And File Growing I in the Stahlhelm

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

And File Growing I in the Stahlhelm ¦DBsciiiraoN eat**. Dy the ton. pro daily Publishing CJ«., Ine., dally exoept Sunday, at & By W; month!, M.s*; month!. s*; month, We, Page Four St., New Xerk City, N. Y. Telephone ALfonquin 4-7956. Cable “DAIWORK.' 1 Mail trcrjwkera: One year, etx S 1 exception Boroegh and Brnnx, York City. and mail cheeks to the Daily SO ISth N. DaUij,^Worker es Manhattan New Feretfß end tfldress Worker. V. St., New Tori. X Confo* cwoiyF«¦* A Canada: One year, Ik; * month!, IS; f month!, 18. 4LLAY OOP! - By Bard ANTI-FASCIST Litvinov Rebuffs REVOLT OF THE RANK , X CONGRESS BURO I British Effort ISSUES APPEAL AND FILE GROWING French, Czech, Other! At Intimidation Union Centers Rally; IN THE STAHLHELM Set Date Soon Tells Ovey That Case Is in Soviet Courts;: Nazi Central Organ Already Warns Against for COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Mar. “Attempt at Against British Ambassador Leaves London 15 (By Mall).—The organizing bur- Revolution” Fascism the eau of European Workers’ Anti- BULLETIN BULLETIN Congress ap- March 30.—Sir John British Foreign Secretary, Fascist has issued an LONDON, Simon, peal to the Douse of Commons that Sir Esmond Ovey, British Am- the workers of the world to BERLIN, Mar. 22 (By Mail).—The Association of Rnhr Mine Ownere informed aid in the organization of the Anti- bassador to Moscow, was leaving for London today. announces that the wage dispute with the trade unions “has been set- Sir John added that in the meantime he woidd refrain from fur- Fascist Congress, originally sponsored tled favorably.” The existing wage agreement and working conditlonc by the Revolutionary Trade ther on the British endeavor to foree Russia to free | German i to remain in September 30th. announcements Union Opposition, the League •re force until ’he British engineers arrested in Moscow on charges of sabotage The operators had demanded a 15 per cent wage cut, and had ter- Against Fascism in Germany, the minated the old agreement, expiring April but even the Fascist cen- in Italy, and 1, General Confederation sorship cannot conceal the fact that determined mass resistance of the By N. BUCHWALD the Revolutionary Trade Union Op- Special Correspondent of the Daily Worker miners has won a great victory, smashing the proposed cut. position of Poland. * * * MOSCOW, March 30. —Tass, the official Soviet news Other organizations have already agency, issues the following communique: signified their readiness to join in BERLIN, March 30.—The Nazi police today arrested two major lead- Ambassador, the congress, including the Confed- ers of the Hugenberg Nationalist Party, Dr. Ernst Oberfohren, national Sir Esmond Ovey, British visited Maxim chairman of the and Dr. Friedrich Everting, noted attorney for •*» eration General du Travail party, * Unitaire Kaiser Wilhelm Litvinov, Soviet Commissar for Foreign Affairs, on March 28 (the revolutionary trade union fed- II and member of the Executive Committee of the Na- I and stated that he had come to inform him of the steps that eration of France), the revolutionary tionaiist Party, charged with a royalist conspiracy to restore the Hoben- I zoilern dynasty. They were placed under "protective arrest” and their the British Government in-« trade union federation of Czecho- 1 slovakia, and the Seamen’s and Dock homes were searched. tends to take in case the pro- ;j collation of all trade. Finnish Investigation Workers’ International. BERLIN, 30.—Reports from various parts of posed trial of the British em-i It is officially announced that the On February 27th a meeting of 800 Mar. ployees of the Metropolitan-Vickers: preliminary investigation in the cases members of Berlin factory councils Germany prove that the conflict between the Nazis and th« Corporation charged with sabotage is j of Vitvitzky, Volkhovsky, Gregory, voted their support and approval of is Hitler Steel Helmet not the Congress. Numerous local or- Stahlhelm not “localized,” as and Seldte, cancelled. Gusev, Zorin, MacDonald and the leader, Commissar Litvinov replied that he j ; other engineers charged with the ganizations and branches of the A. both claim, but is raging over a large part of the could remove all doubts from the Am- \ : crime ol sabotage according to Ar- D. G. 8., reformist labor federation country. bossador’s mind at onee. He in- < j tide 58. Secs. 6-11, of the Soviet In Germany, have also promised formed him that the final decision ! Criminal Code, is being completed. their support. The Nazi Minister of the Interior for Thuringia yesterday of the Public Prosecutor was already | The case will be submitted to the 1,500 Delegates Meet. prohibited the enrolment of Socialists and Communists in the stating Supreme Revolutionary Tribunal, Su- at hand, that the case is set i An anti-war conference in London Thuringian Stahlhelm, while a order was issued by immediate fu- preme Union, similar the for a hearing in the Court of the Soviet on 5, with 1500 pre- ! within a few days. March delegates Nazi State Government of Oldenburg. ture. sent, inclffiuding 300 delegates from Livinov added that if the British ] Members of Tribunal. trade union locals, pro- A number of local Stahlhelm leaders have been arrested ia case be heard before a welcomed the Ambassador intended to influence | The will posed Congress, and pledged their the Bavarian Palatinate, including the towns of Speyer, Neu- that decision by his statement of the j | special session of the Supreme Court, support. Government's proposed steps, the members of which will be Ulrich, stadt, Zweibrucken, and Landstuhl. British I i Anti-Fascist Day. he could rest assured that nothing | I member of the plenum of the Su- Anglo-Italian Four-Power Pact trend among A special Day be The leftward the Stahlhelm rank and file would come of it. The Foreign Com- I preme Court of the U.S.S.R., as Pre- Anti-Fascist will" forces the missar stated that such diplomatic | j siding Justice; Professor Martens, held throughout Sweden on March Voelkische Beobachter, Nazi central organ in Mun- methods—crude outside pressure—; i Director of the .Diesel Institute, and 24. The Norwegian Anti-War Com- ich, to issue a warning to Nazi storm troopers "to nip any at- Director mittee has a for a might sometimes be effective in I Dimitriev, of the Thermo- Strikes At French Hegemony; issued call Scandi- tempt at counter-revolution in the bud!” i Mexico, but they were fated in ad- j Projecting Trust, as Associate Jus- navian Congress Against Fascism to vance to fail in the U.S.S.R. ! tices. Zelikov, Chairman of the be held in Copenhagen on April 15. After tills statement, Sir Esmond j Central Committee of the trade union A strong committee of opposition- did not insist on communicating the I of workers, engineers and techni- Cloaks Anti-Soviet Bloc al trade union officials, together with contents of the proposed British j j cians in the electrical industry and a number of trade union local chair- FASCIST GOVERNMENT OFFICIALLY measures. | central power stations, will act as men and prominent left-wing intel- ¦By HAMILTON) Italy’s policy for past Judging by statements in the Brit- alternate justice. ROBERT eluded: whole the lectuals, has been formed to 1. establishment of few years conduct ish press, it 'may be assumed that i Vishinsky, Prosecuting Attorney of The Disarmament Conference in The a German has been to combat the the anti-Fascist campaign in Den- Republic, prose- within the Polish Corridor, union For DECLARES BOYCOTT ON ALL these steps involve creating further j the will conduct the Geneva has adjourned to April 25, Corridor of Austria with Germany. mark. JEWS i extending from to reason, has the obstacles to the development of trade i I cution for the State. with the unspoken understanding Marienwerder this it supported Send Delegates. the U. S. S. R. and Great ’i'he trial fs scheduled to com- Konitz. Legitimists’ efforts to restore Otto Savage between i 1 that this interval was wanted by the All working class organizations are Attacks by Storm Troopers Multiply; Britain or even the complete can- on April 9 or 10. Anglo-German-Italian bloc newly 2. The creation of an independent von Hapsburg to the Hungarian, and Croatia, centered in Zagreb. This later to the Austrian throne. For invited to send delegates to a pre- Russian from formed in Rome by Prime Minister ’iminary conference to fix the date Music Barred Orchestras and Mussolini. would effectively cripple Jugoslavia, this same reason, it has conspired MacDonald Premier for the Congress and to outline the The openly admitted shift in em- Little Entente member and Italy’s with Austria to ship hundreds of BERLIN, Mar. 30.—The Nazi official anti-.lewish Balkan rival, as a military power. continuation of the anti-Fascist boycott, set for Sat- phasis from Geneva and the League thousands of rifles, as well as ma- urday, April 1, started ahead of schedule yesterday India; Would Split France’s Allies chine guns and airplanes Hungary, campaign. all through Germany. Churchill Warns Offices Rome to In to the Foreign of and Breslau, the Chief of Police ordered all Jews and Jewish convert*! London puts the seal on 3. Lopping Herzegovina and Mon- as recently revealed in the Hirten- All communications in connection Christianity the virtual with Congress be to to turn in their passports to be stamped “not good for collapse of the Disarmament Con- tenegro off Jugoslavia and Incorpo- berg affair. the should ad- foreign travel.” rating In Albania, All of Italy’s has dressed to the Secretariat of the or- ference. them which would support been The official Wolff agency Threatens Rule” officially recognized under Ita- ganizing bureau: Axel Larsen, Cop- news admits that "In the last few days, “Czarist be as predicated however, on no Anschluss.
Recommended publications
  • 2016 Spring/Summer
    SCHIFFER MILITARY New Books: 2 Aviation: 28 Naval: 54 Ground Forces: 56 American Civil War: 73 Militaria: 74 Modeling & Collectible Figures: 92 Pin-ups: 94 Transportation: 96 Index: 98 2016 Spring/Summer 2 2016 NEW BOOKS the 23rd waffen ss volunteer panzer grenadier division contents nederland 2016 new books 10 Enter the uavs: the 27th waffen ss the faa and volunteer drones in america grenadier division 7 langemarck 10 harriet quimby: training the right soldiers flying fair lady stuff: the at the doorstep: aircraft that civil war lore 4 produced america's jet 11 pilots 7 project mercury: suppliers to the matterhorn—the america in space confederacy, v. ii operational history series of the us xx bomber 11 command from india 8 and china, 1944–1945 5 project gemini: last ride of the a pictorial history america in space valkyries: the rise of the b-2a series and fall of the spirit stealth wehrmachthelfer- bomber 8 innenkorps during 5 wwii 12 the history of the german u-boat waffen-ss dyess air force base at lorient, camouflage base, 1941 to the france, august 1942– uniforms, vol. 1 present august 1943, vol. 3 13 6 9 german u-boat ace waffen-ss jet city rewind: peter cremer: camouflage the patrols of aviation history uniforms, vol. 2 u-333 in of seattle and the world war ii pacific northwest 13 6 9 2016 NEW BOOKS 3 german military travel papers of the second world war 14 united states american the model 1891 navy helicopter heroes quilts, carcano rifle patches past and present 24 15 19 united states mitchell’s new a collector’s marine corps general atlas guide to the emblems: 1804 to 1860 savage 99 rifle world war i 20 15 25 privateers american ferrer-dalmau: of the revolution: breechloading art, history, and war on the new mobile artillery miniatures jersey coast, 1875–1953 1775–1783 21 26 16 fighting for making leather bombshell: uncle sam: knife sheaths, the pin-up art of buffalo soldiers vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Military & Maritime Catalog
    SCHIFFER P U B L I S H I N G Military & Maritime Catalog AUTUMN/WINTER 2014 aviation: 18 naval: 43 ground forces: 45 militaria: 61 modeling & collectible figures: 76 American Civil War: 78 Cornell Maritime Press: 79 pin-ups: 86 transportation: 88 2 NEW BOOKS MARTIN B-26 MARAUDER: The Ultimate Look: From Drawing William Wolf Board to Widow Maker Vindicated • Fifth in the Ultimate Look bomber series • Photo coverage of the NMUSAF and MAPS restored B-26s • 20 color profiles of some of the most notable of the B-26 series In his fifth book in The Ultimate Look series, Dr. Wolf again brings the same degree of meticulous research to describe this unappreciated and misunderstood B-26 medium bomber. This massive, comprehensive volume is the first to give the reader a definitive description of this neglected bomber, its development, testing, and manufacture. The role of the enigmatic aviation icon Glenn L. Martin is described in the development of the American aviation industry and the Marauder. The author made extensive use of the massive document and photo collections of the Marauder Archives at Akron and Tucson, and the Air Force collection at the NMUSAF. Martin Company design and production information and flight and test evaluations, along with original Company Flight, Parts, and Maintenance Manuals, and rare archival microfilm of original material were also used. The author was given unprecedented access to the family records of B-26 designer Peyton Magruder. The text is complemented by archival photos and drawings, and new color photos of the Marauders at the NMUSAF, Fantasy of Flight, and MAPS Museum.
    [Show full text]
  • Zjazd Stahlhelmu We Wrocławiu W Dn. 30 I 31 Maja 1931 R. W Świetle Dokumentów Oddziału II Sztabu Głównego WP
    Echa Przeszłości XX/1, 2019 ISSN 1509–9873 DOI 10.31648/ep.4849 Daniel Koreś Instytut Historyczny Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, Instytut Pamięci Narodowej Oddział we Wrocławiu Radosław Szewczyk Archiwum Wojskowe w Oleśnicy Zjazd Stahlhelmu we Wrocławiu w dn. 30 i 31 maja 1931 r. w świetle dokumentów Oddziału II Sztabu Głównego WP Streszczenie: W 1931 r. francuski wywiad wojskowy – poprzez oficera łącznikowego przy polskim Szta- bie Głównym kpt. Josepha Marie Abel Sauzey – zwrócił się do Oddziału II z prośbą o zdobycie informacji na temat zjazdu niemieckiej organizacji paramilitarnej Stahlhelm, który miał się odbyć we Wrocławiu. Przysługa wyświadczona wywiadowi francuskiemu była efektem współpracy Warszawy i Paryża w tej dziedzinie, datującej się od początku lat 20. Nie oznacza to jednak, że polski wywiad potrzebował im- pulsu ze strony sojuszniczej służby informacyjnej, żeby zająć się zagadnieniem rozpoznania masowego, skrajnie nacjonalistycznego i wyraźnie antypolskiego związku paramilitarnego, jakim bezsprzecznie był Stahlhelm. Działalność związku była monitorowana przez agenturę Ekspozytur nr 3 i 4 Oddziału II SG, szczególnie czujnie od początku lat 30., gdy Stahlhelm osiągnął apogeum swojego rozwoju organizacyj- nego i liczebności. Efektem prośby Deuxième Bureau była precyzyjna ankieta oraz oparty na niej raport wywiadowczy opisujący przebieg zjazdu Stahlhelmu w stolicy Śląska w dn. 30 i 31 maja 1931 r. – doku- menty te edytowane są w niniejszym artykule. łowa kluczowe: Stahlhelm, zjazd we Wrocławiu, Oddział II Sztabu Głównego, kpt. Joseph Marie Abel Sauzey, Ekspozytura nr 4 Oddziału II Sztabu Głównego Klęska w I wojnie światowej oraz upadek cesarstwa spowodowały chaos w Niem- czech. Po zwycięstwie rewolucji bolszewickiej kraj ten ogarnęło również wrzenie re- wolucyjne. Tymczasem powracający z frontów zdemobilizowani żołnierze próbowali na nowo rozpocząć cywilne życie.
    [Show full text]
  • Our Special Helmet Issue: Hungarian Protective Headgear of the 20Th
    © Vol. XIV, No. 2 Spring 2012 OUR SPECIAL HELMET ISSUE: HUNGARIAN PROTECTIVE HEADGEAR OF THE 20TH CENTURY PHOTO COLOURIZED BY ORINCSAY BY COLOURIZED PHOTO - CZINK COLLECTION COLLECTION CZINK A note from the Editor I am very proud to have worked together with Major Dr. Tamás Baczoni on this issue of the Magyar Front. The material featured is very useful, not only to military history enthusiasts, but specifically to those collecting and handling vintage combat helmets. All collectors know that extensive knowledge and careful examination of every object is very important in determining its value and authenticity – mid 20th Century Hungarian military helmets are a particularly bewildering subject because older stockpiles were mixed with new parts, materiel shortages necessitated that old German helmet shells were pressed into service with the post-WWII Hungarian armed forces, and the passage of time has caused mix-ups of components and the creation of pieces of MAGYAR FRONT fantasy. VOLUME XIV, ISSUE 2 I recall that back in the 1970s, an American military surplus mail order company offered “genuine Hungarian army helmets” in their catalogue. I can’t imagine how a SPRING 2012 North American firm would have got their hands on Hungarian surplus during the Cold Published quarterly by War, and I don’t recall if they advertised them as being from World War II, however, Peter Czink VRNT, Editor-Designer they turned up in quantity in the early days of mass interest in anything even remotely “German.” Since then, especially with today’s online auctions, these odd, repainted The NEW FRONT: Hungarian helmets, fitted with all sorts of liners (including completely new German (International Hungarian Military style ones), turn up quite regularly.
    [Show full text]
  • GURPS+-+4Th+Edition+-+High-Tech
    Written by SHAWN FISHER, MICHAEL HURST, and HANS-CHRISTIAN VORTISCH Additional Material by DAVID L. PULVER, SEAN PUNCH, GENE SEABOLT, and WILLIAM H. STODDARD Edited by SEAN PUNCH Cover Art by ABRAR AJMAL and BOB STEVLIC Illustrated by BRENT CHUMLEY, IGOR FIORENTINI, NATHAN GEPPERT, BRENDAN KEOUGH, and BOB STEVLIC ISBN 978-1-55634-770-2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 STEVE JACKSON GAMES 5. WEAPONRY. 78 FIREARMS . .78 Dirty Tech: Full-Auto Conversions . 79 How to Treat Your Gun . 79 CONTENTS Drawing Your Weapon . 81 Immediate Action. 81 INTRODUCTION . 4 PERSONAL DEVICES AND Shooting. 82 Publication History. 4 CONSUMER GOODS . 30 Reloading Your Gun . 86 About the Authors. 4 Personal Accessories. 31 Careful Loading . 86 Appliances . 32 Black-Powder Fouling . 86 1. THE EQUIPMENT AGE . 5 Foodstuffs . 33 Air Guns . 88 Ranged Electric Stunners . 89 TIMELINE . 6 Luxuries . 34 TL5: The Industrial Revolution . 6 Non-Repeating Pistols . 90 COMMUNICATIONS . 35 Revolvers . 92 TL6: The Mechanized Age . 6 Mail and Freight . 35 TL7: The Nuclear Age. 6 Dirty Tech: Improvised Guns . 92 Telegraph . 36 Semiautomatic Pistols . 97 TL8: The Digital Age . 6 Telephone. 36 Dirty Tech . 6 Automatic Revolver . 97 Radio . 37 Disguised Firearms . 98 BUYING EQUIPMENT . 7 Radio in Use. 38 Rocket Pistol. 99 You Get What You Pay For . 7 Other Communications . 40 Shotguns . 103 The Black Market . 7 MEDIA . 40 Muskets and Rifles . 107 New Perk: Equipment Bond . 7 Audio Storage, Recording, Drilling . 108 Legality and Antiques. 8 and Playback . 40 Minié Balls . 109 WEAR AND CARE . 9 Video Storage, Recording, The Kalashnikov .
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded from Brill.Com09/28/2021 01:08:55AM Via Free Access
    fascism 6 (2017) 13-41 brill.com/fasc ‘Milksops’ and ‘Bemedalled Old Men’: War Veterans and the War Youth Generation in the Weimar Republic Kristian Mennen Berlin [email protected] Abstract This article reconsiders traditional assumptions about the connection between the First World War and the rise of National Socialism in Germany, according to which politically radicalised war veterans joined the Freikorps after the war and formed the backbone of the Nazi membership and electorate. In questioning this view, the article first traces the political paths of actual veterans’ organisations. Whereas the largest veterans’ organisations were not politically active, the most distinctive ones – Reichsbanner and Stahlhelm – were not primarily responsible for a ‘brutalisation’ or radicalisation of Weimar political culture. Their definitions of ‘veteran’ and ‘front experience’ implicitly excluded the so-called ‘war youth generation’ from their nar- rative. Secondly, it is shown how representatives of this younger generation, lacking actual combat experience but moulded by war propaganda, determined the collective imagination of the First World War. The direct connection between the First World War and National Socialism can therefore primarily be found in the continuity of pub- lic and cultural imagination of war and of ‘war veterans’, and much less so in actual membership overlaps between veterans’ and Nazi movements. Keywords Germany – National Socialism – veterans – Reichsbanner – Stahlhelm – generations – political culture 1 ‘Schwarz-Rot-Gold marschiert!’ Leipziger Volkszeitung, 13 August 1927, 3. Beilage: 1. © Mennen, 2017 | doi 10.1163/22116257-00601002 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial 4.0 Unported (CC-BY-NC 4.0) License.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Milksops' and 'Bemedalled Old Men': War Veterans and The
    fascism 6 (2017) 13-41 brill.com/fasc ‘Milksops’ and ‘Bemedalled Old Men’: War Veterans and the War Youth Generation in the Weimar Republic Kristian Mennen Berlin [email protected] Abstract This article reconsiders traditional assumptions about the connection between the First World War and the rise of National Socialism in Germany, according to which politically radicalised war veterans joined the Freikorps after the war and formed the backbone of the Nazi membership and electorate. In questioning this view, the article first traces the political paths of actual veterans’ organisations. Whereas the largest veterans’ organisations were not politically active, the most distinctive ones – Reichsbanner and Stahlhelm – were not primarily responsible for a ‘brutalisation’ or radicalisation of Weimar political culture. Their definitions of ‘veteran’ and ‘front experience’ implicitly excluded the so-called ‘war youth generation’ from their nar- rative. Secondly, it is shown how representatives of this younger generation, lacking actual combat experience but moulded by war propaganda, determined the collective imagination of the First World War. The direct connection between the First World War and National Socialism can therefore primarily be found in the continuity of pub- lic and cultural imagination of war and of ‘war veterans’, and much less so in actual membership overlaps between veterans’ and Nazi movements. Keywords Germany – National Socialism – veterans – Reichsbanner – Stahlhelm – generations – political culture 1 ‘Schwarz-Rot-Gold marschiert!’ Leipziger Volkszeitung, 13 August 1927, 3. Beilage: 1. © Mennen, 2017 | doi 10.1163/22116257-00601002 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial 4.0 Unported (CC-BY-NC 4.0) License.
    [Show full text]
  • Winter 2020 No
    Arkansas Military History Journal A Publication of the Arkansas National Guard Museum, Inc. Vol. 14 Winter 2020 No. 1 In the Grippe of Influenza: Arkansas and the Spanish Influenza Epidemic of 1918 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chairman Brigadier General John O. Payne Ex-Officio Vice Chairman Colonel (Ret) Damon N. Cluck Ex-Officio Secretary Dr. Raymond D. Screws (Non-Voting) Ex-Officio Treasurer Major Sharetta Glover Board Members Ex-Officio—Major Adam Warford Ex-Officio—Major James Lehner Ex-Officio—Colonel Paul Jara Ex-Officio—CSM Steven Veazey Ex-Officio—CW2 Darrell Daniels At Large – Lieutenant Colonel (Ret) Clement J. Papineau, Jr. Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Anderson (Non-Voting Consultant) Deanna Holdcraft (Non-Voting Consultant) Museum Staff Dr. Raymond D. Screws, Director/Journal Editor Erica McGraw, Museum Assistant, Journal Layout & Design Incorporated 27 June 1989 Arkansas Non-profit Corporation Cover Photograph: Photo from oakandlaurel.com/blog Table of Contents In the Grippe of Influenza: Arkansas and the Spanish Influenza Epidemic of 1918 By Lauren Jarvis, Arkansas State Archives ................................................................................................. 4 The Pandemic of 1918 Timeline By LTC Matthew W. Anderson ................................................................................................................ 10 Featured Artificat: U.S. Model 1917 Helmet By LTC Matthew W. Anderson ................................................................................................................ 20 Message from the Editor We are certainly living in an unusual time in our history. COVID-19 has altered our lives in ways we never imagined. But there have been many pandemics throughout human history. In 1918, as the First World War was about to end, the United States, and the World, experienced a devastating disease. Millions of people worldwide died during the Influenza Pandemic that first hit during the spring of 1918, and then with full-force in the fall.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    Canadian Military History Volume 18 Issue 2 Article 1 2009 Table of Contents Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh Part of the Military History Commons Recommended Citation "Table of Contents." Canadian Military History 18, 2 (2009) This Table of Contents is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. et al.: Table of Contents CANADIAN MILITARY HISTORY Volume 18, Number 2 Spring 2009 CANADIAN MILITARY HISTORY Articles Wilfrid Laurier University, “Completely Worn Out by Service in France”: Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3C5, CANADA Phone: (519) 884-0710 ext.4594 5 Combat Stress and Breakdown among Fax: (519) 886-5057 Senior Officers in the Canadian Corps Email: [email protected] www.canadianmilitaryhistory.com Patrick Brennan Equal Partners, Though Not Of Equal Strength: ISSN 1195-8472 15 The Military Diplomacy of General Agreement No.0040064165 Publication mail registration no.08978 Charles Foulkes and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Michael W. Manulak Canadian Military History is published four times a year in the winter, spring, summer and autumn by the Laurier From Nagasaki to Toronto Omond Solandt Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies, 26 and the Defence Research Board’s Early Wilfrid Laurier University. Vision of Atomic Warfare, 1945-1947 Editor-in-Chief Roger Sarty Jason S. Ridler Managing Editor Mike Bechthold Book Review Supplement Editor Jonathan F. Vance Layout & Design Mike Bechthold CMH Editorial Board David Bashow, Serge Bernier, Laura Brandon, Patrick Brennan, Isabel Campbell, Tim Cook, Terry Copp, Serge Durflinger, Michel Fortmann, The Hendershot Brothers in the Great War Andrew Godefroy, John Grodzinski, David Hall, Steve Harris, Geoffrey Hayes, Jack Hyatt, Whitney 41 Eric Brown and Tim Cook Lackenbauer, Marc Milner, Elinor Sloan, Jonathan F.
    [Show full text]
  • How To: Read Historical Images Man’S Uniform and Those of All the Others in the the PIPE & the CIGARETTE Photo
    WHAT WE FIND THE BADGE THAT DOESN’T MATCH There is one other major difference between this How to: Read historical images man’s uniform and those of all the others in the THE PIPE & THE CIGARETTE photo. He is wearing a different unit badge on his BELGIUM lemon squeezer hat compared to everyone else: his The helmet and the lemon squeezer badge is that of the 14th (South Otago) Company Cigarettes and tobacco were issued as part The BUGLE while everyone else is wearing the unit badge of the of the ration and were the most common item 4th (Otago) Company. Why is he in the photo then? sent in parcels from New Zealand “...of the The British ‘Brodie’ pattern steel helmet and the NZ Lemon FRANCE Why are there no officers from the 4th (Otago) 100 cigarettes though [in a parcel from home This bugle is a standard British Bb Bugle – possibly Squeezer hat both became standard issue in 1916. The Company in the photo? received that morning], I smoked 70 during the made by the original Boosey & Co. Bugles were design was inspired by Mt Taranaki but was also practical, day” Diary of H Kippenberger (Age 19). used to communicate between HQ and the troops. because it allowed rain to run off. Image Courtesy of the South Otago Museum - Balclutha THE BATTLE OF MESSINES Each battalion had their own particular call and there were hundreds of others - reveille (wakeup) Ashley McKenzie-White Damien Fenton Tim Shoebridge July 1917 mealtimes, feeding the horses, retreat (end of a Senior Historian, Massey University NZ’s First World War Heritage day’s fighting ) and last post (finish of the day).
    [Show full text]
  • Van Arty Association and RUSI Van Members News April 28, 2020
    Van Arty Association and RUSI Van Members News April 28, 2020 Newsletters normally are emailed on Monday evenings. If you don’t get a future newsletter on time, check the websites below to see if there is a notice about the current newsletter or to see if the current edition is posted there. If the newsletter is posted, please contact me at [email protected] to let me know you didn’t get your copy. Newsletter on line. This newsletter and previous editions are available on the Vancouver Artillery Association website at: www.vancouvergunners.ca and the RUSI Vancouver website at: http://www.rusivancouver.ca/newsletter.html . Both groups are also on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=vancouver%20artillery%20association and https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=rusi%20vancouver Wednesday Lunches - Lunches suspended until further notice. Upcoming events – Mark your calendars See attached posters for details. Apr 29 RUSI Vancouver virtual presentation - Canada and the Cold War May 06 RUSI Vancouver virtual presentation - Canada and the Cold War May 13 RUSI Vancouver virtual presentation - Canada and the Cold War Everyone stay safe!! World War 2 – 1945 John Thompson Strategic analyst - quotes from his book “Spirit Over Steel” Apr 29th: Hitler marries Eva Braun; names Admiral Doenitz as his successor and blames Germany for letting him down. In the general tenor of things, Walter Wagner, the Berlin official that married Hitler, is killed as a member of the Volksturm 30 minutes after the ceremony. The last convoy battle of the war occurs (and will last to May 2) as RA-66 passes northern Norway for Murmansk; but 14 U-Boats are no match for 25 escorts and two are sunk.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronological List
    Chronological List June 15, 1913 Twenty-fifth Jubilee of Kaiser William II June 30 Extraordinary army and military budget bills October 16-19 Federated Youth Movement conclave at Hohe Meissner December Zabern Affair: crisis of Prussian military intrusion into civilian rule February, 1914 Statistics indicate 1913 as the greatest year of German industrial production and trade June 28-August 4 Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdi­ nand (Austria-Hungary) leads to out­ break of First World War September 12 German advance on Paris stopped in Battle of the Marne August 29, 1916 Generals von Hindenburg and Luden­ dorff take over Supreme High Com­ mand: Kaiser overshadowed; totalitarian war economy launched April6, 1917 United States declares war on Germany November 7 Soviet seizure of power in Russia March 21- Final German offensive in France April5, 1918 September 2 9 General Ludendor:ff urges Kaiser to sue for peace October 28- Mutinies in German navy and armies November 5 November9 Kaiser abdicates; Scheidemann proclaims German Republic November 11 Armistice ends First World War January 5-15, 191 9 Ultra-left Spartacist revolt suppressed CHRONOLOGICAL LIST 337 February6 Weimar Constituent Assembly opens June 28 Germany signs Treaty of Versailles July 31 New republican constitution adopted at Weimar February 24, 1920 Hitler proclaims twenty-five points of National Socialist program in Munich March 13-18 Abortive conservative Kapp putsch m Berlin May5 Germany receives reparations bill of 132 billion marks June 6 German Communist party first
    [Show full text]