Displaying: 1 19 of 19 matches for “1933”
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1. In 1933 . . .
In 1933 . . . On his first day as president, Franklin D. Roosevelt told Americans: “The only thing ... The United States and the Nazi Threat: 1933-37 Learn more about what Americans could have known about
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2. Not a Governmental Affair
Messersmith, US Consul General, Berlin, July 26, 1933 American diplomats in Germany were well aware of the ... spring 1933, tens of thousands of Americans signed petitions protesting the Nazis’ treatment of Jews ... assaulted Americans in Germany—as happened at least 35 times during 1933 alone—US diplomats did protest ... Germany would end, and many fewer occurred after 1933. The US and the Nazi Threat: 1933-37 Learn more
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3. The Weapons of Dictatorship: Terror and Propaganda
Propaganda 1933–1939 There is no bloodshed in the country, but oppression, oppression, oppression. No one ... Klemperer, Dresden, March 27, 1933 Soon after becoming chancellor, Hitler used the power of the state to ... In 1933, they detained as many as 100,000 Germans without trial. Nazi thugs publicly humiliated ... forced them to dissolve themselves. By July 1933, Germany had become a one-party Nazi state.
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4. The Spread of Propaganda Through Radio
directors of the Reich Broadcasting Company, March 25, 1933 After January 1933, Nazi Germany made great ... .3 million sets in January 1933 to over eight million in 1934. By January 1938, more than nine million radios
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5. Protesting Nazism
Wise, March 1933 American Jewish leaders hoped to persuade the US government to condemn the Nazi ... protests in more than 65 American cities during the spring of 1933, in the first months of Nazi Party rule
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6. The German Film Industry
Lübeck area, June 1935 In 1933, Germany was Europe’s largest film producer and the second-largest ... in the world, trailing only the United States. From 1933 to 1945, German studios created roughly 1
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7. For the Future: Indoctrinating Youth
groups for young people, students, and teachers. By January 1933, the Nazi Party had recruited tens of ... thousands of students along with thousands of young teachers. In 1933, the Nazi regime purged the German ... positions. The state banned or dissolved independent youth groups. In January 1933, the Hitler Youth had
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8. The Weapons of Dictatorship: Media Control
came to power in 1933, Germany was a world leader in mass communications. It produced more newspapers ... government and the people. After 1933, the Nazi regime broadcast propaganda over the radio to homes
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9. The German Newspaper Industry
-Friedrich, German journalist and resistance member, September 29, 1938 Prior to 1933, Berlin alone supported ... newspapers, which increased the party’s share of total newspaper circulation from 3 percent in 1933 to
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10. Nazism in the News
the 1930s. At least 2,000 daily newspapers were printed in the United States in 1933, and most
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11. Adolf Hitler Becomes Chancellor
that made Hitler the chancellor, or head of government, on January 30, 1933. Associates of President
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12. German Responses to the Nazi Takeover of Power
expression of outrage. —Robert Musil, Austrian writer, Berlin, March 1933 Many Germans welcomed the
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13. The Nazi Propaganda Machine
The Nazi Propaganda Machine The Nazi Propaganda Machine The Nazi Propaganda Machine In March 1933
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14. Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy
Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy Beginning in 1933
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15. Jews Face Growing Isolation in Germany
came to power in 1933, Jacob at first noticed only gradual changes: fewer non-Jewish customers came to
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16. Selling Nazism in a Democracy
Selling Nazism in a Democracy Selling Nazism in a Democracy 1918–1933 On November 9, 1918, a
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17. Deceiving the Public: Nazi Concentration Camps
after coming to power in 1933, Nazis rounded up those they deemed to be “enemies of the Nazi state
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18. Admit Refugee Children?
the United States between 1933 and 1945.
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19. Forging Unity and Allegiance: The Hitler Cult
Starting in January 1933, Nazi propaganda transformed Hitler from a party leader into the personification