Hitler's Generals in America
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   Index
   The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
   Numbered military units are alphabetized as if spelled out.
   Adelheide, Germany: postwar British prisoner-of-war camp
   Adenauer, Konrad
   Afrika Korps
   Afrikakorps-Verband (Africa Korps veterans association)
   Afrikaner
   Alexander, Harold
   Allied Captured Intelligence Centre, Algiers
   Allied war aims, discussion of
   American Captured Records Section
   American Expeditionary Force
   American methods of interrogation
   American military intelligence
   American officer corps: democratic ideals of; “natural aristocracy” of; professionalization of
   American suspicions of professional militaries
   Anglo-American relationship
   Armee Gruppe Afrika
   Armee Gruppe Weichsel
   Armored Breakthrough
   Aschenbrenner, Heinrich: added to British “stop list,”; interrogation of and eavesdropping on at Fort Huntnn; transfer to Camp Dermott
   atomic bomb
   Australian War Memorial
   Austrian Document Center
   Austro-Prussian War
   Axberg, Olle
   Badinski, Curt: photo of; potential willingness to collaborate with the Americans; repatriation and release of; surrender of; transfer to Camp Clinton
   Baldwin, Alfred: impressions of Elster, von Liebenstein, and von Sponeck
   “barbed-wire psychosis,”
   Barbusse, Henri
   Barnett, Correlli
   Bassenge, Gerhard: “Anti-Nazi and Defeatist” clique; photo of
   Battle of Brest
   Battle of Crete (May–June 1941)
   Battle of El Alamein
   Battle of Kasserine Pass
   Battle of Kharkov
   Battle of Kirovograd
   Battle of the Mareth Line
   Battle of the Scheldt Estuary
   Battle of Zhitomir
   Bay, Thomas A.
   Bays, Thomas
   Belgium, king and queen of
   Bernays, M. C.; inspection of Camp Clinton
   Bieringer, Ludwig: expresses willingness to collaborate with Americans; repatriation and release of; selected for transfer to Camp Dermott; surrender of; transfer to Camp Clinton; transfer to Camp Dermott
   Birkhauser, [first name unknown], Lieutenant: prisoner of war at the Idea Factory
   Bismarck Reich
   Bissell, Clayton
   Blank, Theodor
   Blunda, George F.; photo of
   Boker, John
   Bolero Group. See also Gehlen Organization
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br />   Borowietz, Willibald: American interrogation of and eavesdropping on; arrival in the United States; departure for the United States; painted portraits of Camp Clinton; receipt of the Oak Leaves; suicide of; surrender of
   Bradley, Omar
   British Army of the Rhine
   British Directorate of Military Intelligence
   British Eighth Army
   British First Special Air Service Regiment
   British General Staff
   British Home Army
   British House of Commons
   British Joint Staff Mission
   British officer corps: nobility of
   British Royal Navy
   British “stop list,” postwar
   British War Office
   Bruhn, Hans: release of; surrender of
   Bryan, Blackshear M.
   Buhle, Walther; correspondence with John Lovell; transfer to Ft. George Meade
   Bülowius, Karl Robert Max: American interrogation of and eavesdropping on; arrival in the United States; comments recorded by the British; departure for the United States; surrender of; transfer to Camp Forrest and suicide of
   Bundesnachrichtendienst
   Bundeswehr
   Burgdorf, Wilhelm
   Busch, Ernst: assessment of von Arnim
   Byrnes, James F.
   Camp Alva, Oklahoma
   Camp Bolbec, Le Havre, France
   Camp Clinton, Mississippi; accommodation of high-ranking naval prisoners; accommodations at; alleged insolence of American guard personnel; arrival of more generals after D-Day; arrival of the first general officers; assignment of aides and orderlies; assignment of an assistant executive officer; construction delays; designation as camp for German general officers; Feer’s and Gufler’s critical inspection report of; generals’ preference for remaining at the camp; generals split into pro-Nazi and anti-Nazi factions; Greuter’s and Eberhardt’s inspection report of; Gufler’s and Bernay’s critical inspection report of; improved accommodations at; preparations of; Rapp’s evaluation of the German general officer prisoners; Schnyder’s and Zehnder’s inspection report of; transfer of Botho Elster; Weingärtner’s and Mason’s critical inspection report of
   Camp Como, Mississippi
   Camp Crossville, Tennessee
   Camp Dachau
   Camp Dermott, Arkansas; arrival of naval prisoners and prisoners from Fort Hunt; Axberg’s and Phillipp’s inspection of; Axberg’s inspection of; comparison with Camp Ruston; as a “different kind of POW camp,”; Lakes’ inspection of; Raugust’s inspection of (February 1945); Raugust’s inspection of (April 1945); repatriation of the generals; special report on “morale status of war prisoners,”; Stoltzfus’s inspection of
   Camp Forrest, Tennessee
   “Camp Jerome,” Arkansas. See also Camp Dermott, Arkansas
   Camp King, Germany
   Camp McCain, Mississippi
   Camp Mexia, Texas; alleged insolence of American guard personnel; description of; record-high temperatures in the summer of 1943
   Camp Monticello, Arkansas
   Camp No. 1, Grizedale Hall, Lancashire
   Camp No. 11, Trent Park, Cockfosters; arrival and interrogation of Anton Dunckern; arrival of Rear Admiral Carl Weber; camp closes; carousel environment; criteria for selecting general officers to be transferred to American custody; establishment of; impressions of Bernard-Hermann Ramcke; influx of new general officer prisoners following D-Day; requirement that the generals in their custody sign “paroles” in order to venture outside the camp; transfer to Camp Clinton of Seyffardt, Rauch, von Wülfingen, Gutknecht, von der Mosel, Schirmer, Kähler, von Tresckow, and Weber; transfer to Camp Clinton of von Choltitz, Ullersperger, Eberding, Ramcke, and Dunckern; transfer of von Heyking, Daser, Vaterrodt, Bruhn, and Kittel; transfer to Camp Clinton of von Sponeck, von Liebenstein, Krause, Vierow, Spang, Menny, Badinski, Sattler, Schramm, and Stolberg-Stolberg
   Camp Pryor, Oklahoma
   Camp Ritchie, Maryland; arrival and organization of Hill Project prisoners; establishment of GMDS; photo of
   Camp Robinson, Arkansas
   Camp Ruston, Louisiana; Axberg’s inspections of; designation as anti-Nazi camp; Raugust’s inspection of
   Camp Shanks, New York
   Camp Shelby, Mississippi
   Camp Tracy, Byron Hot Springs, California: arrival of the generals; establishment of the camp; interrogation of and eavesdropping on the generals; interrogation of German general officers; transfer of the generals to Texas
   Camp Trinidad, Colorado
   Camp 2226, Belgium
   Canadian Second Corps
   Cantigny
   Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
   Central Intelligence Group
   Chaplin, Charlie
   Chateau Vrillays, Richelieu
   Cherbonnier, Laurence O.
   Chicago Tribune
   Christopher Columbus (POW production)
   Churchill, Winston
   Civil Affairs Center, Shrivenham, England
   Civil Affairs Division (CAD), U.S. War Department
   Civil Affairs Training Schools
   Civilian Conservation Corps
   civilian internees
   Civil War, American
   Civil War, English
   Clarion-Ledger (newspaper)
   Clay, Lucius D.
   Clegg, John P.
   Colburn, Harry
   Cold War
   Collier’s
   Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre (CSDIC)
   Continental Army, American
   Control Council Prisoner of War Enclosure No. 32 (“Ashcan”), Bad Mondorf, Luxembourg
   Control Group
   Cramer, Hans: “Anti-Nazi and Defeatist” clique; photo of
   Critchfield, James
   Crüwell, Ludwig: “Anti-Defeatist” and pro-Nazi clique; capture of; interned in Cairo; as leader of Clinton’s postwar anti-Nazi faction; photo of; Rapp’s evaluation of and potential willingness to collaborate with the Americans; receipt of the Oak Leaves; requests new aide at Camp Clinton; repatriation and postwar career; transfer to Camp Clinton; and von Thoma share information about German research on V-1 and V-2 rockets
   Daser, Wilhelm: photo of; repatriation and arrival at Zuffenhausen of; surrender of
   Davison, Edward
   Deane, John Russell, Jr.
   demilitarization
   denazification
   Der Angriff (newspaper)
   “Dermott Camp University,”
   Der Ruf
   Doerksen, Clarence
   Donington Hall, Derby
   Doniphan, Alexander
   Dönitz, Karl
   Dos Passos, John
   Dudley, Harry E.
   Duin, Gerald; work with Hill Project and the Gehlen Organization
   Dumbarton Oaks Conference
   Dunckern, Anton: photo of; surrender of; transfer to Camp Clinton
   Eastern European Order of Battle Branch. See also Pentagon
   Eastern Front
   Eastland, James O.
   Eberding, Knut: added to British “stop list,”; photo of; surrender of; transfer to Camp Clinton
   Eberhardt, Charles
   Eher Publishing
   Einheitsaktenplan (German filing system)
   Eisenhower, Dwight
   Elbe River
   Elster, Botho: expresses willingness to collaborate with the Americans; interrogation by CSDIC at Wilton Park; plot to assassinate; selected for transfer to Camp Dermott; surrender of; transfer to Camp Clinton; transfer to Camp Dermott
   Evans, Luther H.
   Fallschirmjäger: Damals und Danach
   Fallschirmjägerverband (German paratroopers veterans association)
   Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
   Federal Republic of Germany
   Feer, Edward: inspection of Camp Clinton
   Fehler, Johann Heinrich
   fifty-fifty agreement
   First World War: armistice; French command of American forces; prisoners of war, America
n treatment of; prisoners of war, British treatment of; public postwar disillusionment
   Fischer, Rudolf
   Fitzgibbon, Robert C.
   Fonger, Harold
   Fort Bragg, North Carolina
   Fort Custer, Michigan
   Fort George Meade, Maryland
   Fort Hunt, Virginia; interrogation of Gehlen; interrogation of Kessler and Aschenbrenner; interrogation of Walter Vierow; work of Gehlen Organization and Hill Project
   Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
   Fort McPherson, Georgia
   Fortress Cherbourg
   Fort Sam Houston, Texas
   Franco-Prussian War
   Frantz, Gotthard: “Anti-Defeatist” and pro-Nazi clique; arrival at Camp Clinton; bitterness over treatment at Camp Clinton; repatriation of and capture by the Soviet Union; surrender of
   Französen
   Frederick the Great
   Free Germany Committee
   Freies Deutschland (newspaper)
   Fremde Heer Ost (German Eastern Front Intelligence Service)
   French Allies
   French resistance
   French Second Armored Division
   Friemel, Hans
   Führungsakademie
   Gable, Clark
   Gallenkamp, Curt: arrives at Camp 2226; conviction for war crimes; transfer to Camp Dermott
   Garmisch, Germany: focus turns to Soviet Union; postwar American prisoner-of-war camp; 7734th USFET Historical Detachment
   Gaul, Hans: transfer to Camp Ruston
   Gebhardt, Karl
   Gehlen, Reinhard: interrogation of at Fort Hunt; postwar career and collaboration with the United States; surrender of; work at Fort Hunt
   Gehlen Organization (Gehlen group); postwar operations. See also Bolero Group
   general officers, American
   general officers, German: American assessments of political orientation; American perceptions of; British perceptions of; comparison of British and American treatment of and accommodations for; development of “anti-Nazi” and “pro-Nazi” cliques; dissatisfaction with Camp Mexia; feelings of abandonment at Camp Clinton; knowledge of British intelligence’s monitoring of conversations; as prisoners of war; provided specially trained Military Police Escort Guard companies at Camp Clinton; resentment of American treatment; Swiss government as protecting power of; transit form North Africa to England; views of the postwar balance of power
   general officers, Italian
   Genzo, Shoji
   German Air Command
   German Army
   German Army Mobilization