Dodd, Jr., and Martha Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, xii and x.
120 “I want to know”: Ibid., 3.
120 “an almost sentimental”: Martha Dodd, Through Embassy Eyes, 12.
121 “The German authorities”: Dodd and Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, 5.
121 “exert all possible”: Ibid., 9.
121 “Let Hitler”: Ibid., 11.
122 “My wife, son and I”: Ibid., 11.
122 On the voyage over: Martha Dodd, Through Embassy Eyes, 18.
122 The Familienblatt and first meetings with journalists: Dodd and Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, 12–13; and Fromm, 120–121.
122 “No group of”: Lilian Mowrer, 286.
122 Sitting on wooden benches: Philip Gibbs, European Journey, 237.
122 “his back beaten to pulp”: Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 218.
123 “pushed past these bullies” and Edgar’s visit to Jewish doctor: Lilian Mowrer, 289.
123 A senior press official and Mowrer’s appeals: Ibid., 296–297.
123 “to allow social and personal”: Ibid., 298.
123 “favors” and visit to concentration camp: Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 221–222.
124 “were indeed badly beaten”: “Round Robins from Berlin: Louis P. Lochner’s Letters to His Children, 1932–1941,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, Summer 1967.
124 “You know, Herr Mowrer” and rest of Mowrer-Nazi officer exchange: Lilian Mowrer, 300–301.
125 “If such intelligent”: Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 225.
125 One of Mowrer’s sources: Ibid., 218.
126 “In this country where”: Ibid., 221.
126 In July, Colonel Frank Knox: Ibid., 224.
127 “I felt at the end”: Dodd and Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, 24.
127 “a blow to freedom”: Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 224.
127 In the Mowrer household and “At this point”: Lilian Mowrer, 302.
127 “Oh, Mr. Mowrer” and other quotes and details from Goldmann incident and aftermath: Lilian Mowrer, 303–305; additional information and “people’s righteous indignation” from Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 225–226.
129 “If you were not” and “gallant fighter”: Lilian Mowrer, 308.
129 “And when are you” and rest of exchange with young German official: Edgar Mowrer, Triumph and Turmoil, 226.
CHAPTER SIX: “LIKE FOOTBALL AND CRICKET”
PAGE
130 “I do not remember” and other Dodd quotes and descriptions of her Chicago life and about marriage: Martha Dodd, Through Embassy Eyes, 5–41.
132 “a perfect example”: Fromm, 121.
132 “pretty, vivacious”: William L. Shirer, Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent, 1934–1941, 42.
132 “Martha had an apartment”: Katharine Smith, unpublished manuscript of “My Life: Berlin August 1935–April 1939,” Truman Smith Papers, box 4, Hoover.
132 “We liked Germany”: Martha Dodd, Through Embassy Eyes, 23–24.
132 “The Germans seemed”: Ibid., 25.
133 “saloon German”: Quentin Reynolds, By Quentin Reynolds, 104.
133 “No American”: Ibid., 105.
133 “I regret to say”: Ibid., 107.
133 “such legendary figures” and description of Hanfstaengl: Martha Dodd, 25– 26.
133 “You’ve been here”: Reynolds, 109.
134 “we didn’t”: Martha Dodd, 27.
134 “The excitement of”: Ibid., 28.
134 “It will be” and “I could not at first tell”: Reynolds, 118–119.
135 “tragic and tortured”: Martha Dodd, 28.
135 Martha still tried: Ibid., 28–29.
135 Hudson Hawley and “Writing the story”: Reynolds, 119–120.
135 “There isn’t one” and Norman Ebbutt: Ibid., 121.
136 they dispatched officials: Martha Dodd, 32.
136 “Putzi serenaded”: Reynolds, 124.
136 “Never come”: Ibid., 125.
137 “Roosevelt must have”: “Round Robins from Berlin: Louis P. Lochner’s Letters to His Children, 1932–1941,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, Summer 1967.
137 “most agreeable”: Dodd and Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, 13.
137 “He showed no”: Ibid., 14.
137 “well-known internationalist” and “So far”: Ibid., 16.
137 “the saddest story”: Ibid., 17.
138 “are so uncontrollable”: Ibid., 44.
138 In a Columbus Day speech: Ibid., 46.
138 “It would be no sin”: Dallek, Democrat and Diplomat, 211.
138 “extraordinary applause”: Dodd and Dodd, eds., Ambassador Dodd’s Diary, 46.
138 “It is evident”: Ibid., 48.
138 “He looks somewhat better” and “The Chancellor assured me”: Ibid., 49.