81 “If only I” and rest of scene between Hitler and Helen: Niemeyer interviewed by Toland, Library of Congress.

82 “I felt Hitler”: Hanfstaengl, 123.

82 “Why don’t you find”: Niemeyer interviewed by Toland.

82 “an empty-headed”: Hanfstaengl, 162.

82 “I always had the feeling”: Niemeyer interviewed by Toland.

82 Otto Strasser and his claims about Geli and Hitler: Ronald Hayman, Hitler + Geli, 145.

83 “The whole affair”: Hanfstaengl, 165.

83 “of an American woman” and “a German propagandist”: Dorothy Thompson, “I Saw Hitler!,” 3–4.

83 “lofty and remote”: Ibid., 5.

83 “Fussy. Amusing”: Ibid., 13.

83 “an immense, high-strung”: Peter Kurth, American Cassandra: The Life of Dorothy Thompson, 160.

83 John Farrar: Marion K. Sanders, Dorothy Thompson: A Legend in Her Time, 166.

84 “The times in which”: Thompson, vi.

84 “Gone ‘legal’”: Ibid., 4.

84 “terrorizes the streets”: Ibid., 12.

84 “When finally I walked”: Ibid., 13.

85 “He is formless”: Ibid., 13–14.

85 “an insignificant” and contrast with Hindenburg and Bruning: Ibid., 14–15.

85 “The Jews are”: Ibid., 34.

85 “Hitler’s tragedy”: Ibid., 35.

85 “If Hitler comes into”: Ibid., 36.

86 “Mrs. Lewis, the wife” and rest of Ludecke-Hitler exchange: Ludecke, I Knew Hitler, 531.

86 One of Putzi’s classmates and rest of Harvard connections with Kaltenborn: H. V. Kaltenborn, Fifty Fabulous Years, 1900–1950, 51.

86 “felt that any” and details of interview procedures: Hans V. Kaltenborn, “An Interview with Hitler,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, Summer 1967.

87 “Why does your” and Hitler’s response: Kaltenborn, Fifty Fabulous Years, 186–187.

87 “he has no capacity”: Kaltenborn, “An Interview with Hitler.”

88 “A dictatorship is”: Kaltenborn, Fifty Fabulous Years, 188.

88 “I could understand”: Kaltenborn, “An Interview with Hitler.”

88 “After meeting Hitler”: Kaltenborn, Fifty Fabulous Years, 186.

88 “Most people”: Ibid., 185.

CHAPTER FOUR: “I WILL SHOW THEM”

PAGE

89 “I’ll give the Hitlerites” and other quotes from Lochner: Louis Lochner, Always the Unexpected, 209–210.

90 “it was obviously”: Burke, Ambassador Frederic Sackett, 262.

90 “rule alone” and descriptions of Hitler and Goebbels: Ibid., 247.

91 “I am told that” and “The Nazi meetings”: Plotkin, 102–103.

91 “the bloody Jews” and “run out of his control” and “like a bunch of schoolboys”: Ibid., 108.

91 “a banker named Arnholt” and “Merely wondering” along with the rest of Mowrer account: Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 212.

92 “I am going to Munich” and rest of Schacht-Mowrer exchange: Ibid., 213.

92 “whenever a political melodrama” and rest of Fromm-Wiegand exchange: Fromm, 62–63.

93 While Ambassador Sackett: Burke, 274.

93 “The German government” and “I do not think”: Fromm, 67.

93 At an “intimate” dinner and rest of Schleicher-Fromm exchange: Ibid., 68– 69.

94 “dancing between four masters” and rest of Plettl-Plotkin exchange: Plotkin, 122–123.

95 “in no way alarmed” and “rapidly increasing”: Burke, 277.

95 “sudden and unexpected”: Ibid., 281.

95 “We have hired Hitler” and “in the driver’s seat”: Lochner, Always the Unexpected, 210–211.

95 He had arrived in Germany: Bouton, “My Years in Germany” (Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Institute of Public Affairs, Ninth Annual Session, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, January 23–25, 1935), S. Miles Bouton Papers, box 4, Hoover.

96 “It requires no great skill”: “Bouton, Home from Europe, Tells of Germany in 1925,” Baltimore Sun, box 1, Hoover.

96 “Read that treaty”: Bouton Collection, box 4, Hoover.

96 “It was several minutes”: “A Veteran Journalist Reports,” c. 1962, Bouton Papers, box 6, Hoover.

96 “does not come into consideration”: Untitled copy of dispatch dated August 9, 1930, Bouton Papers, box 1, Hoover.

96 “For the last five years”: Bouton, “My Years in Germany,” box 4, Hoover.

97 “represents a remarkable” and rest of quotes from original manuscript of March 1932 article “Hitler’s Shadow Across Germany”: Bouton Papers, box 1, Hoover.

98 “That they put me down” and rest of Lochner’s letter: “Round Robins from Berlin: Louis P. Lochner’s Letters to His Children, 1932–1941,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, Summer 1967.

99 “foreigners and Jews” and rest of Lilian Mowrer’s account, including description of Edgar Mowrer’s conversations with Nazis over beers: Lilian Mowrer, 266–268.

100 “But I have only heard” and rest of Lilian’s conversation with her daughter: Ibid., 275.

100 “sick of everything” and other quotes from book: Mowrer, Germany Puts the Clock Back, 196–198.

100 “Did he believe”: Ibid., 194.

101 “I could see the man’s face”: Sigrid Schultz, Germany Will Try It Again, 87–88.

101 “While others slept”: Mowrer, Germany Puts the Clock

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