Americans living or traveling abroad during the years of Nazi rule in Germany found themselves in a unique position from which to observe world events. Able to witness foreign affairs firsthand, Americans abroad became influential sources of information for their friends, families, and fellow citizens.
Americans abroad
-
American Witnesses and the Third Reich
Americans and the HolocaustFilm of General Dwight D. Eisenhower Visiting the Ohrdruf Camp
-
Everyday Encounters with Fascism
Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the HolocaustFilm of Jewish Boycott in Austria
-
Nazi Propaganda and National Unity
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RuleFilm of Nazi Memorials in Munich
-
Propaganda and the American Public
Americans and the HolocaustGerman Leaflet Alleging Allied Atrocities
-
Propaganda and the American Public
Americans and the HolocaustGerman Leaflet for Black American Soldiers
-
Nazi Ideals and American Society
Americans and the HolocaustGerman Leaflet: "Jewry and Penal Punishment"
-
US Government Rescue Efforts
Americans and the HolocaustHerschel Johnson Telegram on the "Goodyear Tire Plan"
-
Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Europe
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustLetter from Barbara Falik to the PM Standard
-
Displaced Persons and Postwar America
Americans and the HolocaustLetter from Dwight D. Eisenhower to Harry S. Truman, September 18, 1945
-
American College Students and the Nazi Threat
Americans and the HolocaustLetter from James Conant to Charles Singer
-
Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Europe
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustLetters from Harry Lerner to His Parents
-
American Witnesses and the Third Reich
Americans and the HolocaustLothrop Stoddard: "In a Eugenics Court"
-
Medical Care, Nazism, and the Holocaust
Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the HolocaustManuscript of Douglas M. Kelley
-
Black Americans and World War II
Americans and the HolocaustOral History with Charity Adams Earley
-
Black Americans and World War II
Americans and the HolocaustOral History with Leon Bass