the Moods: War Drums and Love Songs
Discussion
Friday, 26 May. Morning, 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon
Session IV: Victory Over Japan
Island-Hopping Back to the Philippines
Campaign Across the Pacific
[ Break]
Finale in East Asia
Air Warfare and Atomic Bombs
Comment and discussion
Friday, 26 May, Afternoon, 2:00-4:30 p.m.
Session V: America and the World Since the End of the War
Founding the United Nations: A New World Order?
From Cold War to Pax Americana
Comment and discussion
[ Break]
Session VI: The Good War? Changing Interpretations from the
Onset to the End of the Cold War
Panel discussion with ~udience comment
Adjournment of the Second Conference
The American University of Paris Conference, 3-4 April
Twilight of Totalitarianism: The Closing of the Second World
War (January-August 1995), 3-4 April 1995. To mark the fiftieth
anniversary of the closing of the Second World War, The American
University of Paris is hosting an international conference
10 -
Spring 1994
entitled "Twilight of Totalitarianism," to be held in the Domus
Medica Auditorium on April 3-4, 1995. The conference will examine
the end of the war from the point of view of the losing side; the
main speakers are thus German, Italian, and Japanese. The offi­
cial languages are English and French. The papers will be pub­
lished in advance, so that most of the conference will be given
over to public debate, with the best of the debate to be included
in the final work (Peter Lang, New York & Zurich, 1996). For
further information, write: David W. Pike, 1995 Conference, The
American University of Paris, 31 Avenue Bosquet, 750007 Paris.
First Day
THE AXIS FACE TO FACE WITH DEFEAT
Session 1 a.m.
Military: Frontline Operations
1. The Wehrmacht: Eastern Front
Reiner Pommerin, Technische Universitat, Dresden
2. The Wehrmacht: Western Front
Klaus-Jurgen Muller, Universitat der Bundeswehr,
Hamburg
Military and Diplomatic Relations (German-Japanese)
3. Berlin
Bernd Martin, Albert Ludwigs Universitat,
Freiburg-im-Breisgau
4. Tokyo
Nobuo Tajima, Seijo University, Tokyo
Session 2 p.m.
Civilian: Propaganda and Morale
5. Nazi Germany: Eastern Front
Manfred Nebelin, Technische Universitat, Dresden
6. Nazi Germany: Western Front
Hermann Grami, Institut fur Zeitgeschichte,
Munich
7. Nazi-Occupied Italy
Romain H. Rainero, Universita degli Studi, Milan
8. Japan
Nagayo Homma, University of Tokyo
Second Day
"IN VICTORY, MAGNANIMITY"
Session 3 a.m.
The Axis in Defeat
9. Italy under the British, French, Americans, and
Yugoslavs
Romain H. Rainero, Universita degli Studi, Milan
spring 1994 -
11
10. Western Germany under the British, French, and
Americans
Jost Dillffer, Universitat zu K6ln
11. Eastern Germany under the Soviets
Manfred Wille, Otto von Guericke Universitat,
Magdeburg
12. Japan under the Americans
Akira Iriye, Harvard University
Session 4 p.m.
Inter-Allied Friction: Denazification and the Birth of the
Cold War
13. The Western Perspective
14. The Soviet Perspective
Victor Malkov, Institute of World History, Moscow
15. Allied Collusion in the Escape of Nazi War
Criminals
Simon Wiesenthal, Dokumentationszentrum, Vienna
National Archives Conference, 3-4 March
A Woman's War Too: U.S. Women in the Military in World War II,
3-4 March 1995. The National Archives is sponsoring a major con­
ference, "A Woman's War Too," to be held at the National Archives
at College Park, Maryland. This national forum will explore the
vital contributions made by the approximately 400,000 women who
volunteered to serve in the armed forces of the United States.
The crucial role played by U.S. women in the Allied war effort is
not generally well known. In this two-day conference, eminent
social and military historians, veterans, and leading figures in
women's and military studies will focus on such topics that, up
to now, have not received adequate historical scrutiny. Each ses­
sion will conclude with a discussion of the featured issues in an
open forum with the audience. Sheila A, Widnall, Secretary of the
Air Force and the first female service Secretary, will be the
keynote speaker. The registration fee is $100.00 ($25.00 for stu­
dents).A special fee of $40 has been set for women veterans of
World War II in recognition of their service. For information on
registration, please write to: National Archives (NEE), Room 18N
(WWII), Washington, D.C. 20408.
12 -
Spring 199-4
Friday, March 3
9:00-10:15 a.m.
Opening Session
Opening Remarks: Dr. Trudy Huskamp Peterson, Acting Archivist
of the United States
Keynote Address:
1-0: 45 a. m.­
12":30 p.m.
The Honorable Sheila E. Widnall, Secretary of
of the Air Force
Session One: Women, the U.S. Government, and
American Military Needs in World War II
Chair: Col. Bettie J. Morden, USA (Ret.)
"A Short Overview of the Pre-War History"
Dr. D'Ann Campbell, Austin Peay University
"The History of the WAAC/WAC and Public Response"
Dr. Leisa D. Meyer, College of William and Mary
"The History of the Other Women's Corps"
Dr. D'Ann Campbell, Austin Peay University
1:453:00 p.m.
Session Two: Contributions of Women to the
Services
Chair: Major Constance J. Moore, U.S. Army Center of
Military History
"Women, Medicine, and War"
Col. Mary T. Sarnecky, Nursing History Consultant to the
Surgeon General of the Army
"The WAC as Cryptographer"
Mrs. Mary B. "Ginny" Johnston,
former WAC
"Women Pilots of World War II"
Prof. Rita Victoria Gomez, Anne Arundel Community College
and Office of Air Force History
3:30-4:45 p.m.
Session Three: Realities of Service Life
Chair: Mrs. Regina T. Akers, Naval Historical Center
"The Coast Guard's SPARs, 1943 to June 1946"
Capt. Dorothy Gleason, USCG (Ret.)
Spring 1994 -
13
"The Navy Nurse Corps and POW Internment at Manila and
Los Banos"
Mrs. Mary Rose Harrington Nelson, former lieutenant, NC, USN
"Service Life in the Women's Army Corps and Afro-American
WACs"
Dr. Janet Sims-Wood, Howard University, Moorland-Springarn
Research Center
Saturday. March 4
9:00­
10:15 a.m.
Session Four: Collec ting, Pr eserving, and Sharing
the Contributions of U .S. Women in the Military
in World War II
Chair: Dr. Linda Grant De Pauw, The Minerva Center and The
George Washington University
"Publishing and Self-Publishing Memoirs"
Dr. Linda Grant De Pauw, The Minerva Center and The George
Washington University
"Films, Graphic Collections, Museums, and Educational
Materials"
Mrs. Clare M. Cronin, Research Associate, The Minerva Center
"Archival and Military Repositories Chronicling Women's
Participation in the Military in World War II"
Mrs. Eleanor Stoddard, Oral Historian
10:45 a.m.­
12:45 p.m.
Session Five: National Archives Records of U.S.
Women in the Military in World War II
Chair: Ms. DeAnne Blanton, National Archives and Records
Administration, Military Reference Branch
"Overview of National Archives Holdings"
Ms. DeAnne Blanton, National Archives and Records Adminis­
tration, Military Reference Branch
"Special Media in National Archives Holdings"
Ms. Jennifer Nelson, National Archives, Motion Picture,
Sound, and Video Branch
14 -
Spring 1994
"Select Images from National Archives Holdings"
Ms. Barbara L. Burger, National Archives, Still Picture
Branch
"Records Relating to the Navy, Women Marines, and SPARs"
Mr. Barry Zerby, National Archives, Military Reference
Branch
"Records Relating to Headquarters Army, OSS, and WASPs"
Mr. Kenneth Schlessinger, National Archives, Military
Reference Branch
"Records Relating to Army Units and Nurse POWs"
Ms. Terri Hanna, National Archives, Suitland Reference
Branch
2:003:15 p.m.
Closing Session: Evaluation of the Impact of World
War II on U.S. Women in the Military
Chair: Dr. Mary E. Haas, West.Virginia University
"Impact of the Military on Minority Women"
Dr. Cynthia Neverdon-Morton, Coppin State College
"Women as Veterans: Historical Perspective and Expectations"
Col. Mary V. Stremlow, USMCR (Ret.), New York State Division
of Veterans Affairs
"World War II and the Rise of Proactive Women"
Dr. Mary E. Haas. West Virginia University
U.S. Naval Institute Seminars
18-19 March 1995
Admiral Nimitz Museum Foundation/Naval Institute Retrospective
Symposium
"Decision Making Process in the Use of the Bomb"
"Treatment and Release of Prisoners of War"
Laurie Auditorium, Trinity University
San Antonio, Texas
26-27 April 1995
Naval Institute Fifth Annapolis Seminar & 121st Annual Meeting
Alumni Hall, U.S. Naval Academy
Annapolis, Maryland
Spring 1994 - 15
Conference on Teaching WWII, 5-9 May
International Conference on Teaching the History of the Second
World War in Higher Education Institutions, St. Petersburg, Rus­
sia, May 5-9, 1995. The Russian State Hydrometeorological Insti­
tute, Republic Humanitarian Institute, and St. Petersburg's
Branch of the Russian Peace Foundation is organizing an interna­
tional conference on teaching the history of World War II. Lander
University will co-sponsor the event. The goals of the conference
are to examine the experience of those in higher education who
teach about the war, to aid in developing closer ties among edu­
cational institutions in different areas in different countries
in the areas of teaching a sense of history to young people, and
to examine the most effective ways in which young people are
taught to consider the causes and consequences of the worldwide
tragedy of 1939-1945.
The following panels are envisioned:
"Causes of the Second World War"
"The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet People" [main events
and contemporary interpretations]
"The Western and Pacific Fronts" [main events and contempor­
ary interpretations]
"The Anti-Hitler Coalition"
"Mass Exterminations During the Second World War"
"Conclusion of the Second World War"
"The Cold War as One of the Consequences of the Second World
War"
"Major Military Conflicts After the Second World War (Korea,
Vietnam, Afghanistan)"
Participation in the conference is open to all interested per­
sons. Presentations may be made either in Russian or English.
Abstracts of the presentations will be published by the organiz­
ing institutions. Persons desiring to participate in the con­
ference should mail or fax abstracts (no longer than it doublespaced pages) not later than 15 January 1995.
.
The registration fee for international participants is US
$100. For international participants desiring arranged food and
lodging, the conference will arrange for a home-stay with an
English-speaking family in St. Petersburg for approximately US
$35 per night.
Potential conference co-sponsors in the United States are now
being solicited. Any kind of sponsorship will be highly appreci­
ated. Institutions interested in being co-sponsors may contact
Dr. Aron G. Tannenbaum, Lander University, Greenwood, SC 29649
(phone: 803/229-8403; fax 803/229-8890) for details.
16 -
Spring 1994
Send paper proposals and conference registrations to Dr.
Andrew A. Alimov, Head of Organizing Committee, Russian State
Hydrometeorological Institute, 98, Maloohtiskiy Prosp., St.
Petersburg, 195196, Russia (fax: +7 812/221-6090 or +7 812/221­
4132) .
Conference on Memory and the Second World War, 26-28 April
Conference on Memory and the Second World War in International
Comparative Perspective, Amsterdam, 26-28 April 1995. The Nether­
lands State Institute for War Documentation, with the collabora­
tion with the Institute for the History of European Expansion
(Leyden University), Women's Studies (Utrecht University), and
the Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis (New Jersey), will
sponsor this conference in Amsterdam on 26-28 April 1995, in con­
nection with the fiftieth anniversary of the Netherlands State
Institute for War Documentation. The conference will examine the
question of the construction of the collective memory of the
Second World War, and the representations and the uses of the
past in the last fifty years, not only in Europe and the U.S. but
also in China, Japan, and in Southeast Asia. By focusing on the
"Pacific Memory and the Second World War" in a special session,
the conference aims to confront obvious Eurocentric tendencies in
the national memories of the Second World War in the West.
The organizers of the conference hope to encourage comparative
studies bearing on the view that the present historical phase of
the public memory has certain common features that are currently
undergoing adjustments to what can be described as the postna­
tional era of memory. A second focus for comparative study will
be the question of gender. The role of gender in the construction
and recovery of a historical past has received inadequate atten­
tion to date. For example, what continuities and changes in the
category of gender can be discerned in the construction of
postwar memory about the war? What place was and is reserved for
and given to women in the national and postnational memories, and
in the war memories of the Pacific as well as European theaters
of war? A special session of the conference will bed evoted to
gender and the memory of the Second World War. This aspect of the
conference will be integrated in other meetings as well.
Another theme that is eminently amenable to comparative study
is the remembrance of the Holocaust, which is an important part
of the collective memory of the Second World War in Europe, the
U.S., Israel, and elsewhere. It has raised highly specific ques­
tions for the past fifty years and continues to do so today.
According to the German historian Hanno Loewy, "In keinem anderen
Zusammenhang ist so viel von Erinnerung die Rede wie beim Holo­
Spring 1994 -
17
caust, mit solcher Zwiespaltigkeit und Unsicherheit." A special
session of the conference will therefore be devoted to memory and
the Holocaust, and the issues of wartime atrocities and genocide.
The Holocaust will be addressed in various sessions.
Wednesday, April 26
Morning Session
Part 1: Opening Session
Keynote Speech: Ernst H. Kossman, University of Groningen, the
Netherlands)
Part 2: Memory: Theses, Debates, and Perspectives
panel discussion on questions related to forgetting and remem­
bering
Chair: Natalie Zemon Davies, Princeton University, u.S.
Afternoon Session
P~rt 3: Memory and the Holocaust
presentation of three papers, with remarks from two commen­
tators
Chair: Hans Bloom, University of Amsterdam, the Net herlands
Thursday, April 27
Morning Session
Part 1: Gender and the Memory of the Second World War
presentation of three papers, with remarks from two commen­
tators
Chair: Penny Summerfield, Lancaster University, U.K.
Afternoon Session
Part 2: National and Post-National Memory and the Second World
War: Western Europe, the United States, and Eastern
Europe
presentation of three papers, with remarks from two commen­
tators
Chair: Nicolaas C. F. van Sas, University of Amsterdam, the
Netherlands
18 -
Spring 1994
Friday, April 28
Morning Session
Part 1: Memory in the Pacific and the Second World War
presentation of three papers, with remarks from two commen­
tators
Chair: Ian Buruma, London
Afternoon Session
Part 2: National and Post-National Memory and the Second World
War During and After Decolonization: Western Europe,
the United States, and the Pacific
presentation of three papers, with remarks from two commen­
tators
Chair: Michael Adas, Rutgers State University, New Brunswick,
U.S.
Part 3: Closing Session
panel discussion
Chair: John W. Chambers II, Rutgers State University, New
Brunswick, U.S.
For information, contact:
Memory and Second World War Conference
Netherlands State Institute for War Documentation
Herengracht 474
1017 CA Amsterdam
The Netherlands
History of Business, Technology, and Science, 27-28 October
Aftermath: The Transition from War to Peace in America, 1943­
1949, 27-28 October 1995. 1995 marks the fiftieth anniversary of
the end of World War II and the beginning of America's conversion
to a peacetime economy and society after five years of total war
mobilization. The Center for the History of Business, Technology
and Society will bring attention to this critical period with a
conference, "Aftermath: The Transition from War to Peace in Amer­
ica, 1943-1949," to be held October 27-28, 1995. Papers should
discuss World War II's influence on postwar America. Especially
invited are papers that address important but unexplored transi­
tions in American culture, economy, and society. As the confer­
ence's primary concern is life in America, it will not include
\
\
Spring 1994 - 19
coverage of foreign relations. Honorarium and travel support may
be offered to presenters. Send a one-page abstract and a c.v. by
April 21, 1995 to Dr. Roger Horowitz, Associate Director, Center
for the History of Business, Technology, and Society, Hagley
Museum and Library, Box 3630, Wilmington, DE 19807, or fax to
(302) 658-0568. E-mail queries may be sent to:
RH@STRAUSS.UDEL.EDU.
ass
~~d
CIA
So~rc~s
(Compiled with the kind assistance of Larry McDonald)
From Studies in Intelligence: Index,
1955-1992
Those wishing to obtain copies of the individual articles
listed below may contact:
Military Reference Branch (NNRM)
Textual reference Division
National Archives and Records Administration
Washington, DC 20408
Footnote to Cicero (what happened to Moyzisch's secretary)
Fall 1987
Military Intelligence Behind Enemy Lines (in the Polish home
army)
Stefan Borowy
Summer 1958
Reminiscences of a Communications Agent (for the British in east
Europe)
Expatriate
Fall 1958
Agent Radio Operation During World War II
Winter 1959
Scudder Georgia
The Lost Keys to E1 A1amein (German interception of u.S. Cairo
traffic)
Wilhelm F. Flicke Fall 1959
The Alamo Scouts (infiltrate the Pacific islands)
Eustace E. Nabbie
Fall 1959
The Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich
Winter 1960
R. C. Jaggers
20 -
Spring 1994
Portuguese Timor: An Estimative Failure (that led to Allied
occupation)
Thomas F. Conlon
Winter 1960
The U.S. Hunt for Axis Agent Radios
The Last Days of Ernst Kaltenbrunner
Spring 1960
Postal Forgeries in Two World Wars
Summer 1960
Spring 1960
Robert E. Matteson
Torrey & Avery
Intelligence Operations of OSS Detachment 101
Summer 1960
W. R. Peers
A Small South Pole (Japanese radio deception on Timor)
Eustace E. Nabbie
Fall 1960
Galahad: Intelligence Aspects (unorthodox warfare In Burma)
Charles N. Hunter
Winter 1961
Operation Columba (intelligence by private pigeon)
Spring 1961
T. J. Betts
Combat Intelligence: A Comparative Evaluation
Lyman B. Kirkpatrick
Fall 1961
Anti-Soviet Operations of Kwantung Army Intelligence 1940-1941
Spring 1962
The Eastern Front at the Turning Point (German logistics 1941)
Anthony Quibble
Fall 1962
The Beginnings of Air Targeting (strategic bombing direction from
London)
W. W. Rostow
Winter 1963
Memorandum for the President: Sunrise (the Dulles-aranged sur­
render)
William J. Donovan
Spring 1963
Memorandum for the President: OSS-NVKD Liaison
William J. Donovan
Summer 1963
Memorandum for the President: Boston Series (from a penetration
of the German foreign office)
William J. Donovan
Winter 1965
Memorandum for the President: From Peter to Tito
William J. Donovan
Spring 1965
Spring 1994 - 21
Memorandum for the President: Japanese Feelers (in Europe)
William J. Donovan
Summer 1965
Origins of Central Intelligence
Summer 1964
Arthur B. Darling
B-29s Against Coke Ovens (in China)
Summer 1965
Pearl Harbor: Estimating Then and Now
Fall 1965
A. R. Northridge
A. R. Northridge
The Selectively Reluctant Informant (re Bangkok targets)
A. R. Northridge
Summer 1967
Roderick "Steve" Hall (ass and Alpine partisans)
Anthony Quibble
Fall 1967
The Rate Drei: Getting Behind the "Lucy" Myth
Mark A. Tittenhofer
Summer 1969
Donovan's Original Marching Orders
Summer 1973
Masterman Revisited
Thomas F. Troy
Spring 1974
The Coordinator of Information and British Intelligence
Thomas F. Troy
Spring 1974
The Abwehr Myth: How Efficient Was German Intelligence in WWII?
Fall 1977
Intelligence and the General Staff
David Kahn
Winter 1977
The Clandestine War in Europe (1942-1945) (text of speech)
William J. Casey
Spring 1981
An Interview with Erna Flegel from the Fuehrerbunker, November
1945
Fall 1981
"Zdravo, Pur vi Americanec (aSS in Yugoslavia)
Robert E. Mattingly
Spring 1982
Who Knew Not Fear (ass in France)
Summer 1982
Robert E. Mattingly
22 -
Spring 1994
"Man, You Must Be Lost or Something" (aSS in France)
Robert E. Mattingly
Fall 1982
William J. Casey
Winter 1982
The Intelligence Background of Operation Torch
Spring 1984
John C. Beam
War Behind the Lines
The OSS and the Maginot and Siegfried Lines
Summer 1984
Leonard C. Courier
OSS Propaganda in Europe and the Far East
Fall 1984
Jack B. Pfeiffer
Leonard C. Courier
OSS Mission to the Burgundian Maquis
Spring 1985
Interviews with Adenauer
Martha Mautner
Churchill and Intelligence
Christopher Andrew
Fall 1986
Fall 1986
On the Difficulties of Writing Intelligence History
Klaus-Jurgen Muller
Fall 1986
OSS: Lessons for Today
The Tangled Web
William J. Casey
Spring 1987
Amphibious Intelligence (in Italy)
The OSS-German POW Controversy
"If Donovan Were Here Today"
With the OSS in China
Winter 1986
Sir David Hunt
Mark Murphy
Spring 1988
William M. Henhoeffer
George E. Adams
Waging Economic Warfare From London
Fall 1988
Winter 1990
W. W. Rostow
The Vemork Action: A Classic Act of Sabotage
Fall 1992
Fall 1987
Winter 1991
Claus Helberg
Spring 1994 - 23
Reports of the Office of Research and Estimates
The following are 150 estimates prepared by the CIA from 1946
through 1950. They were declassified in 1993 as part of the
agency's historical review program. The estimates in this group
were produced by the Office of Research and Estimates of the
early CIA. They were known as OREs and were precursors to the
better-known National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs), a series
initiated by the new Office of National estimates on 13 November
1950. All the estimates have been released in full text. Declas­
sification of the small number of remaining estimates continues.
While most of these focus on the developing Cold War situation,
many provide great insight into the social, economic, and politi­
cal landscape of various societies as they emerged from World War
II.
No.
Pages
Date
Title
1. ORE 1
2. ORE 2
07/23/46
07/23/46
3. ORE 2/1
07/24/46
4. ORE 3/1
10/31/46
5.
6.
7.
8.
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
7
10
5/1
1/1
12/02/46
12/26/46
01/03/47
01/06/47
9.
10.
11.
12.
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
6/1
13/1
15
14
02/07/47
02/20/47
02/28/47
03/11/47
Soviet Foreign and Military Policy
Analysis of Soviet Foreign Propaganda Broadcasts
Analysis of Soviet-Controlled German
Broadcasts
Soviet Capabilities for the Development and Production of Certain
Types of Weapons and Equipment
Chinese Minorities in Southeast Asia
Forthcoming Elections in Bolivia
The Situation in Korea
Revised Soviet Tactics in International Affairs
The Greek Situation
The Situation in Austria
The Ratay Question
Future Soviet Participation in
Long-Range International Air
Transport
Soviet Obj ec ti ves in Latin America
Developments In the Azerbaijan
Situation
Basic Dutch-Indonesian Issues and
the L i nggadj a ti Agreement
Petroleum Resources Within the USSR
Significant Considerations Regarding
the Disposition of the Italian
African Colonies
13. ORE 16
14. ORE 19
04/10/47
06/04/47
15. ORE 20
06/09/47
16. ORE 4/1
17. ORE 39
06/16/47
07/25/47
11
12
2
2
7
4
10
5
18
7
9
6
6
15
15
19
17
24 -
Spring 1994
18. ORE 21/1
08/05/47
19. ORE 45
09/15/47
20. ORE 54
21. ORE 52
10/16/47
10/17/47
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
10/20/47
10/20/47
10/20/47
10/20/47
11/01/47
11/05/47
11/14/47
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
48
49
50
51
16/1
53
44
29. ORE 62
11/18/47
30. ORE 55
11/28/47
31. ORE 56
32. ORE 63
12/05/47
12/18/47
33. ORE 65
01/05/48
34. ORE 9
35. ORE 69
01/13/48
02/09/48
36. ORE 7-48
37. ORE 8-48
02/28/48
02/28/48
38. ORE 6-48
03/05/48
39. ORE 15-48 03/18/48
40. ORE 9-48 03/26/48
41. ORE 14-48 03/26/48
42. ORE 22-48 04/02/48
43. ORE 10-48 04/05/48
44. ORE 23-48 04/15/48
45. ORE 19-48 04/23/48
Probable Soviet Reaction to a U.S.
Aid Program for Italy
Implementation of Soviet Objectives
in China
The Current Situation in Egypt
Current Situation in the Mediter­
ranean and the Middle East
The Current Situation in Iran
The Current Situation in Palestine
The Current Situation in Turkey
The Current Situation in Greece
Soviet Objectives in Latin America
The Current Situation In Spain
The Japan Peace Treaty Problems,
Issues, and Reactions
Implementation of Soviet Objectives
in Korea
The Consequences of the Partition
of Palestine
The Political Future of Spain
The Current Situation in French
North Africa
The Venezuelan Elections of
14 December 1947
The Succession of Power in the USSR
Possible Consequences of Communist
Control of Greece in the Absence
of US Counteraction
Possible Developments in Palestine
Peron and the Argentine Congressional
Elections
Consequences of Communist Accession
to Power in Italy by Legal Means
The Current Situation Korea
Cuban Political Trends
Prospects for International Air
Transport
Possibility of Direct Soviet Military
Action During 1948
Consequences of Certain Courses of
Action With Respect to Greece
The Current Situation in the Free
Territory of Trieste
Soviet Military and Civil Aviation
Policies
3
13
17
3
4
5
5
5
10
7
19
6
16
11
5
5
6
9
9
5
11
7
7
4
5
12
9
38
Spring 1994 - 25
46. ORE 11-48 04/28/48
47. ORE 13-48 04/28/48
48. ORE 29-48 04/28/48
49. ORE 31-48 05/14/48
50. ORE 40-48 OS/20/48
51. ORE 17-48 OS/27/48
52. ORE 26-48 06/04/48
53. ORE 30-48 06/04/48
54. ORE 21-48 06/14/48
55. ORE 41-48 06/14/48
56. ORE 47-48 06/23/48
57. ORE 34-48 07/09/48
58. ORE 45-48 07/22/48
59. ORE 38-48 07/27/48
60. ORE 58-48 07/30/48
61. ORE 20-48 08/02/48
62. ORE 12-48 08/03/48
63. ORE 37-48 08/05/48
64. ORE 48-48 08/05/48
65. ORE 47-48 08/13/48
ADDEN
66. ORE 64-48 08/27/48
67. ORE 38-48 08/31/48
ADDEN
Possible development Resulting from
9
the Granting of Amnesty to Accused
Collaborators in the Philippines
The Current Situation in Austria
7
Possible program of Future Soviet
5
Moves in Germany
Vulnerability to Sabotage of Petro­
5
leum Installations Venezuela,
Aruba, and Curacao
Prospects for Internationalization of 5
Air Transport
Civil AViation Policies of Selected 104
Powers
The Prospects for a United States
15
of Indonesia
Limitations of South China As An
12
Anti-Communist Base
The Significance of the World Feder­
15
ation of Trade Unions in the
Present Power Conflict
Effect of Soviet Restriction on U.S.
3
Position in Berlin
Consequences of the Withdrawal of
7
U.S. Forces from Tsingtao
Future Danube River Navigation and
35
Control
The Current Situation in China
16
Possible developments from the
9
Palestine Truce
The Strategic Value to the U.S. of
15
Conq of W. Europe and the Near
East (to Cairo) Prior to 1950
Soviet and Satellite Grain
49
Prospects for a Negotiated Peace in
6
China
Reaction of West German Political
5
Parties to Decisions of the
Tripartite London Conference
Probable Effects on tsrael and the
25
Arab States of a UN Arms Embargo
Consequences of the WIthdrawal of
1
U.S. Forces from Tsingtao
Evidence of USSR Military Intentions
12
in Soviet Propaganda Broadcasts
Possible Developments from the Pales­ 4
tine Truce
26 - Spring 1994
68. ORE 42-48 09/01/48
69. ORE 25-48 09/03/48
70. ORE 22-48 09/16/48
ADDEN
71. ORE 57-48 09/28/48
72. ORE 60-48 09/28/48
73. ORE 65-48 10/08/48
74. ORE 67-48 10/08/48
75. ORE 58-48 10/27/48
ADDEN
76. ORE 44-48 10/28/48
77. ORE 58-48 11/01/48
NOTIC
78. ORE 61-48 11/02/48
79. ORE 28-48 11/17/48
80. ORE 49-48 11/18/48
81. ORE 27-48 11/19/48
82. ORE 71-48 12/08/48
83. ORE 77-48 12/10/48
84. ORE 40-49 01/27/49
85. ORE 51-48 01/27/49
86. ORE 1-49
01/31/49
87. ORE 16-49 02/10/49
88. ORE 28-49 02/10/49
89. ORE 68-48 02/10/49
90. ORE 50-48 02/15/49
91. ORE 32-48 02/21/49
92. ORE 41-49 02/24/49
Soviet Rolling Stock and Motor
Vehicle Industries
The Break-up of the Colonial Empires
and Its Implications for u.S.
Security
Possibility of Direct Soviet Military
Action During 1948-49
Consequences of a Breakdown in FourPower Negotiations on Germany
Threats to the Security of the u.S.
The Current Situation in Iran
Continuing Satellite Aid to the
Greek Guerri llas
The Strategic Value to the USSR of
the Conq of W. Europe and the Near
East (to Cairo) Prior to 1950
Prospects for Survival of the
Republic of Korea
Notice to Recipients of Appendices to
ORE 58;....48
The Probable Effects of Postponement
of the Italian Colonies Question
Current Situation in Greece
The Trend of Soviet-Yugoslav Relations
Possible Developments in China
The Kurdish Minority Problem
Chinese Communist Capabilities for
Control of All China
Consequences of Dutch "Police Action"
in Indonesia
Possibility of Soviet Troop Withdrawal from Germany Before the
Summer of 1949
The Political Situation in the Union
of South Africa
The Yugoslav Dilemma
Possible Developments in Soviet
Policy Toward Austria
Opposition to ECA in Participating
Countries
Probable Argentine Policy Toward the
US to 1952 and Its Effects on US
Interests
Communist Capabilities in South Korea
Effects of a U.S; Foreign Military
Aid Program
7
14
4
8
13
10
4
48
7
1
12
10
5
7
18
8
5
6
13
3
3
36
25
11
11
Spring 1994 - 27
93. ORE 3-49
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
39-49
11-49
35-48
6-49
78-48
02/28/49
03/14/49
03/17/49
03/17/49
03/23/49
03/30/49
99. ORE 50-49 04/13/49
100. ORE 29-49 04/15/49
101. ORE 43-49 04/25/49
102. ORE 46-49 05/03/49
103. ORE 17-49 05/04/49
104. ORE 48-49 05/18/49
105. ORE 51-49 OS/26/49
106. ORE 58-49 06/01/49
107. ORE 54-49 06/13/49
108. ORE 45-49 06/16/49
109. ORE 44-49 06/20/49
110. ORE 65-49 06/27/49
111. ORE 60-49 06/30/49
112. ORE 23-49 07/18/49
113. ORE 59-49 08/02/49
114. ORE 56-49 08/31/49
115. ORE 69-49 09/12/49
116. ORE 66-49 09/15/49
117. ORE 74-49 09/22/49
118. ORE 83-49 10/18/49
Consequences of U.S Troops With­
drawal from Korea in Spring, 1949
Possible developments in Taiwan
The Caribbean Legion
Current Situation ln Burma
Rubber Supply Situation in the USSR
The Current Situation in the Phil­
ippines
Significance of the Council of
Economic Mutual Assistance
Prospects for Soviet Control of a
Communist China
Trends in Air, Ocean, and Railway
Transportation
The Possibility of Direct Soviet
Military Action During 1949
The Strategic Importance of the Far
East to the US and the USSR
The Soviet Position in Approaching
the CFM
Soviet Control Mechanism in Germany
Pol & Econ Changes in Western Europe
Since the Last Conference of
Foreign Ministers
Difficulties in the Implementation
Abroad of Point Four
Probable Developments in China
Estimate of the Yugoslav Regime's
Ability to Resist Soviet Pressure
During 1949
The Current Situation in Iran
Standardization of Arms Programs
in the Western Hemisphere
The Tudeh Party: Vehicle of Com­
munism in Iran
Military Budgets of Selected
Countries
The Current Situation in Austria
Relative US Security Interest in the
European-Mediterranean Area and
the Far East
The World Breadgrain Situation
1948-49 and 1949-50 Outlook
Government Programs on National
Security and International
Affairs for FY1951
Current Situation in Iceland
7
5
8
14
11
21
4
25
25
4
18
9
9
10
7
21
12
10
7
27
35
10
7
12
12
5
28 -
Spring 1994
119. ORE 76-49 10/19/49
120.
121.
122.
123.
124.
125.
126.
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
90-49
33-49
77-49
71-49
24-49
86-49
2-50
11/09/49
11/17/49
12/14/49
12/15/49
01/05/49
01/11/49
02/03/50
127.
128.
129.
130.
131.
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
ORE
89-49
92-49
4-50
7-50
91-49
02/03/50
02/10/50
02/28/50
03/20/50
04/06/50
132. ORE 19-50 04/21/50
133. ORE 8-50
05/11/50
134. ORE 17-50 06/02/50
135. ORE 32-50 06/09/50
136. ORE 18-50 06/19/50
137. ORE 25-50 06/26/50
138. ORE 33-50 08/10/50
139. ORE 26-50 08/28/50
140. ORE 20-50 09/01/50
141. ORE 50-50 09/07/50
Suppl
142. ORE 34-50 09/28/50
143. ORE 46-50 09/29/50
144. ORE 22-49 10/02/50
145. ORE 58-50 10/12/50
146. ORE 29-50 10/13/50
Survival Potential of Residual Non10
Communist Regimes in China
The Current Situation in Iran
8
Current Situation in Malaya
14
Communism in Scandinavia
17
Current Situation in Albania
13
The USSR Petroleum Industry
53
Communist Influence in Burma
11
Possibility of Soviet Troop With2
drawal From East Germany in 1950
The Food Outlook for Communist China
9
The Crisis in Indochina
10
Current Situation in Greece
13
Probable Developments in Taiwan
15
Estimate of the Effects of the
36
Soviet Possession of the Atomic
Bomb Upon the Security of the US
Reports of Current Soviet Military
7
Activity in China
Evaluation of Soviet-Yugoslav
8
Relations (1950)
Soviet-Satellite Drive Against
6
Western Influence in Eastern
Europe
The Effect of the Soviet Possession
4
of Atomic Bombs on the Security
of the U.S.
Current Capabilities of the Northern 13
Korean Regime
Spitzbergen
12
Prospects for Stability in the
9
Philippines
Current International Position of
9
Sweden
Economic Situation in Yugoslavia
26
Prospects for Chinese Communist
14
Action in Indochina During 1950
Probable Developments In Eastern
7
Germany by the End of 1951
The Current Situation in British
12
West Africa
Importance to the US of Latin
111
American Civil Air Transport
Critical Situations in the Far East
16
Consequences to the U.S. of Com17
munist Domination of Mainland
Southeast Asia
Spring 1994 - 29
147. CIA RE 34-49
11/14/50
148. CIA RE 27-50
11/17/50
149. CIA RR 6-50
12/19/50
150. CIA RR 36-50
12/19/50
5
Soviet Capabilities and Inten­
tions in Latin America
South African Politics and u.S.
9
Security
Repercussions on the Netherlands 1 1
of Indonesian Independence
8
Neutrality and Third-Force Ten­
dencies in Western Europe
ass Records Accessioned from the CIA (1980-93)
Record Group 226, U.S. National Archives
Entry
d87
cd88
d89
cd90
Boxes
Rec'd.
Austrian Applications
for Nazi Membership
116
7 Jul 88
Overseas Cable File
668
1 Oct 85@
Entry Title
Italian Intelligence Personalities
53
12 Jun 90
Washington R + C & Field Photo Branch
49
Dec 85
5
2 Jun 92
34
3 Jan 80
640
30 Oct 86
y90A
cmd91
d92
History of ass in London (M1623)
COl/aSS Central Files
92A
73 *
93
Propaganda Charts
94
CIG/CIA Organization Charts
cmd95
Combined Intelligence
Committee/JIC (M1642)
cd96
Washington Communications Office
cd97
Algiers File
98
Pictorial Records Section
Correspondence
2+*
3 Sep 85
+*
10
23 Apr 85
2
12 Feb 85
45
3 Sep 85
104
30 Apr 91
30 - Spring 1994
OSS History Office Collection
107
3 Jan 80
Foreign Nationalities Branch (C0002)
131
3 Jan 80
Jedburgh Teams; and Yugoslavia,
Greece, and Bulgaria
5
3 Jan 80
Burma File
3
8 Jul 86
Special Forces and Jedburgh Mission
Reports
5
3 Jan 80
e104
Communications Chrono File
1
12 Mar 86
e105
Survey of Foreign Experts
32
1 Jul 86
ed106
New York Secret Intelligence Branch
50
3 Jan 80
ed107
Survey of Foreign Experts
32
1 Jul 86
ed108
Washington Registry SI Intel
Field Files
465
13 May 86
d108A
288
6 Sep 88
108B
320
24 Sep 91
y108C
22
2 Jun 92
ed109
Washington Registry Intelligence Files 124
3 Feb 87
ed110
Field Intelligence Reports: Theater
53
Officer Correspondence, Draft Histories
3 Jan 80
y111
Secret Intelligence "A" Reports
5
7 Jul 88
el12
Propaganda Samples
1
3 Jan 80
Washington R + R/CD Records
7
12 Feb 85
ed99
emd100
ed101
e102
ed103
edl13
114
Photocopies of Donovan Files
(duplicates Washington Director's
Office Files)
edl15
London Field Files
eml16
Office of the Director, OSS (M1642)
(destroyed)
52
3 Jan 80
7
3 Jan 80
Spring 1994 - 31
117
cl18
Special Devices
Washington COl/OSS Accession Logs
118A
cdl19
London X-2 Files
yl19A London X-2 PTS Files
cd120
Washington Cl & TSS Files
y120A
cd121
Field R + C Files
y121A
8
24
12 Feb 85@
6
27 Jan 93
29
31 Jan 90
92
30 Apr 91
46
8 Jul 86
26
25 Jul 89
140
12 Mar 86
6
2 Jun 92
6
31 Jan 90
cd122
Miscellaneous X-2 Files
cd123
Field Files: Bern and Madrid
18
31 Jan 90
cd124
Field Files: Athens, Austria, Barce­
lona, Bern, Heidelberg, Lisbon,
London, & Caserta; Washington X-2
32
31 Jan 90
cd125
Field Files: Bern, Stockholm & Caserta
59
cd125A Stockholmn X-2 Personalities Files
d126
Caserta X-2 Personalities Files
126A
8 Jul 86@
7
31 Jan 90
74
12 Jun 90
3
30 Apr 91
cd127
Madrid X-2 and Sl Files
33
25 Jul 89
cd128
Field Files: Paris
25
31 Jan 90
cd129
Cable Logs ("A" Reports)
4
2 Oct 84
cd130
Budget Data for COl, OSS & SSU; and
Filed Photo Negatives
4
12 Mar 86
cd131
Washington/Field Office: Administrative 21
and Support Records; Cables
2 Oct 84
32 -
Spring 1994
cd131A Emergency Rescue Equipment (ERE)
cd132
Washington Services Branch
cd133
Washington Registry Office Chrono­
logical File; and Washington Field
Photo Branch Records
cd133A
cd134
Washington R + D and R + C
5
2 Oct 84
59
8 Jul 86@
171
22 Jul 86@
7
2 Jun 92
372
12 Feb 85
30 Oct 96@
134A
134B
6
cd135
Washington Communications Branch
cd136
Field Files: Algiers, Austria, Bari,
Burma, Cairo, Calcutta, Caserta,
Denmark, Kunming, London, Paris,
New York and Washington
d136A Downes Papers
86
23 Apr 85
187
3 Sep 85
10
22 Jan 91
27
8 Jul 86@
4
12 Dec 86@
cd137
Washington Secretariat and SI Records
cd138
Washington X-2 Branch Records
cd139
Washington/Field Station Files: Cairo, 298
Calcutta, Caserta, Honolulu, New
York, Paris, Singapore, Stockholm
& Washington
11 Jun 85
25
2 Jun 92
y139A
cd140
Washington/Pacific Coast/Field Stations 94
12 Mar 86@
cd141
Washington Personnel, Projects and
Research Records
6
12 Mar 86
cd142
New York Secret Intelligence Branch
Intelligence Records
5
12 Mar 86
cd143
Field Files: Calcutta and Caserta
14
3 Sep 85
Spring 1994 - 33
cd144
Field Files: Algiers, Angola, Austria, 138
Bari, Belgium, Burma, Cairo and Calcutta
144A
cd145
6
cd146
27 Jan 93
R + A Branch Chief ~iles; R + D Sampl~ 107
Books; German Press Extracts and Reports
y145A
1
12 Feb 85
2 Jun 92
Washington: Budget and Finance; CD;
267
General Counsel; History Project;
Intelligence Service; R + A;R + D;
Secretariat; Security; SI; SO; and SSO
y146A
17 Dec 85
6 Aug 85@
28
2 Jun 92
10
23 Apr 85
146B
cd147
New York and London Records
cd148
Field Files: Chungking, Dakar, Hol­
land, Istanbul, Kandy, Kunming,
Lisbon, New York, Paris, Pretoria,
Singapore, Stockholm, and Tangier
cd149
New York: Survey of Foreign Experts
Records
138
12 Feb 85@
1
12 Feb 85@
150
R + D Production Records
+*
151
Map Records
+*
cd152
c153
R + A Branch Records
1946 (M1656)
Field Files: Bari, Bucharest, Burma,
Cairo, Caserta, Kandy, and Kunming
154A
cd155
d156
23 Apr 85
9
8 Sep 89
218
2 Oct 84
R + A Branch
m153A SSU Intelligence Reports:
cd154
4
1*
Washington R +
DlcD
Records
Secret Intelligence Branch Indices
4
3 Feb 87
275
8 Jul 86
34 - Spring 1994
cd157
New York George Office Records
20
12 Mar 86
cd158
Seventh Army Accounts
10
12 Mar 86
cd159
New York Secret Intelligence Branch
7
7 Jul 88
cd160
New York Secret Intelligence Branch
39
12 Mar 86
22
27 Jan 93
12
3 Feb 87
160A
cd161
Schools and Training (S + T) Branch
mc162
ass Director's Office Minutes and
9
Correspondence with Navy, State,
and War Departments & with FDR and HST
12 Mar 86@
General Magruder Records and Papers
(post-ass)
163
cd164
R + A Branch/Map Procurement (com­
bined with Entry 152)
cd165
ass Operations: Mediteranean & Burma
y165A
1*
23 Apr 85
44
17 Dec 85
11
2 Jun 92
6 Aug 90
m166
US Military Government of Korea and
Photos in Mexico (1943-47) (P2267)
1
167
Miscellaneous Top Secret Reports File
1
cd168
Field Files: Kandy, Kunming, London,
Madrid, New York, Paris, Shanghai,
Singapore, and Stockholm
95
12 Feb 85@
16
2 Jun 92
16
3 Feb 87
y168A
169
Washington/London Special Funds Branch
cd171
171A
(CI)
18 *
169A
170
*
SSU Liaison Control of Records
Washington X-2 Personalities Files
.3*
(post-ass)
52
25 Jul 89
80
12 Mar 91
Spring 1994 - 35
d172
cd173
10
3 Feb 87
afficial Subject Records 12
12 Mar 86
2
27 Jan 93
284
12 Feb 91
2
12 Mar 86
2
12 Mar 86
15
12 Mar 86
4
31 Jan 90
Cairo SI/X-2 Branch Records
Washington
ass
173A
174
Rome X-2 Branch Records
cd175
ass
cd176
Washington X-2 Records
cd177
ass
d178
179
d180
R + A Branch: Latin American
Section
R + A and State aIR Records
Washington R + A Intelligence Files
ass
Miscellaneous Files
Director ass afficial Files: 190 micro- 12
film rolls (A3304)
180A Director
Text
181
cd182
.3*
ass
afficial Files: Sanitized
Microfilmed afficial
ass
ass
Records
Shanghai Intelligence Files
182A
cd183
c184
4*
51
Washington SI/Special Funds Records 35
Washington-aSS Records
184A
12 Aor 90
6
19
ass
(cI)
(microfilm)
6 Sep 89@
30 act 91
3 Feb 87@
1
12 Mar 86
6
27 Jan 93
30 act 91
185
Washington-aSS Communications Records
1
186
Washington-aSS Communications Records
2*
(CI)
187
Washington-aSS Communications Records
2*
( CI)
188
Washington-aSS Communications Records
189
Washington-aSS Communications Records
33
2*
2 Jun 92
(CI)
36 -
Spring 1994
cd190
y190A Resistance History
190B
cd191
R + A Jewish Desk
191A Dwork papers: RG 200
32
2 Jun 92
36
27 Jan 93
4
26 Jun 90
29
20 Jun 88
192
OSS/SSU Miscellaneous Records
5
14 Feb 91
193
Boston Series (M1740)
5
12 Jul 91
194
Field Files; Algiers, Athens, Austria, 163
Bari, Bern, Rurma, Cairo, Calcutta,
Ca s.ab Lane a .-Ch ungk i ng., Heidelberg,
I&tanbul, Kandy, Kunming, London,
Madrid, New Delhi, New York, PCA,
Prague, Rome, Shanghai, Singapore,
Stockholm, and Washington
30 Oct 91
y195
d
c
m
y
22 Jul 86@
Field Files: Athens, Bari, Bern,
742
Burma, Cairo, Calcutta, Casablanca,
Caserta, Heidelberg, Kunming, Lisbon,
London, Madrid, Paris, and Rome
Washington Office Property Board
Records
5
2 Jun 92
115
12 Aug 92
52
26 Jan 93
196
Washington Office Items Previously
Withheld
197
ass
198
Miscellaneous Records
199
ass
Field Finance Records
81*
27 May 93
200
ass
MIscellaneous Records
1
*
27 May 93
Station Special Funds Finance
Records
Descriptive List
in Computer Index
Microfilmed
Not yet declassified
* cubic feet
@ additional shipment of 17 cu. ft. on 7 Jul 88
2
Spring 1994 -
37
ass R&A, Visual Presentation, and FNB Branches Record
Record Group 226, U.S. National Archives
Research and Analysis Branch (Entries 1-84)
Entry
Entry Title
Boxes
1
R&A General Correspondence, 1942-46
35
2
Correspondence Re the Civil Affairs Staging Area
(CASA) Outposts at the Presidio, Monterey, Col.,
1945
3
3
Cablegrams Received by the Cal, 1942
1
4
Despatches Received from Neutral Foreign Posts,
1941-42
4
5
Cablegrams Received from ass Outposts, 1942-44
5
6
Cablegrams, To and From ass Outposts
7
Chronological File of Cablegrams
8
R&A Reports RePolitical, Social, and Economic
Cond i t ion s , 1941- 4 6
9
Reports Re European Railroads and Bridges
3
10
Reports of the Joint Psychological Warfare
Commi t tee, 1942
1
11
ass Orders, Memoranda, Bulletins, Circulars, and
Instructions
2
12
Economic Intelligence of British Ministry of
Economic Warfare, 1942
1
13
Biographical Sketches and "Morgue Files" of the
14
3
64
27
Popula D'Italia
13A
14
2
R&A Name and Subject Card Indexes to Entry 16
38 - Spring 1994
15
Descriptive ("Accession") Lists of Intelligence
Reports for Entry 16
16
Regular Series R&A Intelligence Reports, 1941-45
17
Name and Subject Card Indexes to Entries
19, 21, and 23
add on
18
Description ("Accession") LIsts for R&A Reports
in Entry 19
19
R&A Reports,
add on
8
1648
35
3
"XL" Series, 1941-46
7
470
20
Descriptive ("Accession") Lists for R&A Intelligence
Reports in Entry 21
21
R&A Intelligence Reports,
22
Descriptive ("Accession") Lists of R&A Reports in E23
23
R&A Reports Re Enemy Logistics, "Order of Battle"
Ser ies, 1942-45
24
Card Abstracts of Reports Arranged by Dissemination
("A"-Prefixed) Number, 1942-45
25
Survey of Foreign Experts Interviews of Refugees in US 11
26
Cross-Reference Cards to Unidentified Reports
Re Europe and Asia, 1942-45
4
457
"L" Series, 1942-45
2
231
R&A Economics Division (Entries 27-36)
Entry
Entry Title
Boxes
27
Correspondence of Emile Depres, Economics
Division Chief, 1941-45
28
Economics Division Correspondence and Reports,
29
Reports Prepared by the Economics Division of the
Office of Cal
1
30
Recovery of Looted Art Treasures in Germany, 1940-45
1
2
1942-44
1
Spring 1994 - 39
31
Agricultural Conditions in Europe and North Africa,
1941-44
1
32
German Manpower,
2
33
Military Supplies of the Axis Powers,
34
Industrial Resources of Axis Powers,
35
German Trade and Shipping
36
Economic and Industrial Conditions in Germany,
1942-44
1
1942-44
2
1942-43
1
1943-44
1
R&A Europe-Africa Division (Entries 37-52)
Entry
Boxes
Entry Title
37
Correspondence of the Division Chief, 1942-45
7
38
General Correspondence,
6
39
Correspondence Re Outposts,
40
Correspondence Re Europe and Africa,
41
Cablegrams to and from Outposts
1
42
Monthly Progress Reports,
1
43
Contact File Interviews and San Francisco Conference,
1945
1
44
"Civil Affairs Guides" and Correspondence Re Germany
and German Occupied Countries
8
45
"Outpost Informational Letters," 1943-45
1
46
Al gier s Ou tpos t,
1
47
Balkan Activities,
48
Cai ro Ou tpos t,
49
Outposts in France,
50
Outposts in Germany,
1941-45
1942-45
1943-45
1943-44
1944-46
1944-45
1944-45
1945
3
1942-45
2
2
2
2
1
40 - Spring 1994
51
Outposts in Italy, 1943-45
3
52
London Outpost
5
Entry
Entry Title
Boxes
53
Far East Division Correspondence with Outposts, 1942-46 7
54
Security-Classified Records, Far East, 1944-45
1
55
Reports Re China and Formosa, 1941-46
4
56
Biweekly Latin American Situation Reports, 1944-45
2
57
Latin American Division, Photographs of Fritz
Ehemann, A German Merchant in Venezuela
1
57A-D
R&A Branch, Psychological Division: Reading File,
Reports, research and Budget Records
3
58
Minutes of the Meetings of the Board of Analysts,
1941-43
1
59
Projects Committee Minutes of Meetings, 1942-46
4
60
Projects Committee, Correspondence, 1943-45
1
R&A Interdepartmental Committee for Acquisition
of Foreign Publications, 1942-45 (Entries 61-72)
Entry
Entry Title
Boxes
61
New Delhi, Correspondence, 1944-45
1
62
New Delhi, Reports Re Southeast Asia, 1944-45
2
63
Stockholm, Correspondence
1
64
Correspondence from Washington, London, and Paris,
1942-45
1
65
Correspondence from Finance Branch Re Personnel,
1943-45
1
66
German POW Interrogations Re Archives and Publishing
1
Spring 1994 - 41
67
Semimonthly Outpost Letters and Monthly Reports from
Interdepartmental Committee, 1945 (cf Entry 70)
1
68
Foreign Publications Card File, 1943-45
8
69
Foreign Newspapers and Periodicals Card File
1
70
List of German Periodicals Maintained by the Stockholm Office, Dec. 1944 (cf Entry 67)
1
71
Lists of Foreign Publications Microfilmed, 1942-45
2
72
Swedish Language Newspaper Clippings
2
Entry
Entry Title
Boxes
73
ETa General Correspondence, 1944-45
8
74
William Langer and Chandler Morse, Correspondence,
1943-45
3
75
Allan Evans, Deputy Chief, Correspondence, 1942-45
4
76
Biographical Records Division, Correspondence, 1944-45
1
77
Enemy Objective Unit of the Economic Warfare Division,
Correspondence, 1943-45
6
78
London Joint Target Group Correspondence, 1944 (cf
Entries 79 and 80)
1
79
London Joint Target Committee, oil Targets Reports,
1944
1
80
London Joint Oil Target Committee, 1944-45
1
81
ass MIssion to Germany, Correspondence, 1944-45
3
82
French Political and Economic Conditions
1
83
MEDTO Correspondence, 1943-45
2
84
China Theater Correspondence, 1944-45
2
85
Records Re Maps, Charts, Motion Pictures, etc., of
the Visual Presentation Branch, 1942-45
45
42 - Spring 1994
86
FNB Correspondence, 1941-45 (cf Entry 100)
1
Other Archival Accessions and Declassifications
(From The Record: News from the National Archives and Records
Administration, Vol. I, No.1, September 1994.)
NARA Accessions
The National Archives and Records Administration has announced
the accession of the following materials.
Records of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (Record Group 52,
27 cubic feet). Selected Subject Files, 1941-53. Materials
open. Contact Military Reference Branch (202) 501-5395.
General Records of the Department of State (Record Group 59, 172
cubic feet). Records of Component Offices of the Bureau of
European Affairs, 1944-62. Records of the Bureau of International Organization Affairs relating to the United Nations,
1945-64. Contact Civil Reference Branch (202) 501-5425.
Records of the National Security Agency/Central Security Service
(Record Group 457, less than one cubic foot). Totally
declassified copies of the publication "War Secrets in the
Ether," by William Fricke (SRH series, Studies on Cryptology,
SRH 002) and volumes III and VI of "Battle of the Atlantic"
(SRH 024 and 025). Materials open. Contact Materials reference
Branch (202) 501-5385.
NARA Declassifications
Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers (Record Group 77,
274 cubic feet). Recently declassified were Classified Subject
Files, 1940-1945. Materials open. Contact Suitland Reference
Branch (301) 763-7410.
Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State
(Record Group 84, 147 cubic feet). Recently declassified were
Berlin Mission, Germany, 1945-1990 (127.5 cubic feet) and
Madrid, Spain, 1944-1955 (1.7 cubic feet).
Records of U.S. Occupation Headquarters, World War II (Record
Group 260, 129 cubic feet). recently declassified were
selected boxes from U.S. Civil Administration of the Ryukyu
Islands (USCAR), Administrative Division, 1945-71. Materials
open. Contact Suitland Reference Branch (301) 763-7410.
Spring 1994 - 43
Records of U.S. Army Commands (Record Group 338, 281 cubic feet).
Recently declassified were United States Army Forces,
Antilles, 1939-1948; United States Army, Pacific (USARPAC)
Military Historian's Office, Organizational History Files,
1942-; and Natick Laboratories, Historian's Background Files,
1941-1966. Materials open. Contact Suitland Reference Branch
(301) 763-7410.
Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1917- (Record Group
407, 5 cubic feet). Recently declassified were TAGO, Historical Documents, World War II. Materials open. Contact Suitland
Reference Branch (301) 763-7410.
Records of the U.S. High Commission for Germany (record Group
466, 2 cubic feet). Recently declassified were records from
the Historical Division, Publications Relating to United
States Occupation of Germany, 1945-1953. Materials open. Contact Suitland Reference Branch (301) 763-7410.
Feder~1
Addresses of
R e c o r d s ~~d Archiv~1
Co11ectio~s
National Archives
Reference Services
National Archives
Washington, DC 20408
(202) 501-5400
National Archives-Central Plains
Region
2312 East Bannister Road
Kansas City, MO 64131
(816) 926-6272
National Archives-New
England Region
380 Trapelo Road
Waltham, MA 02154
(617) 647-8100
National Archives-Southwest
Region
501 West Felix Street, P.O.
Box 6217
Fort Worth, TX 76115
(817) 334-5525
National Archives-Pittsfield
Region
100 Dan Fox Drive
Pittsfield, MA 01201
(413) 445-6885
National Archives-Rocky Mountain Region
Building 48, Denver Federal
Center
P.O. Box 25307
Denver, CO 80225
(303) 236-0817
44 - Spring 1994
National Archives-Northeast
Region
201 Varick Street
New York, NY 10014
(212) 337-1300
National Archives-Pacific
Southwest Region
24000 Avila Road
P.O. Box 6719
Laguna Niguel, CA 92607-6719
(714) 643-4241
National Archives-Mid
Atlantic Region
9th and Market Streets,
Room 1350
Philadelphia, PA 19107
(215) 597-3000
National Archives-Pacific
Sierra Region
1000 Commodore Drive
San Bruno, CA 94066
(415) 876-9009
National Archives-Southeast
Region
1557 St. Joseph Avenue
East Point, GA 30344
(404) 763-7477
National Archives-Pacific
Northwest Region
6125 Sand Point Way, NE
Seattle, WA 98115
(206) 526-6507
National Archives-Great
Lakes Region
7358 South Pulaski Road
Chicago, IL 60629
(312) 581-7816
National Archives-Alaska
Region
654 West Third Avenue
Anchorage, AK 99501
(907) 271-2441
Presidential Libraries
Office of Presidential
Libraries
National Archives
Washington, DC 20408
(202) 501-5700
Nixon Presidential Materials
Staff
National Archives at College
Park
8601 Adelphia Road
College Park, MD 20740-6001
(301) 713-6950
Herbert Hoover Library
P.O. Box 488
West Branch, IA 52358
Gerald R. ford Library
1000 Beal Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
(313) 741-2218
Franklin D. Roosevelt Library
511 Albany Post Road
Hyde Park, NY 12538
Gerald R. Ford Museum
303 Pearl Street, NW
Grand Rapids, MI 49504
(616) 451-9263
Spring 1994 - 45
Harry S. Truman Library
US Highway 24 and Delaware St.
Independence, MO 54050-1798
(816) 833-1400
Jimmy Carter Library
One Copenhill Avenue
Atlanta, GA 30307
(403) 331-3942
Dwight D. Eisenhower Library
Southeast Fourth Street
Abilene, KS 67410
(913) 263-4751
Ronald Reagan Library
40 Presidential Drive
Simi Valley, CA.93065
(805) 522-8444
John F. Kennedy Library
Columbia Point
Boston, MA 02125
(617) 929-4500
Bush Presidential Materials
Project
Suite 300
701 University Drive, East
College Station, TX 77840-1899
(409) 260-9552
Lyndon Baines Johnson Library
2312 Red River Street
Austin, TX 78705
(512) 482-5137
Federal Records Centers
Federal Records Center-Atlanta
1557 St. Joseph Avenue
East Point, GA 30344
(404) 763-7438
Federal Records Center-New York
Building 22, Military Ocean
Terminal
Bayonne, NJ 07002
(201) 823-7161
Federal Records Center-Boston
380 Trapelo Road
Waltham, MA 02154
(617) 647-8745
Federal Records Center-Philadelphia
5000 Wissahickon Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19144
(215) 951-5588
Federal Records Center-Chicago
7358 South Pulaski Road
Chicago, IL 60629
(312) 353-0164
Federal Records Center-Pittsfield
100 Dan Fox Drive
Pittsfield, MA 01201
(413) 445-6885
Federal Records Center-Dayton
3150 Springboro Road
Dayton, OH 45439
(513) 225-2878
Federal Records Center-San Francisco
1000 Commodore Drive
San Bruno, CA 94066
(415) 876-9015
46 - Spring 1994
Federal Records Center-Denver
Building 48, Denver Federal
Center
P.O. Box 23507
Denver, CO 80225
(303) 236-0804
Federal Records Center-Seattle
6125 Sand Point Way
Seattle, WA 98115
(206) 526-6501
Fede~al Records Center-Fort
Worth
Box 6216
Fort Worth, TX 76115
(817) 334-5515
National Personnel Records
Center
Civilian Personnel Records
111 Winnebago Street
St. Louis, MO 63118
(314) 425-5722
Federal Records Center-Kansas
City
2312 East Bannister Road
Kansas City, MO 64131
{816) 926-7271
National Personnel Records
Center
Military Personnel Records
9700 Page Avenue
St. Louis, MO 63132-5100
Federal Records Center-Los
Angeles
24000 Avila Road
Laguna Nigual, CA 92607-6719
(714) 643-4220
Washington National Records
Center
Washington, DC 20409
(301) 763-7000
Download