AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY· OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR NEWSLETTER Arth ur L. Funk, Chairman Department of History University of Florida Gain...ville, Florida :12611 Fall 1985 No. 34 Permanent Directors Robin Higham. Archivist Department of History Kanea8 State Uni versity Manhattan, Kansas 66506 Charles F. Delzell Vanderbilt University CONTENTS H. Stuart Hugh.. University of California at San Diego . Forrt~8t C. POji{Uf:' Dwi~ht I). Eisenhower Institute Trrms (·.rpiring /98.'j Brig. (;l'11 James L. Collins, Jr. Chief of Military Hislory (ret) Robert Dallek University of California at Los Angeles John u'wis Gaddi. Ohio University Robin Higham Kansas State University D. Clayton tJ Elmes Mississippi State University Charles B. MacDonald Arlington, Va. Agnes F. Peterson Hoover Institution Ru."ell F. Weigley Temple University Terms expiring 1986 Swphen E. Ambrose University of New Orleans Martin HlumensQn Washini<lon. D.C. William H. Cunliffe National Archives Harold C. DeutBch Army War College Stanlt~Y 1.. Falk CenLt't of Military Hi""tory (ret.) Mauric~ Mlltloff Center of Military Hislory (ret.) Erne~t R. May Harvard University Gerhard L. Weinberg University of North Carolina Earl F. Ziemke University of Georgia TPrms expiring 1987 Dean C. Allard Naval History Division Philip A. Crowl Naval War (:ollege (ret.) Brig. Gen. A. F. Hurley, USAF (ret.) North Texas State University David Kahn Great Neck, N. Y. Warren F. Kimball Rutgers University Richard H. Kohn Office of Air Force History Roberta Wahl.tetter Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles Robert Wolfe National Archives Janet Ziegler University of Caiifornia at Los Angel.. . ---~ Donald S. Detwi ler, Secretary and Newsletter Editor Department of History Southern lIlinoi. University at Carbondale Carbondale, lIlinoi. 62901 International Book Revipw Coordination General Information 2 Annual Membership Dues and Support 2 Committee Election The 1985 Annual Meeting (December, New York) AHA/ACHSWW Joint Session on the Atomic Bomb and the Surrender of Japan Annual Business Meeting 2 2 Arthur 1.. Funk Department of Histury University of Florida Oain..ville, Florida :12611 The ACHSWW i8 affiliated with American Historical Association 400 A Street, S.E. Washington, D.C. 20003 Comite Intemational d'Histoire de la Deuxieme Guerre Mondiale . Henri Michel, President 12, rue de Moscou 75008 Pari., France 3 World War II Conference (April 1986, Rutgers at Newark) 3 News from Washington, D.C. Center of Military History, Department of the Army Military Records Branch, U.S. National Archives 3 3 International News International Committee Elections World War II Studies at Two Centers in Paris: Historical Institute for Contemporary Conflicts Institute for History of Current Historical Events Archival Resources U.S. National Archives NSA/CSS Cryptologic Documents Other Accessions, Openings, and Declassifications Bibiliography A Biography of the First Chief of Military History German Military, Air, & Naval History Bibliographies A Bibliography of Works in English Published Since 1975 4 4 5 6 6 7 9 9 Attachments: Recent Periodical Literature on Military History (from The Army Historian, No.8, Summer 1985) October 1985 List of NSA/CSS Cryptologic Documents in Record Group 457, Military Records Branch, U.S. National Archives ACHSWW Membership Information & Renewal Form Annual Committee Election Ballot GENERAL INFORMATION Established in 1967 lito promote historical research in the period of 'i'Jorld War II in all its aspects, II the American Committee on the His­ tory of the Second World War is affiliated with the American Histor­ ical Association, the International Committee for the History of the Second World War, and corresponding national committees in many other countries, including Austria, France, East and West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, the Soviet Union, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The ACHSWW issues a semiannual newsletter. Membership is open to anyone interested in the era of the Second World War. ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP DUES AND SUPPORT Annual membership dues of $10.00 ($2.00 for students) for calendar year 1986 are payable at the beginning of January directly to the secretary (not through an agency or subscription service). Please complete and return the membership renewal and information form at­ tached to the newsletter, together with your remittance. Members abroad are asked to remit dues in U.S. funds. The news­ letter, which is mailed at bulk rates within the United States, will be sent by surface mail to foreign addresses unless special arrange­ ments 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 membership dues, to defray operating costs not covered by regular dues. COMMITTEE ELECTION Attached to this newsletter is the ballot for election of committee directors for three-year terms from 1986 through 1989. Th~ ballot, which may be mailed with the membership renewal form and remittance, or sent separately, should be returned to the secretary in January. THE 1985 ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of the ACHSWW will be held in conjunction with that of the American Historical Association at the New York Marriott Mar­ quis Hotel, 1535 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019, 27-30 December 1985. Session on the Atomic Bomb and the Surrender of Japan The ACHSWW/AHA joint session will be on Saturday, 28 December, 2:30­ 4:30 p.m., in the Marriott's Grand Ballroom North, chaired by Charles F. Delzell, with papers by Barton J. Bernstein, liThe Atomic Bomb and Japanese Surrender,1I and Rufus E. Miles, Jr., liThe Strange Myth of Half a Million Lives Saved," and comment by Martin J. Sherwin and David A. Rosenberg. 2 I--~~-~ -~~ Annual Business Meeting The 1985 business meeting is scheduled for Sunday, 29 December, 5:00­ 7:00 p.m., in Meeting Room 7 on the 5th floor of the Marriott Marquis. The Chairman of the ACHSWW and Vice President of the International Com­ mittee, Arthur L. Funk, will give a report on the meeting of the Inter­ national Committee held in Stuttgart at the end of August. There will also be reports on the conference on "World War II and the Shaping of Modern America" being held in April 1986 at Rutgers in Newark, and on plans for next year's annual meeting of the ACHSWW, to be held, in con­ junction with that of the AHA, in December 1986 in Chicago. CONFERENCE ON WORLD WAR II AND THE SHAPING OF MODERN AMERICA A public conference at the Newark campus of Rutgers, the State Univer­ sity of New Jersey, on "World War II and the Shaping of Modern America" will be conducted 4-6 April 1986. Sessions will deal with literature, film, women, race relations, medicine, international relations, intel­ ligence, and warfare. Among the participants will be Charles Alexander, David Culbert, Benjamin Ferencz, Lloyd Gardner, George Herring, David Kahn, Walter LaFeber, Forrest Pogue, D. C. Watt, and Russell Weigley. For details, contact Prof. Warren F. Kimball, Director, World War II Conference, Rutgers University, Newark, N.J. 07102, (201) 648-5897. NEWS FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. U.S. Army Center of Military History The summer 1985 issue of The Army Historian, the quarterly of the De­ partment of the Army's Center of Military History, reports that the CMH is once again headed by a general officer on active duty: In August, the U.S. Army's Chief of Military History, William A. Stofft (formerly Director of the Combat Studies Institute of the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth) was promoted to brigadier general. For information on The Army Historian, write to the Managing Edi­ tor at the CMH, 20 Mass. Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20314-0200. (The bibliography of periodical literature on military history appended to this newsletter was reproduced, as noted, from The Army Historian, with the understanding of the Chief Historian at CMH, David F. Trask, who represented the ACHSWW at a session this past summer in Stuttgart.) Military Records Branch, U.S. National Archives On 1 October 1985, the Military Archives Division of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration was reorganized. The Modern Mili­ tary Headquarters Branch and the Navy and Old Army Branch were replaced by two new units: the Military Projects Branch and, of particular inter­ est to ACHSWW members, the Military Reference Branch. Like the former Modern Military Headquarters Branch, of which it may be seen as an out­ 3 .-------­ growth, the Military Reference Branch is located in Room 13W of the Na­ tional Archives Building on Pa. Ave., N.W., and is headed by Robert Wolfe, a veteran director of the ACHSWW. Also like "Modern Military," the Military Reference Branch has World War II captured military rec­ ords. However, instead of being able to concentrate on recent, high­ echelon U.S. military records, the new branch, under the reorganiza­ tion, is to handle the military and related records in the Archives Building dating as far back as the last quarter of the eighteenth cen­ tury. (The name of the Modern Military Field Branch in Suitland, Md., has been shortened to Military Field Branch, but the branch was not re­ structured in the reorganization.) INTERNATIONAL NEWS International Committee Elections In the elections at the meeting of the International Committee for the History of the Second World War, held on 31 August 1~85 in Stuttgart, the International Committee's founding president, Henri Michel (France), was elected honorary president. The secretary, Jean Vanwelkenhuyzen (Belgium), was elected president. The offices of secretary and treas­ urer were combined and the former treasurer, Harry Paape (Netherlands) was elected secretary-treasurer. The International Committee's bulletin, previously the responsibility of the secretary or treasurer, is now to be issued by Mme. V. Moisuc (Romania). The representatives of Romania and Yugoslavia on the executive committee (i.e., the Bureau) of the International Committee, Gen. Gheorghe Zaharia and Dusan Biber, respec­ tively, were elected vice presidents, and the four incumbent vicepresi­ dents, Gen. Pavel Zhilin (U.S.S.R.), Czeslaw Madajczyk (Poland), Sir F. William Deakin (U.K.), and Arthur L. Funk (U.S.A.) were reelected. World War II Studies at Two Centers in Paris When the French Committee on the History of the Second World War was dissolved in the form in which it had been directed by Henri Michel as a standing inter-ministerial committee of the government, several of its functions were assumed by two centers of historical studies in Paris: Historical Institute for Contemporary Conflicts The Institut d'Histoire des Conflits Contemporains (Hotel National des Invalides, 75007 Paris) publishes the Revue d'Histoire de la 2e Guerre Mondiale et des Conflits Contemporains. Henri Michel is the director of the quarterly~ the Institute's director, Guy Pedroncini, is editor in chief. Since 1950 the Revue has published 137 issues with over 500 articles and almost 2000 book reviews. A list of the contents of the first hundred issues was published in a special number in 1977; and the Institute has a computer listing of all articles and reviews by author and by topic. 4 The Institute has over a dozen specialized research commissions. One of them, chaired by General Delmas, focusses primarily on the Sec­ ond World War. Among the others concerned with various aspects of the war are the commissions dealing with navy matters (Admiral Chatelle), Indo-China (Jacques Valette), Aeronautics and Space (Gen. Christienne), and International Relations (Jean-Claude Allain). Inquiries regarding the Revue or the work of the commissions are invited through the Institute. Institute for History of Current Historical Events The library of the French Committee on the History of the Second World War went to the Institut d'Histoire du Temps Present (80b, rue Lecourbe, 75015 Paris), directed by Fran90is Bedarida. Although the work of the Institute, which is regularly reported in its quarterly bulletin, is by no means limited to the era of the Second World War, it continues an ac­ tive research program on the World War II period. To cite but one exam­ ple, a study is currently being made of the experiences of former in­ mates of the women's camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Its purpose is to iden­ tify the ways in which they adapted and survived in the camp and to learn of the problems faced by the survivors after liberation. Apart from the intrinsic value of the findings regarding the inmates, the systematic comparison of written and oral accounts may, it is hoped, have methodological value as a case study in oral history. ARCHIVAL RESOURCES NSA/CSS Cryptologic Documents Attached as an appendix to this newsletter is a cumulative listing of National Security Agency cryptologic documents offered to and accepted by the U.S. National Archives as of October 1985. (Previous cumulative listings were carried in the Fall 1984 and Fall 1982 issues.) The attachment includes many previously unlisted special research histories in the SRH series (including SRH-306, "OP20G, Exploits and Commendations World War II," 1942-1948, NSG, 151 pp., and SRH-349, "The Achievements of the Signal Security Agency in World War II," February 1 946, 1 1 5 pp.). There are also several documents from series from which there have be~n no previous accessions. The SRIA, SRIB, SRIC, and SRID series are comprised (as indicated in the "Legend" at the beginning of the October 1985 list) of individual translations of German Abwehr messages and of messages between Germany and clandestine agents operating in Europe, in Africa, in the Western Hemisphere, and in the Far East. A total of 13,148 pp. of documentation is listed as having been accessioned from these four series alone. The attached listing also includes records of historical crypto­ logic import in four series: SRMA, from the U.S. Army; SRMF, from the U.S. Air Force; SRMN, from the U.S. Navy; and SRMD, from cryptologic or joint U.S. agencies. Among the documents listed in the Navy series are the 267-page "OP-20-G File of Memoranda and Reports Relating to the 5 Battle of Midway, 1942-1946" (SRMN-005) and a file on "Japanese Espion­ age Activities in the United States, 1941-1943" (SRMN-007, 188 pp.). The October 1985 list includes a number of documents from the inter­ war period dealing with the First World War, e.g, SRH-310 and SRH-311 on German military ciphers in 1917 and 1918, SRH-327 on German diplo­ matic codes employed in World War I, and SRMN-003, "Instructions for Safeguarding and Using Navy Cipher Box, Mark II," 1918. The NSA/CSS Cryptographic Documents are deposited in the U.S. Na­ tional Archives in Record Group 457, in the Military Records Branch (formerly Modern Military Headquarters Branch) in Room 13W of the Na­ tional Archives Building in Washington, D.C. More specific informa­ tion is available directly from Mr. John E. Taylor, Military Records Branch, U.S. National Archives, Washington, D.C. 20408, who may be reached by telephone at (202) 523-3340. Those planning to visit the Military Records Branch during the sum­ mer of 1986 may wish to consider the possible advantages of advance con­ sultation. During the summer of 1985, the daily number of visitors to the Modern Military Branch averaged almost twice what it had been the summer before: twenty-nine in summer 1985, compared to sixteen a year earlier; the daily average of over thirty-six during the week of 15-19 July 1985 peaked at forty-eight on the 16th. Considering the substan­ tially broadened scope of responsibility following the reorganization noted above, not to mention the possibility of substantially increased interest due to continuing accessions from NSA and CIA, the staff of the Military Records Branch may well have more researchers than ever turning to them next summer. They are best able to give thoughtful help to those who write (or telephone) well in advance, clearly defin­ ing their areas of enquiry and the scope of their research. Other Accessions, Openings, and Declassifications ass Documentation In the past few months, the CIA has transferred a large amount of ass documentation to the National Archives, adding to the important body of operational records recently deposited in Record Group 226. (The initial accesion of these records was described in some detail in the Fall 1984 issue of this newsletter.) Like the NSA/CSS cryptographic documentation cited above, these ass records are in the Military Records Branch. Rec­ ords of the Strategic Services Unit (SSU) and the Central Intelligence Group (CIG) have not yet been received, but may be forthcoming in 1986. Treasury Department Records, 1940-1970 The Judicial, Fiscal, and Social Branch of the Civil Archives Division of the National Archives has accessioned three groups of records (in Record Group 56) from the Treasury: 55 cubic feet of central files of the Office of the Secretary, 1957-1966, including the project papers for a never published administrative history of Treasury Department wartime activities; 1.8 cubic feet of records of war loans and savings bonds promotions, 1940-1970, including posters, pamphlets, etc.; and 21.5 cu­ bic feet of National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Fi­ nancial Policy (NAC) records, 1946-1953, with material on Asian and Eu­ 6 .-­ ropean redevelopment and correspondence with the Export-Import Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the Departments of State, Commerce, and Defense. The Alexander Sachs Papers at the FDR Library The Franklin D. Roosevelt Library has received the papers of the late Dr. Alexander Sachs (120 cubic feet), a collection of correspondence, economic charts, tables, and reports for the years 1930-1972. Chief of the economic research division of the National Recovery Administration during the 1930s, Dr. Sachs, a Russian-born economist, served as econom­ ic advisor to the Petroleum Industry War Council and as special counsel to the Director of the oss. On 11 October 1939, immediately after the fall of Poland, Sachs delivered to the White House a letter from Albert Einstein advising President Roosevelt of the potential use of uranium to produce a nuclear chain reaction. The ensuing political chain reac­ tion led to the "Manhattan Project" and the development of the atomic bomb. (The Einstein letter is printed as an appendix to Dr. Vincent C. Jones' Manhattan: The Army and the Atomic Bomb, published earlier this year by the Center of Military History.) BIBLIOGRAPHY A Biography of the First U.S. Army Chief of Military History Leslie Anders. Gentle Knight: The Life and Times of Major General Edwin Forrest Harding. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1985. X & 384 pp. Maps, photographs, notes, essay on sources, & index. In November 1945, shortly before his retirement as chief of staff, General George C. Marshall established the Historical Division, War De­ partment Special Staff, with Major General Forrest Harding as director. Harding laid the groundwork for what is now the U.s. Army's Center of Military History, was instrumental in securing the services of Kent Rob­ erts Greenfield as Chief Historian, and launched the professional his­ toriographical program that led to the production of the monumental se­ ries on The U.S. Army in World War II. Before Harding's retirement late in 1946, the new chief of staff, Dwight Eisenhower, had confirmed the standing of the position he had established by upgrading its title from that of a staff division director to Chief of Military History. Leslie Anders, formerly an historian in the Office of the Chief of Engineers, now Professor of History at Central Missouri University, has written a biography worthy of its distinguished subject. Moreover, in providing this readable account of the life and times of one of the fin­ est representatives of the modern American military tradition, he has produced a work that provides invaluable insight into the social and intellectual history of the officer corps of the U.s. Army. The well­ written text is documented with thirty-five pages of backnotes, supple­ mented by an essay on the secondary literature, the author's extensive correspondence and interviews, and the archival sources utilized in many depositories, including the personal papers in the Harding Memorial Mu­ seum, the late general's former family home, in Franklin, Ohio. 7 Born in 1886 in that southwestern Ohio town (where he died in 1970), Forrest Harding was a 1909 graduate of West Point--and a class­ mate of three future full generals in the U.S. Army, Jacob Devers, George Patton, and William Simpson, and two in the Chinese Army, Ting Chia-chen and Ying Hsing-wen. He returned to West Point to teach dur­ ing the superintendancy of Douglas MacArthur, but came to identify him­ self much more closely with George Marshall, under whom he first served, in the 1920s, with the Fifteenth Infantry in Tientsin, China, and later, in the early 1930s, as a faculty member at the Infantry School in Fort Benning, Georgia. From 1934 to 1938, he was editor of The Infantry Journal, which under his direction became a leading professional journal in its field and made a significant contribution to the professionaliza­ tion of the U.S. Army officer corps--not to mention establishing Hard­ ing's own reputation as one of the best minds in the Army. In 1940, during the prewar expansion, Harding received his first star, and early in 1942, soon after Pearl Harbor, his second, when he was promoted to major general and made commander of the Thirty-Second Infantry Division, a National Guard unit from Michigan and Wisconsin. Nine months later, in November 1942, Harding led his division in the U.S. Army's first counter-offensive against the Japanese. This was in southeastern New Guinea, off the northern coast of Australia. Goaded by Australian reproaches, if not by his own ambition, the Su­ preme Allied Commander of the Southwest Pacific Area, General Douglas MacArthur, was determined not only to stop the advance of the Japanese toward Australia, but to turn them back by a counter-offensive. Professor Anders, known for his work on the Burma campaign and the Ledo Road, gives a clear picture of MacArthur's ill-advised deployment of the green division, without artillery, tanks, or coordinated air support, against strong Japanese positions in the Papuan jungle, not­ withstanding the misgivings of Harding's corps commander (and West Point classmate), Lt. Gen. Robert Eichelberger. MacArthur was in a hurry. He ordered that Buna be captured. When, as inevitable, the initial attempt did not succeed, he made Harding the scapegoat, ordering Eichelberger to relieve him and to "take Buna, or not come back alive." Eichelberger replaced Harding at the beginning of December, took Buna, and did come back alive. But by the middle of December 1942, he was the only un­ wounded American general left at the front. It was a full month, to the day, after Harding's relief, before the last of the Japanese bunkers could be overrun. The operation cost eighty-five hundred Allied battle casualties, twenty-six hundred of them in the Thirty-second Division alone. (Anders points out that if one takes into account the fifty­ three hundred in the division who came down with malaria, the total number of "casualties from 'all causes' constituted a heavy majority of the eleven thousand . . . poured into Buna's cauldron. ") Harding's biographer makes it clear that MacArthur, after having had Harding abruptly relieved, made a point of treating him with kid gloves. Harding left the Southwest Pacific Area Theater with the Sil­ ver Star for personal gallantry under fire and with the recommendation that he be assigned command of a combat division in another theater. In­ stead, Marshall made him Commanding General of the Panama Mobile Force, a tactical command that played an important part in the training of other units for jungle warfare--something in which Harding had acquired valuable experience. In 1944, he was ordered to San Juan, Puerto Rico, to command the Department of the Antilles. He returned in the summer of 1945 to Washington to serve on the Joint Postwar Planning Committee 8 I~------ of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Soon thereafter, Marshall, in qne of the last assignments of his long tenure as chief of staff--he had succeeded Malin Craig on 1 September 1939--entrusted his old friend with the Mil­ itary History Division, the final post of Harding's career, and probab­ ly the one in which he made his most enduring contribution. Bibliographies of German Military, Air, and Naval History Derinis E. Showalter. German Military History, 1648-1982: A Critical Bibliography. Military History Bibliographies, Vol. 3. New York & London: Garland Publ., Inc., 1984. 331 pp. An extensive listing of books and articles in German, English, and French, with an author index, organized by periods. The individual en­ tries are unannotated, but many of the works are discussed in critical bibliographical essays at the beginning of each segment. Edward L. Homze. German Military Aviation: A Guide to the Literature. Military History Bibliographies, Vol. 2. New York & London: Garland Publ., Inc., 1984. 234 pp. Like the foregoing bibliography in the same series, this is an ex­ tensive listing of pertinent works with bibliographical essays on the major periods (early flight, World War I, the interwar period, World War II, and the postwar period) and an author index. Keith W. Bird. German Naval History: A Guide to the Literature. Military History Bibliographies, Vol. 7. New York & London: Garland Publ., Inc., 1985. 1121 pp. Published in the same series as the bibliographies listed above, this substantially longer volume is differently structured; the 4871 titles on German naval (and maritime) history are in a single list, al­ phabetized by author, in the last third of the volume, following an ex­ tensive historiographical study (printed from double-spaced camera-ready typescript) of German naval history in the context of German history. A Bibliography of Works in English Published Since 1975 Arthur L. Funk. The Second World War: A Select Bibliography of Works in English Published Since 1975. Claremont: Regina Books, 1985. 210 pp. This volume was compiled, as noted on the title page, "for the American Committee on the History of the Second World War on the occa­ sion of the 16th International Congress of Historical Sciences meeting in Stuttgart, August 1985." It is a continuation of "A Select Bibliogra­ phy of Books on the Second World War in English Published in the United States, 1966-1975," prepared by the Chairman of the ACHSWW as a pamphlet on the occasion of the 14th International Historical Congress in San Francisco in 1975, as a continuation, in turn, of Janet Ziegler's World War II: Books in English, 1945-65, Hoover Institution Bibliographical Series, 45 (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1971). Not intended to to serve as a comprehensive bibliography with balanced coverage, it is a useful working checklist of 2132 enumerated but unannotated titles, followed by author and subject indices, of recent monographs and refer­ ences--citing, for example, fifty-two bibliographies and thirty research guides in the first dozen pages alone. 9 PROFESSIONAL READING Periodical Literature in English on the Study, Use, and Teaching of Military History Hardpresscd Army histnrians. civilian and military. arc often asked to explain what it is that they and their colleagues do and can do fnr the Army. Mosl of us usually mumble something about learning from the past. often lacking the time to sit down and define with any precision what history in the Army means. Although bihliographies on military historical subjects abound. we have also lacked an up-to­ date bibliography of periodical literature on how military history can be studied. used. and taught. The following list. taken primarily from military and historical journals throughout the English-speaking world. represents a wealth of shared ideas on the profession and its applications. Th£' Army Historian prints it here for whatever use our colleagues can make of it. Additions and corrections from readers arc more than welcome. Ageton. Arthur A. "Are the Lessons of History No Longer Valid')"' Military Reviell'. 23 (February 1953): Conn, Stetson. "The Pursuit of Military History." Military Affairs, 30 (Spring 1966): 1-8. _ _ _ _ . "Army Historical Work, Past and Pres­ ent." Army Dig£'st, 22 (June 1967): 46-47. Cooling, Benjamin F., Ill. "Military History for the Military Professional." Parameters, 1 (Winter 1972): 40-50. Ballagh. R.S., and Michael R. Matheny. "The Battalion Staff Duty Officer Approach." The Army Historian, 4 (Summer 1984): 4-5. Banner. James M .. Jr. "The Season of Applied History: Challenging the Frustrations." NCPH Newsletter. 3 (Spring 1983): 1-3. Barclay. C.N. "The Writing and Production of a Regimental History." Ann." Quanerly. 74 (April 1957); 28-35. _ _ _ _. "Technology and the Frontiers of Military History." Military Affairs. 39 (December 1975): 206-207. Corvisier, Andre. "Research in Military History in France: The Application of Data Processing Tech­ niques." WarandSociety. I (September 1983): 21-35. Cunningham, John T. "Historian on the Douhle.·· American Heritage, 19 (June 1968): 54-64. Depuy, Trevor N. "History and Modern Battle." Army, 32 (November 1982): 18-30. Diner, Steven J. "Writing History for Policymakers: A Follow-up." AHA Perspectives, 21 (April 1983); 8. Ekrich, Arthur A., Jr., "Military History: A Civilian Caveat." Military Affairs, 21 (Summer 1957): 49-54. Emerson, William R., "The Reading of Military History." Military Affairs, 22 (Fall 1958): 152-153. Falls, Cyril. "The Value of Military History." Journal of the Royal Artillery, 79 (July 1952): 166-176. Feld, Maury D. "The Writing of Military History." Military Affairs, 22 (Spring 1958): 38-39. Ferguson, James H. "The Military Historian Gocs 'Where the Action Is.'" Army DiRest, 24 (August X2-93. _ _ _ _ . "Military History: The Cult of Denigra­ tion." Army Quarterly, 84 (April 1962); 61-64. Beaumont, Roger A. "Military Fiction and Role: Some Problems and Perspectives. " Military Affairs, 39 (April 1975): 69-71. Bittner. Donald F. "Military History at the 'Command and Staff.·" Fortitudine, 13 (Winter 1984): 3-11. Blumenson, Martin. "Can Official History Be Honest History?" Military Affairs, 26 (Winter 1%2): 153-161. _ _ _ _. "Why Military History?" Army, 25 (January 1975): 33-37. Bond, Brian. "Some Attractions and Pitfalls of Military History." Miliwry Rel'iell', 45 (February 1%5): 87-96. Burns, John H. "What About Military History?" Infan­ try Journal. 45 (July-August 1938): 321-327. Caldwell, Frank C. "Every Marine an Historian." Marine Corps Ga~ette. 50 (March 1966): 33-38. Callahan, Raymond. "Three Faces of Military History." The Arm\' Historian, 3 (Spring 1984): 7-10. Case, Lyn~ M. "The Military Historian Overseas." American Association ofUnil'Crsiry Professors Bulletin, 34 (Summer 1948): 320-334. Chaney. Otto P .. Jr. "The Agony of Soviet Military Historians." Militan Review, 48 (June 1968): 24-28. Coffman, Edward M: "The New American Military History." Military Affairs, 48 (January 1984): 1-5. Colby, Elbridge. "Roads of Research Beyond Books." Military Affairs. 31 (Summer 1967): 91-93. Cole, Hugh H. "Writing Contemporary Military History." Militan' Affairs. 12 (Fall 1948): 162-167. 1969): 56-58. Finley, James P. "Army Museums and Military History Education." The Army Historian, 7 (Spring 1985): 1-2. Gailey, Harry H., George E. Moore, and Embert J. Henderson. "The Universities and the Teaching of Military Subjects on Third World Areas." Military Af­ fairs, 41 (April 1977): 79-80. Garland, Albert N. "Some Thoughts on the Writing of Military History." Military Affairs, 35 (February 197 1): 18-20. Gilbert, Felix. "Form Clausewitz to Delhruck and Hintze: Achievements and Failures of Military History." Jour­ nal of StrateKic Studies, 3 (December 1980): 11-20. 12 The ARMY HISTORIAN Glover. Richard. "War and Civilian Historians." Journal of the History of Ideas. 18 (January 1957): 84-100. Goldberg. Alfred. "A Message for Field Historians: Your Work is Important." The Army Historian. 7 (Spring 1985): 8-11. Gooch, John. "Clio and Mars: The Use and Abuse of History." Journal of Strategic Studies, 3 (December 1980): 21-36. Hamburger. Kenneth E.. and Robert Mixon. "Military History for Civilian Teachers-USMA Educates the Professors." Anny, 34 (June 1984): 47-49. Harahan, Pat, and Jim Davis. "Historians and the American Military: Past Experience and Future Expec­ tations." The Public Historian, 5 (Summer 1983): 55-64. Hardcastle, Bruce D. "Logistical History." The Army Hisron'an, 2 (Winter 1984): 14-16. _ _ _ _ . "Strategic Thought." The Anny Historian. 3 (Spring 1984): 11-15. Harris, H.E.D. "The Value of History to the Soldier." Army Quarterly, 85 (October 1962): 79-87. Hassler, Warren W., Jr. "Military History: The Army's Pivotal Study." Military Review, 56 (October 1976): 29-33. Hayes. John D. "Military Historians and Departmental Histories." Military Affairs, 19 (Summer 1955): 120. _ _ _ _ . "The Military Officer and His History. " Milita'}' Affairs, 19 (Spring 1955): 65. _ _ _ _ . "The Teaching of Military History." Military Affairs, 20 (Spring 1956): 64. Higgins, Trumbull. "The Anglo-American Historians' War in the Mediterranean." Milita'}' Affairs, 34 (Oc­ tober 1970): 84-88. Higham, Robin. "If You Don't Read History, You'll Repeat It." Military Review, 53 (May 1973): 28-34. Holley, LB .. Jr. "On History and Staff Work." Air University Review, 21 (January-February, 1970): 101-108. (Review article) ants of Power or Agents of Understanding?" Military Affairs, 36 (October 1972): 88-92. _ _ _ _. 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Wright is Bruce Dittmar Hardcastle, Managing Editor of The Army Historian IDSD]. o ~ r INDEX OF NSA/CSS CRYPTOLOGIC DOCUMENTS <: OFFERED TO THE NATIONAL AHCHIVES OF THE UNI'l'f;l) STATES "(Record Group 457, Military RecorJs Branch, Military Archives Division) As of October 1985 m V> LEGEND ,<"(C.C. V) UJ > :r ~ ~ SR- Individual Translations, Ja9anese Army Messages 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 Translatiqns, German Navy Liaison Berlin/Tokyo Msgs. SRGN- Individual Translatl0ns, I 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 Western HemispheJ SRID- Individual Translations, Messages between German clandestine agents operating in the Far East SRMA- Discrete records of historical cryptologic import originated by the u.s. Army SR..-~D- 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 pertaining to Japanese Naval Communications SRNS­ Summaries SRQ­ Unclassified Technical Documents SRR­ Individual Translations, Japanese Water Transport Messages SRS- Summaries For detailed lis 4 see page 4 of this index . \ German U Boat Messages ~ 0 - I­ ~ UJ - :I: -I­ ilS Japanese Naval Radio Intelligence IV) ~~ -0 .oJ -~ ~ 0 UJ ~ ~ u; ex: ( .-~, ( "-. SR-01 thru SR-1)82 SR-~183 VI W > thru SR-~221 \ Translation Reports of Japanese Intercept­ World War II - Mar 1942 to Sep 1944, Five Volumes (1,306 pages) Translations of Japanese Army Messages, June 1943 to Nov 1944 (4,113 pages) SR-522 thru SR-1&679 Translations of Japanese Army Messages, (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945· (13,428 pages) SR-18,680 thru SR-2~180 SR-26,304 thru SR- 28,600 SR-29,119 thru SR-29,653 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (6,334 pages) SR-36,S06 thru SR-43,314 SR-49,70S 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,lSl SR-2S,601 SR-29,654 SR-43,315 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (lS,137 pages) thru thru thru thru SR-26,303 SR-29,118 SR-36f805 SR-49,707 SR-54,S95 thru SR-55;>28 SR-55i756 thru SR-5S,51S SR-58,B89 thru SR-63,051 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (Total pages: 7,560) SR-64,839 thru SR-65,124 SR-66,762 thru SR-66,984 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (Total pages: 509) SR-5&,520 SR-63,052 SR-65r152 SR-6&985 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (Total pages: 13,SlS) thru thru thru thru SR-5S,B88 SR- 64fi38 SR-66,761 SR-77p09 thru SR-136,869 (Less SR-101,605 thru 103,799, and SR-105,640 thru 105,900 - NOT USED) SR-77~010 Translations of Japanese Army Messages (Japanese Ground Forces) Dates: 1944-1945 (Total pages: 57,404) W :I: ~ I<­ o -o ..J .~ .~ ow ~ ~ uJ ex: . 1 ) c ~aEanese Ar~At.~Fhe SRA-l thru SRA-6,946 June 1943 to Aug 1945 Ja;eanese Army Attache Translations, June 1943 to Aug 1945 (Total pagesg SRA-6,947 thru 18,500 thru 1,170 SRDJ-001 thru 9,360 Japanese-German Diplo~ Messages Dates: 1940-1941 (Total pages: lOp528) SRDJ-9,361 thru 19,978 SRDG-1,171 thru 4,872 Japane?~-German SRDG-4,873 thru 7,195 SRDJ-19,978 thru 32,199 Dates: pages: \ SRDG-7,196 thru 18,750 SRDJ-32,201 thru 43,166 :> .~ 14 u 544) ~Eanese-G~ Dip~mati~ M~~~age~ Dates: pages: Feb 1943 to Sep 194~Tota1 22 u 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 Di~matic Translations Dates: Sep 1943 to Mar 1946 (Total pages ~ 82,299) SRDJ-113,785 thru 114,399 SRDJ-115,132 thru 115,614 Japanese DiDlomatic Translations Dates: Sep 1939 to Mar 1945~otal page s ; 1 , 823 ) SRF-OOl thru SRF-55,792 Translations of Japanese~~orce Messaqes 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 f 964) SRGN-OOl thru 49,461 SRHN-49,462 thru 49,668 German N~YYLU~Boat Messa e Translations & Summaries g 2 Feb 1941 to 9 Jul 1945 (U.S.) 10 Aug 1944 to 6 May 1945 (Bri-tish) .. (Total pages: 49,668) SRIA-OOOl thru 1,550 .1- D!.E,lomatic J.I>~ssage~. Apr 1941 to Jan 1942 (Total 14,320) Japanes~-German p.iplomatic Message§. Dates~ Feb 1942 to Feb 1943 (Total pages: <II 11,553) SRDG~OOl I UJ 'J:'ranslations? --[6,946 pages) SRIB-OOOl thru 7,361 SRIC-0001 thru 4,164 SRID-Ol thru 73 Ge~~an Abwehr Translations, 1,550) Dates: 1942- ~(Tota1 pages: German Clandestine Translations, 1942-197i5 (Total pages~ Dat.es: 7~36l) German Clandestine Translations, (Total pages: 1940-1945 Dates: 4,164) German Clandestine Translations, (Total pages: 1944-1945 Dates: ? 3) 2 c SRN-OOI thru SR~-125, 093 and ~ Translations bfJap'anese Navy Messages, SRNA-OOI thru SRNA-5,324 Japanese Naval Fo~ces. Dates: 1940-1946 (Total pages: 130,416) SRN-125,094 thru 129,615 , Japan'ese Navy Messages, 1942-1946 (4,521 pages) SRN-129,616 thru 133,367 Translation of Japanese Navy Messages, Japanese Naval Forces, 5 Dec 41 - 25 Mar 42, Naval Communications DIV-OP-20-G (3,752 pages) SRN-133,368 thru 165, 038 S~~-165,039 thru 290,908 , Translations of Japanes'e Naval Forces, wtVII 'CINCPAC, 1 Jan 44 - 15 Nov 45 (Total pages: 125,869) , SRNM-l thru S~~M-l,292 , Miscellaneou's Records Pertaining to Japanese Naval Comro:unica'tions, WWII, 13 Mar 42 ­ 4 Jun 42, DIV-OP-20-G (Total pages: 1,292) SR~S-OOOI thru SR~S-1,290 S~~S-1,289 thru SRNS-l,458 SRNS-l,459 thru Vl W Translation of Japanese Naval Forces, WWII, \ 19 Dec 42 - 31 Dec 43, CINCPAC (Total pages: ) 31,670) S~~S-l,516 Japanese Naval Radio Intelligence Summaries Dates: 1942 - 1946 (Total pages: 2,882) Summaries of Jaoanese Warship/Fleet/Aircraft Locations and Intentions. Dates: 1942 ­ 1945 (Total pages: 2,296) Declassified Traffic Intelligence Summaries of Jaoanese 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 Count of 2,022,000 Letters, Callimahos, July 1973 (32 pages) SR0.-02 Recollections Concerning the Birth of One­ Time Tape and Printing-Tel'egraph 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) > 3 c SRS-01/04/19/25/26/35/39/ 44/52/56/60/65/70/75/81/ 87/94/101/108/115/129/157/ 183 thru 547 "MAGIC" Summaries, Japanese Army Supp1ement/ Far East Summaries, 19 Sep 1944 - 2 Oct 45 (Total 9ages: 3,998) SRS-170 (less 01/04/19/25/ "MAGIC" Far East Summaries, 12 Feb 44 ­ 26/35/39/44/52/56/60/65/70. 18 Sep 44 (Total pages: 1,845) SRS-71 thru 133 (less 75/81/ 87/94/101/108/115/129. SRS-134 thru 182 (less SRS- thru 157) \ 1 SRS-548 B-BERICHTE & X-BERICHTE, 18 Sep 39 ­ 23 May 1945 (Excluding period from 23 Apr 44 to 6 Jan 45) German Nava1._ Intelligence Sum­ maries, 18 Vo1s., Original bond paper docu­ ments & one diazo set of microfiche (Total pages: 11,861) SRS-549 thru SRS-823 (less 604 & 726) "MAGIC" 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]) "MAGIC" Diplomatic Suriunaries, Vol 1, Jan 43, Vol. II, Feb 43, Vol. III, Mar 43, Vol. IV, Apr 43, Vol. V, May 43, Vol. VI, Jun 43, Vol. VII, Ju1 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-BERICHTE, 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 "MAGIC" Diplomatic Summaries, 1 Jan 44 ­ 31 Dec 44 (Total pages: 4,222) SRS-1534 thru SRS-1837 "MAGIC" Diplomatic Summaries, MIS, War Dept, 1 Jan 45 - 3 Nov 45. (Total pages: 3,204) SRS-1838 "MAGIC" Summary No. 609. Date: 25 Nov 43. {Total pages: l6} duplicated document, see SRS-1863. SRS-1839 thru SRS-1868 "MAGIC" Summary Nrs. 585 thru 614. Date: 1 November - 30 November 1943. (Total pages: 145) SRS-1869 SUNSET Daily Intelligence Reoorts 1942-1945 (some missing), European Theater. (Total pages: 1,680) Vl LJJ > 4 ~ C:· " SRH-OOl Historical Background of the Signal Security Agency Vol. I "Codes & Ciphers Prior to World War I (17761917). (139 pages) Vol II "World War I (1917-1919}" (353 pages) Vol. III "The Peace (1919-1939)" (416 pages) (Total pages: 908) SRH-002 War Secrets in the Ether, Wm. F. Flicke (312 pages) SRH-003 Influence of U.S. Cryptologic Organizations'on the Digital Computer Industry, Samuel S. Snyder (38 pages) SRH-004 Six Lectures on Cryptology, Wm. F. Friedman, 1965 (186 pages) Declassified Copy (Replaces Sanitized. Released ~O June 1977) 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-010 History of Converter M-325 (Short Title: SIGFOY) Project History, 1946 (48 pages) SRH-Oll The Role of Communications 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 VI 11 Jan 46; Vol VII 15 Jan 46; Vol VIII 28 Dec 45. (Total pages all volumes 2,442) <fl UJ > -J: ~ SRH-012 The Role of Radio Intelligence in the American-Japanese Four volumes, Aug 1941 to Sep 42 (2,128 pages) see'also'SRH-036, SRH-136, SRH-144. ~aval-War. UJ .J: .... 'lL. '0 Q UJ ~ ~ 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-015 Notes on German Fuel Position, G-2 SHAEF, War Dept. Memoranda and studies concerning the use of the ULTRA in eyaluating the German fuel position. 31 Mar 45 (44 pages) UJ 0:: 5 ( -,.' , SRH-016 The Need for New Legislation Against Unauthorized Disclosure of Cormnunication" Intelligence Activities, 9 June 1944, a study of disclosures of cryptologic successes during M~II and their impact. (Total pps 110) SRH-017 Allied Strategic Air Force Target (c. Aug 1945), 1 Vol. (66 pages) SRH-018 Collection of Japanese Diplomatic Messa~es, 12 Jul 38 21 Jan 42, Dept of the Army Intelligence Files, One Volume. (97 pages) SRH-019 Blockade-~nning SRH-020 Narrative Combat Intelligence Center Joint Intelligence Center Pacific Ocean Area. 8 Nov 1945 (20 pages) SRH-021 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-OOB and SRH-009 for Vols II and I. SRH-026 Marshall Letter to Eisenhower on the Use of ULTRA Intelligence, 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) Plannin~ i <n Between Europe and the Far East by Submarines. 1942-1944, 1 Dec 1944 (33 pages) LU :> 6 :~ (, (-: ... to. SRH-031 Trip Reports Concerning Use of ULTRA in the Mediterranean 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) SRH-033 History of the Operations of Special security Officers Attached to Field Commands, 1943-1945. (7 pages) SRH-034 Marshall Letter to MacArthur on the Use of ULTRA Inte11igence,~ dated 23 May 1944. (20 pages) \ History of the Special Branch, MIS, War Department. Date, 1942-1944. (63 pages) , SRH-035 ~:r < rT1 Vl 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-1440 SRH-037 Reports Received by U. S. War opt. on the Use of ULTRA in European Theater, vrnII. Date October 19450 (33 pages) SRH-038 A Selection of Papers Pertaining to Herbert Dates 1918-1950. (192 pages) SRH-039 Unit History, 2d Army Air Force Radio Squadron Mobile. Dates: April 1945 - June 1946. (20 pages) SRH-040 "MAGIC" Diplomatic Extracts. SRH-041 MIS Contribution to the War Effort. (22 pages) SRH-042 Third Army Radio Intelligence History in Campaign of Western Europeo SIS, Third Uo S. Army, Date: Oct 1945. (82 pages) SRH-043 Statement for Record of Participation of BrigoGen.Carter Wo Clarke, GSC, in the Transmittal of Letters from Gen. George C. Marshall to Gov Thomas E. Dewey, Sep 19440 (14 pages) SRH-044 War Dpt Regulations Governing the Dissemination and Security of Communications Intelligence. Dates: 194319450 (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) ~::" ..:.: 7 o. Date July 19450 Yardley. (80 pps) Date Dec 19450 SRH-047 Unit History, 3rd Radio Squadron Mobile, U,S. Army Air Corps, Dates, April 1944 ... Aug 1945. (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) SRH-050 Riverbank Laboratory Correspondence, from G. Fabyan, BrigGen ~. 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 Estimated Aircraft Locations. Dates: July 43 - Aug 45. (397 page,s) SRH-053 Soecial Report by Joint Army ~ 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 Okinawa Campaign. Dates: 18 Mar 45 - 22 Jun 45. (16 pages) SRH-055 Estimated Unit Locations of Japanese Navy and Army. Air Forces. Date 20 July 1945. (40 pages) SRF.-056 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) SRH-059 Selected Examples of Commendations and Related Correspondence Highlighting the Achievements of U. S. Signal Intelligence during ~rnII, 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, 19431945. (33 pages) SRH-062 History of Military Intelligence Service, MIS, War Opt. Sep 1945. (116 pages) SRH-063 Japanese Surface and Air Operation, 1 Jan 42 - 31 Jan 42, CNO, 21 Feb 45 (47 pages) ) . V'l UJ > SRH-064 'Japanese Submarine Operations, 23 Jan - 25 Mar 42, eNO. 28 Mar 45 (33 pages) 8 SRH-065 Japanese Surface and Air Operations, CNO, 1 Feb 42 31 Mar 42, 6 Apr 45. (54 pages) SRH-066 Examples of Intelligence Obtained from Cryptoanalysis, 1 Aug 46. (11 pages) SRH-067 Japan as Mediator in the Russo-German Conflict, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section and CNO, 29 Dec 44. (20 pps SRH-068 Japanese Estimates of Germany1s Ability to Continue the Struggle, 22 Jan 45, COMINCH/CNO. (25 pages) ! The Problem of the Prolongation of the Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact, dtd 12 Feb 45, COMINCH/CNO. (37 pages) SRH-069 <n w > r u ~ ...J -~ '~ :w SRH-070 Notes on the Crimea (Yalta) Conference, 23 Mar 45, COMINCH/CNO. (11 pages) SRH-071 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 tihite 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-Jaoanese 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-080 Compilation of Intelligence Data, Japanese Submarine Forces, 9 Feb 45, Capt W. R. Smedberg, III. (3 pages) SRH-081 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) ,:I: il- I~ ,~ 1-9 1 :2 ~ Pacific Strategic (20 pages) It 0 w ~ ~w a: 9 c- -" C .1; SRH-083 SRH-084 SRH-085 SRH-086 ,'. ,'. The Chungkin9-Yenan Controver'sy, 10 May 45, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (18 pages) Russo-Japanese Relations (1-12 Jul 45), 14 Jul 45, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (11 pages) :;0 ~ F5 e ~, 01 §! Russo-Japanese Relations (13-20 Jul 45) Pacific Strategic~1 Section, COMINCP/CNO. 21 Jul 45. (24 pages) ~I Russo-Japanese Relations (21-27 Jul 45) 2 Aug 45, pacific~i Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO (22 pages) ~i -i \ SRH-087 tiongolian \Independence, 3 Aug 45, Pacific Strategic. Intellige~ce Section, COMINCH/CNO. (14 pages) SRH-088 Russo-Japanese Relations, 28 Jul - 6 Aug 45, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (20 pages) SRH-089 Military and Political Plans for the Southern Pacific Area Formulated b the Japanese prior to 14 Aug 45, Pacific Strategic Intell1gence Sect10n, COMINCH eNO, 24 Aug 45. (14 pages) SRH-090 Japan's Surrender Maneuvers, 29 Aug 45 Pacific strategic Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (48 pages) SRH-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 Intelligence Section, COMINCH/CNO. (24 pages) SRH-095 Recent Political Developments in French Indo-China, 6 Apr 45, Pacific Strategic 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 Strategic 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 Report of Pacific Order of Battle Conference (Ground Forces), 15-18 Aug 45, MIS War Department. (363 pages) 10 < rT1 V> SRH-099 History of the Intelligence Group MIS (MID) W.D.G.S. 7 Dec 41 - 6 Sep 45, Graphic Presentation of Intelligence, 6 Sep 45, MIS, War Opt. (155 pages) SRH-IOO The Aftermath of Japanese Occupation of French Indo-China, (Mar-May 45), May 1945, Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section. (12 pages) SRH-lOl 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 Ja anese Arm /Nav CINCPOA (15 Feb - 1 Aug 45). I \ SRH-I03 Suicide Attack Squadron Organization, CINCPAC, CINCPOA, July 45. (22 pages) SRH-I04 Enemy Combat Ship Losses, CINCPAC, CINCPOA, 1 Aug 45. (IS pages) SRE-I05 Japanese Swept Channels and Sunken Vessels as Indicated in-ULTRA (MAPS), 18 Aug 45, CINCPAC, CINCPOA. (24 pages) SRH-I06 Specific Instructions for the Handling and Dissemination of Special Intelligence, 25 Jan 41, G2, DA, ONI, USN (2 pages) SRH-I07 Problems of the SSO System World War II, Aug 52, MIS, War Do.t, u. S. Army. (40 pages) SRH-I08 SRH-I09 Organization and Operations of the German Specialists, MIS, War Opt. 2 Jul 45. (12 pages) SRH-IIO Operations of the Military Intelligence Service, War opt, London, 11 Jun 45, F. W. Hilles, LtCol GSC. (57 </) w ->J: ~ -- -- -lReport on Assignment with Third United States Army, -- - Maj Warrack Wallace, USA. (8 pages) page~ SRH-lll MAGIC Reports for the Attention of the President, 19431944, MIS, War Department. (32 pages) SRH-112 Post Mortem Writings on Indications of Ardennes Offensive, 1945, Oot of Army and NSA. (44 pages) ...J ~ 0 ~ ~ -- W J: ~ u.. - SRH-113 Selected Documents Concerning O.S.S. Operations in Lisbon, MIS War opt. 5 May - 13 Jul 43. (27 pages) SRH-114 China's Position Today, COMINCH, CNO, 19 Aug 45. SRH-115 U. S. Army Investigations Into the Handling of Certain Communications Prior to the Attack on Pearl Harbor, 19441945, MIS. ~lar opt. (387 pages) 0 U> ~ a2 (25 page! ...J ~ ~ aUJ ~ ~ UJ 0:: 11 C~·, (': SRH-116 Origin, Functions and Problems of the Special Branch, M.I.S. (55 pages) SRH-117 History of Special Branch M.I.S. June 1944 September 1945 (11 pages) SRH-118 Incidental Exhibits re Pearl Harbor Investigation (MIS WDGS) (481 pages) SRH-119 Military Intelligence Service War Department Special Security Officer and Other Correspondence Relating to Special Intelligence inthe"- p'a-ci'fic Ocean Arei(92 pages) SRH-120 Utilizatidn of American Indians as Communication Linguists (107 pages) SRH-121 Japanese Ship List "Know Your Enemy!" 18 Dec 1944 (38 pages) SRJ-I-122 Japanese l4essages Concerning the Hoshi Ma'rU 'and the AW~ Maru ~ December 1944 thru August 1945 (143 pages) SRH-123 Brownell Committee Report (212 pages) SRH-124 Operational History of the 849th Signal Intelligence Service, Mediterranean Theater of Operations, USA (210 pages) SRH-125 Certain Asoects of "Magic" in the Cryptologic Backqround of the Various Official Investigations Into the Pearl Harbor Attack, by Wm. 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 pages) U) UJ > i ~ ...J ~ a ~ .~ UJ J: ~ L<- a U) ~ - 9 2 ~ fE 0 lJJ ~ ~ lJJ l'<: 12 ~ ( SRH-13l History of the Intelligence Group, MIS, WDGS, Military Branch: ' Part I, Research Unit ( 27 pages) Part II, Pacific Order of Battle Section (225 pages) Part III, Pacific Order of Battle Section, Continued (217 pages) Part IV, Pacific Order of Battle Section, Continued (151 pages) \ Part V, lMilitary Research Section (142 pages) \ Part VI, ,Air Industry Section (159 pages) (Total pps921 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 Expansion of the Signal Intelligence Service from 1930 7 December 1941, by ~~. F. Friedman (29 pages) SRH-135 History of the Second Signal Service Battalion, 1939 1945. Army Security Agency, Dept. of Army. (186 pages) SRH-136 Radio Intelligence in World War II, Tactical Operations in the Pacific Ocean Areas, December 1942. (707 pages) SRH-137 Unit History. 1st Radio Squadron~ Mobilp" 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 History, 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 Group," Military Intelligence Service, War Department, 22 September 1945. (16 pages) f,/) lJJ > U- o SRH-14l Part 1 and Part 2. Papers from the Personal Files of Alfred McCormack, Colonel, AUS. Special Branch, G-2 Military Intelligence Branch, War Opt. (Part 1 - 223 pages; Part 2 - 347 pages.) (Total pages 570) 13 (, SRH:"'142 SRH-143 SRH-144 ( ULTRA and the Campaigns Against the U-Boats in World War II. (42 pages) ULTRA in the Battle of Britain: Success? (72 pages) The Real Key to ~adio JJ ~ R e ~! 051 1 Intelligence in World War II, Tactical Operations ~I in the Pacific Ocean Area, February 1943. (Part 1 and (/) Part 2.) (642 pages) ~I See also SRH-012, SRH.,..036 and SRH-136. -I, ~! SRH-145 Collection of Memoranda on Operationsof'SIS Intercept\Activities and Dissemination, 1942 - 1945. (293 pages) \ SRH-146 Handling of ULTRA within the Military Intelligence Service. 1941 - 1945. (7 pages) ~, -I ~ r- < rn (/) SRH-147 Communication Intelligence Summaries, 1 November .,.. 6 December 1941, Commandant, 14th Naval District, United States Navy. (44 pages) SRH-148 General Information on Local ULTRA Picture as Background for Signal Intelligence Conference. 6 March 1944. (10 pages) SRH-149 A Brief History of Communicat.ions Intelligence in the United States, by Laurance F. Safford, Captain, USN (Ret) (22 pages) SRH-150 The Birthday of the Naval Security Group (6 pages) SRF.:-15l Military Study Communication Intelligence Research Activities, United States Navy, 30 June 1937. (25 pages) SRH-152 History Review of OP-20-G, United States Navy (13 pages) SRH-153 MIS, War Department Liaison Activities in the UK, 1943 - 1945. (20 pages) SRH-154 Signal 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) 14 \ :', '- SRH-157 Monthly Listing of Sinkings of Japanese Ships April - September 1945. PSIS 121-1 - 121-6 (66 pps) SRH-158 A List of Japanese Merchant Ships, Second Edition PSIS 100-1, 1 February 1945. Part I - Abe H. to Kyu-Urakaze M. (327 pps) Part II - Lai Hsing to Zyno M. (362 pps) (Total pages 689) SRH-159 Preliminary Historical Report on the Solution of the "B" Machine (10 pages) , . I SRH-160 History of WeAther Unit. SRH-161 Permanent Organization for Code and Cipher Investigation " and Attack (Plans for M.I. 8) (8 pages) (33 pages) < m VI ...,:.'.'. SRH-162 History of Security Monitoring WWI to,1955. (13 pages) 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 (JANAC). Parts I, II and III. (852 pages) SRH-166 Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee (JANAC) Memoranda to Office of Naval Communications. September 1944 (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 Centralized Control of U. S. Army Signal Intelligence Activities. (91 pages) SRH-170 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) ~ 15 SRH-171 Navy Department, Office of Chief of Naval Operations, Secondary Course in Cryptanalysis. (63 pages) SRH-172 OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Army Order of Battle Information (5 Oct - 7 Dec 43), Parts I thru IV. (1,558 pages) SRH-173 OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle, First Edition (15 Mar 44), Parts I and II. (776 pages) SRH-174 OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Japanese Order of Battle, Second Edition (15 May 44), Parts I and II. (845 pages) SRH-175 Signal 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 Japanese Concerning possible Broadcast of the "Winds Execuie" 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 U. S. Naval Pre-World War II Radio Intelligence Activities in the Philippine Islands, 1931-1942. (100 pages) SRH-181 OCSIGO, Signal Security A~ency, Japanese Order of Battle, Fourth Edition (10 October 1944), Parts I thru V. (1,328 se~urity ~ages) SRH-182 U. S. Naval Communications Suoplementary Activity, Vaitogi, Samoa, 1939 - 1947. (29 pages) SRH-183 OCSIGO, Signal Security Agency, Location of Jaoanese Military Installations, 14 December 1944. (31 pages) SRH-184 CNO Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section, Allied Claims and ~nemy Confirmation of Damage to Japanese Shins (January 1943-February 1945), Parts I thru X. (2:909 pages SRH-185 ~ar SRH-186 U. S. Naval Supolementary Radio Station, Iwo Jima, March December 1945. (32 pages) SRH-187 U. S. Naval Supnlementary Radio Station, Palmyra Island, Territory of Hawaii. (7 pages) til W > a- . -' .~ ~ Experience of Alfred McCormack. 16 (83 pages) ,' c.: .. (. SRH-188 u. S. Navy, Strategic Radio Direction Finder Station, Guada1cana1, November 1942 - 4 December 1944 (6 pages) SRH-189 u. SRH-190 u. SRH-191 u. S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Johnston Island, 1 DeceMber 1942 - 1 January 1946. (17 pages) S. Navy Strategic Radio Direction Finder Station, Tarawa Atoll, 13 - 19 December 1943 ~ 27 November 1944. (6 pages) S. Naval Supplementary Radio station, Kwajalein, 29 February 1944 - 8 December 1945. (6 pages) \ SRH-192 u. SRH-193 u. I 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) SRH-194 {J. S. Naval S~pplementary Radio Station, 'Leyte, Philippine Islands, 16 July 1945 - 17 september 1945. (5 pages) 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-31 March 1945. (23 pages) SRH-197 u. SRH-198 File of Messages Exchanged with U. oS. Military Mission to Moscow. (46 pages) SRH-199 Japanese Army Shipping Organization, 1 March 1945, Military Intelligence Service, War Department. (121 pages) SRH-200 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) SRtI-201 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) S. Navy Communication Intelligence Organization, Liaison and Collaboration, 1941-1945. (39 pages) 17 < m V> 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) ~i:m-t.1 % 1 -II I \ SRH-206 U. S. Navy (OP-20) Report on Orange Navy's Reaction to Changkufe'ng Incident - August 1938. (16 pages) SRH-207 Evacuation of USN COMINT Personnel from Corregidor in World War II. (99 pages) SRH-208 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 Decryption Intelligence Charts '(Japanese Navy) 20 January - 1 May 1942. (249 pages) SRH-2l0 Collection of papers Related to the "Winds U. S. Navy, 1945. (80 pages) Ex~cute" Messag~, SRH-211 Japanese Radio Communications and Radio Intelligence, CINCPAC-CINCPOA Bulletin 5-45, 1 Jan 1945. (34 pages) SRH-212 Elementary Cipher Solution, Navy Department, Office of Chief of Naval Operations, 1930. (24 pages) SRH-213 Office of Operations Bulletins, Office of Chief of Naval Operations, Navy Department, 1935 - 1941. (40 pages) SRH-214 Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis, Office of Chief of Naval Operations, Navy Department, c. 1939. (42 pages) SRE-215 U. S. Navy, Communication Security Group Training Pamphlet No. 17, Ciphers, 1937. (49 pages) SRH-216 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-218 Navy Department Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis, 19~6. (96 pages) 18 - < m Vl ( ::0 IT1 SRI-I-219 ULTR~ SRH-220 Messaqes between U.S./Philippine Guerilla Forces and HQ, S~PA (December 1942 - November 1943). Parts I thru VI. (7,112 :9ages) 'Material in the Blarney Papers. (64 pages) ~a ~, 01 51 S~H-221 SIS Activities of Caotain Harrison and Captain Koerner, ETO 1944 - 1945. (19 pages) ~I SH!-:!-222 Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (May June 1930). (OP-20) (221 pages) ~I \ 8RP.-223 ~ Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (June August 1933) I (278 pages) r- Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (August October 1934) (119 pages) < \ 0 SRH-225 ~! -I' 0 SRH-224 ~I Various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers (July September 1935) (80 pages) 0 SRH-226 Japanese Naval Reserve Communications Intelligence Specialists (1941 - 1945). (16 pages) SRR-227 Unit Ei~torjL~ 126t~ Sianal Radio Intelligence COMPany February 1941 - Se:otemher 1945. . (103 pages) S~~-~-- 228 Histories of Radio Intelliqence Units, European Theatre, September 1944 to ~arch 1915, Volume I and II. (Vol. I 397 pages, Vol II 239 Dages) (Total pages 636) Eist~of the 136th Radio Security Detachment, 7 February 1942 - 30 April 1946. (209 pages) (9 pages) SR~~-230 The Role of COMINT in the Battle of Midway. SRE-231 Japanese Reports on Monitoring of Allied Wireless Communications in the Philippines (January - December 1943). (113 pages) SHfI-232 U.s. Navy COMINCH Radio Intelligence Appreciation Concerning German U-Boat Activity in the Far East (January - April 1945). (9 pages) SRH-233 U.S. Navy Director of Naval Communications Memoranda on the Congressional Investigations of the Attack on Pearl Harbor. (43 pages) SR!-!-234 The Zimmermann Telegram and Related Papers. SRH-235 COMI~T (67 pages) Contributions, Submarine Warfare in WoW. II, 17 June 1947. (4 pages) 19 ~ IT1 til ( u.s. SRH-236 Navy, Submarine l'!arfare '~1essage Reports, i.dmiralty to COMINCH, 24 May 1942 - 12 June 1945,-Parts I-X, British Admiralty. (2,869 pages) SRH-237 Geiger-Muller Counter for Detection of Radioactive Secret Ink, 1941 - 1945, Signal Security Agency. (34 pages) SR~-238 MIS/SSA Axis Analysis of Over-The-Hump U.S. Air Transport Traffic, 15 June 1945, MIS/SSA. (23 ~ages) SRH-239 War Department, HIS, Japanese Army Signal Centers·' arid Officer Lists, 1 Se~tember 1945, MIS. (27 pages) < < <~ SRH-240 Detachment B, \5th Radio Sauadron Mobile Weekly R/T Technical Summary, 19 - 25 November 1944 and 17 - 23 December 194<1. (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 Sauadron Mobile, 1 January 31 March 1953. (314 pages) .. S~H-2L13 SRE-24-1 Historical Reoort, 30 Dece~er 15t~ < rTl V> Radio Sauadron Mohile, 1 April 31 December 1954. (100 pages) 195~1 Aua.ust - Sistorical Reoort, 8th Radio Sauadron Mobile, 21 1947 - 28 February 1954. (268 pages) Nove~ber Eistorical Data Renort, 6961st Conmunications Squadron, 1 January - 31 December 1953. (120 ~ages) SRI-I- 24 6 Historical Data Report, 6962nd Supoly Squadron, 1 September 31 December 1953. (27 pages) SRH-247 Historical Data Report, 34th Radio Squadron Mobile, 1 January - 30 Se:?tember 1953. (68 ~ages) SRH-248 Historical Data Report, 31st Communications Security Squadron, 8 December - 31 December 1953. (110 pages) SRH-249 History of the 32nd Communications Security Sauadron, 1 July - 31 December 1953. (51 pa0es) 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, 1950 - July 1953. (9 pages) 20 Se~tember ( ( SRH-252 A Version of the Japanese Problem in the Signal Intelligence Service (Later Signal Security Agency) 1930 - 1945, by John R. Hurt. (218 pages) SRH-253 Historical Data Report, 85th Radio Squadron Mobile, 8 - 31 December 1953. (6 pages) SRH-254 The Japanese Intelligence System, MISjWDGS, 4 September 1945. (171 pages) SRH-255 Oral History Jnterview with Mr. Robert D. Ogg. (82 pages) I SRH-256 Attack on the 'U.S.S. Liberty. SRH-257 Analysis of Japanese Air Operations During Okinawa Campaign, 1 O~tober 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 Blockade Runners (World War II). 1943 - 1944 (238 pages) SRH-261 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 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, CINCPACjCINCPOA. (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. SRH-270 Army-Navy-FBI Comint Agreements of 1942. \ S. ArMy Comint Policy: 1942. (6 pages) 21 (71 pages) Pearl Harbor to Summer (5 pages) < 11'1 tn ( ;0 ~ SRH-271 Presidential Memorandum of Communications Intelligence Activities, 24 October 1952. (8 pages) SRH-272 CINCPAC Enemy Activities (124 pages) SRH-273 Military Cryptanalytics, Part I, by William F. Friedman and Lambros D. Callimahos, April 1956. (443 pages) SRH-274 Military Cryptanalytics, Part II, by Lambros D. Callimahos and William F. Friedman, October 1959. (634 pages) SRH-275 OP-20-G file bn Fleet Radio Unit, Melbourne (Frumel), 28 June 1943 2 September 1945. (156 pages) 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 E. 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 II, SSA, (239 pages) SRH-281 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 Pacif ic Ocean Areas - December 1943. (144 pages). See also SRH-Ol1, SRH-284, SRH-286. SRH-286 Radio Intelligence in WW II: Subnarine Operations in the Pacific Ocean Areas - January - February 1944 (in part). (244 pages) See also SRH-Oll, SRH-284, SRH-285. Fil~, April - May 1942. I ::: T 22 M m o c' SRH-287 Radio Intelligence in \VW 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. SRH-289 The Employment of Mobile Radio Intelligence Units By COMMands Afloat During WW II, 1946, U. S. Navy (OP-20G), (151 pages). \ SRH-290 U.s. Naval Direction Finder Station, Soapstone Point, Alaska, 1921-1938, NSG. (5 pages) SRH-291 u. 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. S. Naval HFDF Station, Cape Lookout, North Carolina, 1935-1942, NSG. (7 pages) 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-301 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) I ~:I: < S. Naval Communications Station, Guam, station B, 1929-1942, NSG. (7 pages) 23 I'T1 Vl SRH-303 Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Otter Point, Umnak Island, Alaska, 1941-1945, NSG. (15 pages) SRH-304 U. S. Naval HFDF Station, Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, Mar 41-Feb 45, NSG. (10 pages) SRH-305 The Undeclared War "History of R. I.," 15 November 1943, by L. F. Safford, CAPT., U. S. Navy. (29 pages) SRH-306 OP20G, Exploits and Commendations World War II, 19421948, NSG. (151 pages) \ SRH-307 G.H.O., SWPA,\special Intelligence Precis, G-2, General Headquarters, South - west Pacific Area, 22 Feb 1943-22 Nov 1943. (67 pages) ~:I: < m 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 by 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-314 Pacific Ocean Mobile Radio Intelligence Unit Reports, 1944. (120 pages) SRH-315 American Army Field Codes in the American Expeditionary Forces During the First World War. (273 pages) SRH-316 U. S. Naval Supplementary Radio Station, Adelaide River, Northern Territory, Australia, 23 March 194321 Sept 1945, NSG. (33 pages) 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) 24 VI SRH-320 various Reports on Japanese Grand Fleet Maneuvers, 1927-1929. (58 pages) SRH-321 Report of Code Compilation Section, General Headquarters, American Expeditionary Forces, December 1917-November 1918. (44 pages) SRH-322 Statistical Methods in Cryptanalysis by Solomon Kullback, Ph.D. (194 pages) SRH-323 COMINCH Comb~t Intelligence Division File on Hospital Ships, Part I, - General File (192 pages), Part I I Submarine Patrol Reports Pertaining to Hospital Ships (305 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-IO 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) \ 25 (57 pages) (58 pages) SRH-335 The Contribution of the Cryptographic Bureaus in the World War, 1935. (88 pages) 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) I \ i SRH-339 Elements of Cryptography by Captain Roger Baudouin. (213 pages) SRH-340 Operating Instructions for M-161-C, Short Title S IGLSV. (24 pages) SRH-341 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) ~:r < rn V) SRH-352 U. S. Naval Radio Station Dutch Harbor; Unalaska Island, Alaska, 1980. (27 pages) 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 WWII, Part I (464 pages) Part II (180 pages). (Total pages: 644) SRH-356 Special Text No. 166 Advanced Military Cryptography, Second (1943) 'IEdition. (117 pages) SRH-357 History, sign~l Intelligence Division (ETO), June 1942July 1945. (234 pages) SRH-358 History of Training in Signa~ Security Agency and Training Branch, SSA, 15 Aprll 1945. (175 pages) SRH-359 History of Converter M-134-C, Volume I. o"'Tl < rn U> (267 pages) 27 SRMA-OOI Polygraphic Coincidence Counter With Alphabetic Mixer. (16 pages) SRMA-002 Staff Study on ass Cryptographic Plan. SRMA-003 U. S. Army Converter M-228 (Short Title: (l0 pages) SRMA-004 Policy on Classification of Cryptographic and Cryptanalyt ic Dev ices. (2 pages) SRMA-005 Enemy 1944. (5 pages) SIGCUM). Analysi~ of Allied Communications, 15 December (36 pages) I SRMA-006 Use of Balloons By Japanese, WWII. (7 pages) 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) ~:r < rn Vl 28 [N.B. The last four pages of the October 1985 listing (pp. 27-30) have relatively few entries and are therefore reproduced here, without omission or change in pagination, on two pages. DSD] SRMD-OOl Estimates of Empire Air Distribution, 5 June-15 August 1945. (136 pages) 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 Jun1e 1944. (30 pages) \ < fT1 III 29 ;0 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .~ F; SRr1N-OOl Military Study of Facsimile By Lieut. J.N. Wenger, USN, 1938? (13 pages) SRMN-002 Convoy Routes of Japanese Merchant, Tanker and Combatant Ships in the Pacific Area, Dec 1943 - Oct 1944. (9 pages) SRMN-093 Instructions For Safeguarding and Using Navy Cipher Box, Mark II, 1918. (8 pages) SRMN-004 OP-20-G File of CINCPAC Intelligence Bulletins, March-l June 1942) (111 pages) fll o (16 I I SRMN-005 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. (188 pages) SRMN-008 United States Navy CINCPAC and Comfourteen CI Bulletins/ Radio Digests, 1 March-3l December 1942. (370 pages) SRMN-009 United States Navy CINCPAC Fleet Intelligence Summaries, 22 June 1942-8 May 1943. (383 pages) SRMN-OI0 United States Navy Course in Elementary Cryptanalysis, 1941-1942. (141 pages) SRMN-Oll United States Navy Elementary Course in Cryptanalysis, 1948-1950. (385 pages) 30 < fT1 III AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR 1986 MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION, DUES, AND SUPPORT Arthur L. Funk, Chairman ])epartlnenl of llistory Univt'r!'\tty of FJIlrida GairH~ville, Florida a2611 Permanl'lIJ lJirl'c'lr>rs ('hurle:; F. I JdzPlI Vanderbilt LTnin'rsity H. Stuart Hughes U ni\'ersity of California al San Diego Forrest C. Pogue Dwight D. Eisenhower In~titut€ Terms expiring 1985 Brig. Gen James L. CoUins, Jr. Chief of Military History (ret.l Robert LJallek University of California at L,os Angeles .John J kwit: naddis Ohio Univprsity Robin Higham Kansas State University n. Clayton .James Misflissippi State University Charles B. MacDonald Arlington, Va. Agnes F. Peterson Hoover Institution F. Templl' RUHSl'll Annual dues of $10.00 ($2.00 for students) are payable at the beginning of January 1986 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. 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. Donald S. Detwiler, Secretary and Newsletter Edit.or Department of History Southern Illinois University at Carbond all' Carbondale, IlIinoil:l 62901 l-tobin Hii{ham, Archivist Department of History Kam~as State University Manhattan, Kansas 66506 International Book Review Coordination Arthur L. Funk Department of History University of Florida Gainesville, Florida 32611 The ACHSWW i. affiliated withe American Historical Association 400 A Street, S.E. Washington, D.C. 2000:\ Comit.e International d'Histoire de la Deuxieme Guerre Mondiale Henri Michel, President 12, rue de Moscou 75008 Paris, France Wt'i~ley llmn~r8it.v Tams I'xpmnlo[ 191'6 Stephen E. Ambrose UniVl~rsit.Y of New Orlean~ Martin Hlumenson Washinbrtoll, D.C. William H. Cunliffe National ArC'hivct, Harold C. Deutsch Army War College Stanley L. Falk Cent.pr of Military Please return to: Prof. D. S. Detwiler Secretary, ACHSWW Hist. Dept., SIUC Carbondale, IL 62901 Name: Hi~t(\ry (ret.) Maurin' Matloff (\'ntN of Military History (ret.) ----------------Address: --------------- Enwst R May Harvard University Gerhard L. Weinberg University of Nonh Carolina Earl F. Ziemke University of Georgia Particular field(s): ------------------------ Terms expiring 1987 Dean C. Allard Naval History Divi8ion Philip A. (:rowl Naval War (·Llll~j,{l'(ret.) IlriK (;,,"l1l'.llurl,'y. USAF (ret.l Nortb T\,)ia~ State Univ~ntity DllVid Kahn Great NL~'k. N Y Warren F. Kimball Rutgers University Richard H. Kohn Officp of Air Force History Roberta Wohlstetter Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles Robert Wolfe National Archives Janet Ziegler Univ{'r~ity of California at Los Angeles Enclosures: Membership dues for 1986: - - - - (1987: _ Donation to SIU Grant-in-Aid Acct. 6-23358: -----(As noted in the newsletter, members may also enclose the committee election ballot.) AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR ACHSWW ELECTION BALLOT FOR THE 1986-88 TERM Arthur L.. Funk, Chazrman 1lepartment of History University of Florida Gainesville, Florida :J2611 Prrmanf'flt lhrectors Charles F. Delzell Vand~rbilt University H. Stuart Hughes University of California at San Diego Pogue Dwight D. Eisenhower Im;(llUle FOITt'!'lt {' '['1'T/1II. npir"'# 1986 Brig, l;en James L. Cullins, Jr. Chief of Militar~' History (ret.) Robert Dallek John uwis {";addis Ohio University Robin Hillham Kansas State University n. Clayton .J am€'~ Mitlsissippi State University Charles H. MacDonald ArlinKton. Va. Agnl'l"I F. L'etcrson Hoovpr Lnst.itution Russell F. W"igi<'y Temple University Tl'rms c.rpirifl~ 1486 Stephen E. Arnbnlse Univen;ity of New Orleans Martin Blumeni'on Washinjlton, D.C. William H. Cunliffe National An'hive8 llarold C. I h'uL~ch Army Wilr ('oUe~t' Hi~tor.v (re-L) Maurict:' Matloff Ct>nwr of MIlitary History (rf'l.) Ernest H.. May Harvard l!niversity Gerhard L. Weinherg University of North Carolina Earl F. Zwmkl' IJI1l\ennty of (;t>(Jrj;{ia TNm . , I'xplrin!-! !Y;l7 I h'un ('. Allard Na,·,tl tti~tory Division Philip A. ('rowl Nava I War College (ret.) Bri~. Gen. A. F. Hurley, USAF (ret.) North Texas State University David Kahn Great Neck, N. Y. Warren F. Kimball Rutgers University Richard H. Kohn OffiC'f' of Air Force History Roherta Wohlstetter Pan Heuristics, Los Angeles Robert Wolfe National Archives Janet Ziegler University of California at Los Angeles and Nf.'wslettf'r Editor Department of History Southern Illinois Unlversity at Carbondale Carbondale, Illinois 62901 Robin Higham, Archwist Department of History Kansas State lJniveroity Manhattan, Kansas 66506 International Hook Review Coordination Arthur L. Funk Department of History University of Florida Gainesville, FI()rid~ :J2611 The ACHSWW is af{lltalRd wIth. American Historical Assoeiation 400 A Street, S,I<;, Washington, D.C. 2000a University of California at 1...08 Angeles Stanley L Falk Center of Military 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 1988. 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 the end of January 1986. Donald S. Detwiler, Sf'f'retary Robert J. C. Butow, University of Washington Comite I ntemational Brig. Gen. James L. Collins, Jr. (ret.) d'Histoire de la Deuxieme Alvin D. Coox, San Diego State University Guerre Mondiale Michel, President Robert Dallek, Univ. of Calif., Los Angeles Henri 12, rue de Moscou 75008 Paris, France John Lewis Gaddis, Ohio University Alfred Goldberg, Arlington, Va. George C. Herring, University of Kentucky Robin Higham, Kansas State University D. Clayton James, Mississippi State University Charles B. MacDonald, Arlington, Va. Allan Millett, Ohio State University Raymond O'Connor, University of Miami (emer.) Robert O. Paxton, Columbia University Agnes Peterson, Hoover Institution Brig. Gen. Edwin H. Simmons, Director, Marine Corps History and Museums David F. Trask, Chief Historian, U.S. Army Center of Military History Russell F. Weigley, Temple University Alan Wilt, Iowa State University