Appendix I
DIRECTORS OF MAJOR BANKS,
FIRMS, AND INSTITUTIONS
MENTIONED IN THIS BOOK
(AS IN 1917-1918)
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION (120
Broadway)
|
|
J. Ogden Armour
|
Percy A. Rockefeller
|
G. J. Baldwin
|
John D. Ryan
|
C. A. Coffin
|
W.L. Saunders
|
W. E. Corey
|
J.A. Stillman
|
Robert Dollar
|
C.A. Stone
|
Pierre S. du Pont
|
T.N. Vail
|
Philip A. S. Franklin
|
F.A. Vanderlip
|
J. P. Grace
|
E.S. Webster
|
R. F. Herrick
|
A.H. Wiggin
|
Otto H. Kahn
|
Beckman Winthrop
|
H. W. Pritchett
|
William Woodward
|
CHASE
NATIONAL BANK
|
|
J.
N. Hill
|
Newcomb
Carlton
|
A.
B. Hepburn
|
D.C.
Jackling
|
S.
H. Miller
|
E.R.
Tinker
|
C.
M. Schwab
|
A.H.
Wiggin
|
H.
Bendicott
|
John
J. Mitchell
|
Guy E. Tripp
|
EQUITABLE
TRUST COMPANY (37-43 Wall Street)
|
|
Charles
B. Alexander
|
Henry
E. Huntington
|
Albert
B. Boardman
|
Edward
T. Jeffrey
|
Robert.C.
Clowry
|
Otto
H. Kahn
|
Howard
E. Cole
|
Alvin
W. Krech
|
Henry
E. Cooper
|
James
W. Lane
|
Paul
D. Cravath
|
Hunter
S. Marston
|
Franklin
Wm. Cutcheon
|
Charles
G. Meyer
|
Bertram
Cutler
|
George
Welwood Murray
|
Thomas
de Witt Cuyler
|
Henry
H. Pierce
|
Frederick
W. Fuller
|
Winslow
S. Pierce
|
Robert
Goelet
|
Lyman
Rhoades
|
Carl
R. Gray
|
Walter
C. Teagle
|
Charles
Hayden
|
Henry
Rogers Winthrop
|
Bertram G. Work
|
FEDERAL
ADVISORY COUNCIL (1916)
|
Daniel
G. Wing, Boston, District No. 1
|
J.
P. Morgan, New York, District No. 2
|
Levi
L. Rue, Philadelphia, District No. 3
|
W.
S. Rowe, Cincinnati, District No. 4
|
J.
W. Norwood, Greenville, S.C., District No. 5
|
C.
A. Lyerly, Chattanooga, District No. 6
|
J.
B. Forgan, Chicago, Pres., District No. 7
|
Frank
O. Watts, St. Louis, District No. 8
|
C.
T. Jaffray, Minneapolis, District No. 9
|
E.
F. Swinney, Kansas City, District No. 10
|
T.
J. Record, Paris, District No. 11
|
Herbert
Fleishhacker, San Francisco, District No. 12
|
FEDERAL
RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK (120 Broadway)
|
|
William
Woodward (1917)
|
Class A
|
Robert
H. Treman (1918)
|
|
Franklin
D. Locke (1919)
|
|
|
|
Charles
A. Stone (1920)
|
Class B
|
Wm.
B. Thompson (1918)
|
|
L.
R. Palmer (1919)
|
|
|
|
Pierre
Jay (1917)
|
Class C
|
George
F. Peabody (1919)
|
|
William
Lawrence Saunders (1920)
|
FEDERAL
RESERVE BOARD
|
|
William
G. M'Adoo
|
Adolph
C. Miller (1924)
|
Charles
S. Hamlin ( 1916)
|
Frederic
A. Delano (1920)
|
Paul
M. Warburg (1918)
|
W.P.G.
Harding (1922)
|
John Skelton Williams
|
GUARANTY
TRUST COMPANY (140 Broadway)
|
|
Alexander
J. Hemphill (Chairman)
|
|
Charles
H. Allen
|
Edgar
L. Marston
|
A.
C. Bedford
|
Grayson
M-P Murphy
|
Edward
J. Berwind
|
Charles
A. Peabody
|
W.
Murray Crane
|
William
C. Potter
|
T.
de Witt Cuyler
|
John
S. Runnells
|
James
B. Duke
|
Thomas
F. Ryan
|
Caleb
C. Dula
|
Charles
H. Sabin
|
Robert
W. Goelet
|
John
W. Spoor
|
Daniel
Guggenheim
|
Albert
Straus
|
W.
Averell Harriman
|
Harry
P. Whitney
|
Albert
H. Harris
|
Thomas
E. Wilson
|
Walter
D. Hines
|
London
Committee:
|
Augustus
D. Julliard
|
Arthur
J. Fraser (Chairman)
|
Thomas
W. Lamont
|
Cecil
F. Parr
|
William
C. Lane
|
Robert
Callander
|
NATIONAL
CITY BANK
|
|
P.
A. S. Franklin
|
P.A.
Rockefeller
|
J.P.
Grace
|
James
Stillman
|
G.
H. Dodge
|
W.
Rockefeller
|
H.
A. C. Taylor
|
J.
O. Armour
|
R.
S. Lovett
|
J.W.
Sterling
|
F.
A. Vanderlip
|
J.A.
Stillman
|
G.
H. Miniken
|
M.T.
Pyne
|
E.
P. Swenson
|
E.D.
Bapst
|
Frank
Trumbull
|
J.H.
Post
|
Edgar
Palmer
|
W.C.
Procter
|
NATIONALBANK
FÃœR DEUTSCHLAND
|
|
(As
in 1914, Hjalmar Schacht joined board in 1918)
|
|
Emil
Wittenberg
|
Hans
Winterfeldt
|
Hjalmar
Schacht
|
Th
Marba
|
Martin
Schiff
|
Paul
Koch
|
Franz Rintelen
|
SINCLAIR
CONSOLIDATED OIL CORPORATION (120 Broadway)
|
|
Harry
F. Sinclair
|
James
N. Wallace
|
H.
P. Whitney
|
Edward
H. Clark
|
Wm.
E. Corey
|
Daniel
C. Jackling
|
Wm.
B. Thompson
|
Albert
H. Wiggin
|
J.
G. WHITE ENGINEERING CORPORATION
|
|
James
Brown
|
C.E.
Bailey
|
Douglas
Campbell
|
J.G.
White
|
G.
C. Clark, Jr.
|
Gano
Dunn
|
Bayard
Dominick, Jr.
|
E.G.
Williams
|
A.
G. Hodenpyl
|
A.S.
Crane
|
T.
W. Lamont
|
H.A.
Lardner
|
Marion
McMillan
|
G.H.
Kinniat
|
J.
H. Pardee
|
A.F.
Kountz
|
G.
H. Walbridge
|
R.B.
Marchant
|
E.
N. Chilson
|
Henry
Parsons
|
A. N.
Connett
|
Appendix II
THE JEWISH-CONSPIRACY THEORY OF THE
BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION
There is an extensive literature in English, French, and German reflecting the argument that the Bolshevik Revolution was the result of a "Jewish conspiracy"; more specifically, a conspiracy by Jewish world bankers. Generally, world control is seen as the ultimate objective; the Bolshevik Revolution was but one phase of a wider program that supposedly reflects an age-old religious struggle between Christianity and the "forces of darkness."
The
argument and its variants can be found in the most surprising places and from
quite surprising persons. In February 1920 Winston Churchill wrote an article —
rarely cited today — for the London
Illustrated Sunday Herald entitled "Zionism
Versus Bolshevism." In this' article Churchill concluded that it was
"particularly important... that the National Jews in every country who are
loyal to the land of their adoption should come forward on every occasion . . .
and take a prominent part in every measure for combatting the Bolshevik
conspiracy." Churchill draws a line between "national Jews" and
what he calls "international Jews." He argues that the
"international and for the most atheistical Jews" certainly had a
"very great" role in the creation of Bolshevism and bringing about the
Russian Revolution. He asserts (contrary to fact) that with the exception of
Lenin, "the majority" of the leading figures in the revolution were
Jewish, and adds (also contrary to fact) that in many cases Jewish interests
and Jewish places of worship were excepted by the Bolsheviks from their
policies of seizure. Churchill calls the international Jews a "sinister
confederacy" emergent from the persecuted populations of countries where
Jews have been persecuted on account of their race. Winston Churchill traces
this movement back to Spartacus-Weishaupt, throws his literary net around
Trotsky, Bela Kun, Rosa Luxemburg, and Emma Goldman, and charges: "This
world-wide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilisation and for the
reconstitution of society on the basis of arrested development, of envious
malevolence, and impossible equality, has been steadily growing."
Churchill
then argues that this conspiratorial Spartacus-Weishaupt group has been the
mainspring of every subversive movement in the nineteenth century. While
pointing out that Zionism and Bolshevism are competing for the soul of the
Jewish people, Churchill (in 1920) was preoccupied with the role of the Jew in
the Bolshevik Revolution and the existence of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy.
Another
well-known author in the 1920s, Henry Wickham Steed describes in the second
volume of his Through 30 Years 1892-1922 (p.
302) how he attempted to bring the Jewish-conspiracy concept to the attention
of Colonel Edward M. House and President Woodrow Wilson. One day in March 1919
Wickham Steed called Colonel House and found him disturbed over Steed's recent
criticism of U.S. recognition of the Bolsheviks. Steed pointed out to House
that Wilson would be discredited among the many peoples and nations of Europe
and "insisted that, unknown to him, the prime movers were Jacob Schiff,
Warburg and other international financiers, who wished above all to bolster up
the Jewish Bolshevists in order to secure a field for German and Jewish
exploitation of Russia."1 According to
Steed, Colonel House argued for the establishment of economic relations with
the Soviet Union.
Probably
the most superficially damning collection of documents on the Jewish conspiracy
is in the State Department Decimal File (861.00/5339). The central document is
one entitled "Bolshevism and Judaism," dated November 13, 1918. The
text is in the form of a report, which states that the revolution in Russia was
engineered "in February 1916" and "it was found that the
following persons and firms were engaged in this destructive work":
(1)
Jacob Schiff
|
Jew
|
|
(2)
Kuhn, Loeb & Company
|
Jewish
Firm
|
|
Management:
|
Jacob
Schiff
|
Jew
|
|
Felix
Warburg
|
Jew
|
|
Otto
H. Kahn
|
Jew
|
|
Mortimer
L. Schiff
|
Jew
|
|
Jerome
J. Hanauer
|
Jew
|
(3)
Guggenheim
|
Jew
|
|
(4)
Max Breitung
|
Jew
|
|
(5)
Isaac Seligman
|
Jew
|
The
report goes on to assert that there can be no doubt that the Russian Revolution
was started and engineered by this group and that in April 1917
Jacob
Schiff in fact made a public announcement and it was due to his financial
influence that the Russian revolution was successfully accomplished and in the
Spring 1917 Jacob Schitf started to finance Trotsky, a Jew, for the purpose of
accomplishing a social revolution in Russia.
The
report contains other miscellaneous information about Max Warburg's financing
of Trotsky, the role of the Rheinish-Westphalian syndicate and Olof Aschberg of
the Nya Banken (Stockholm) together with Jivotovsky. The anonymous author
(actually employed by the U.S. War Trade Board)2 states that
the links between these organizations and their financing of the Bolshevik
Revolution show how "the link between Jewish multi-millionaires and Jewish
proletarians was forged." The report goes on to list a large number of
Bolsheviks who were also Jews and then describes the actions of Paul Warburg,
Judus Magnes, Kuhn, Loeb & Company, and Speyer & Company.
The
report ends with a barb at "International Jewry" and places the
argument into the context of a Christian-Jewish conflict backed up by
quotations from the Protocols of Zion. Accompanying this report is a series of
cables between the State Department in Washington and the American embassy in
London concerning the steps to be taken with these documents:3
5399
Great Britain, TEL. 3253 i pm
October
16, 1919 In Confidential File
Secret for Winslow from Wright. Financial aid to Bolshevism & Bolshevik Revolution in Russia from prominent Am. Jews: Jacob Schiff, Felix Warburg, Otto Kahn, Mendell Schiff, Jerome Hanauer, Max Breitung & one of the Guggenheims. Document re- in possession of Brit. police authorities from French sources. Asks for any facts re-.
Secret for Winslow from Wright. Financial aid to Bolshevism & Bolshevik Revolution in Russia from prominent Am. Jews: Jacob Schiff, Felix Warburg, Otto Kahn, Mendell Schiff, Jerome Hanauer, Max Breitung & one of the Guggenheims. Document re- in possession of Brit. police authorities from French sources. Asks for any facts re-.
* * * * *
Oct.
17 Great Britain TEL. 6084, noon r c-h 5399 Very secret. Wright from Winslow.
Financial aid to Bolshevik revolution in Russia from prominent Am. Jews. No
proof re- but investigating. Asks to urge Brit. authorities to suspend
publication at least until receipt of document by Dept.
* * * * *
Nov.
28 Great Britain TEL. 6223 R 5 pro. 5399
FOR WRIGHT. Document re financial aid to Bolsheviki by prominent American jews. Reports — identified as French translation of a statement originally prepared in English by Russian citizen in Am. etc. Seem most unwise to give — the distinction of publicity.
FOR WRIGHT. Document re financial aid to Bolsheviki by prominent American jews. Reports — identified as French translation of a statement originally prepared in English by Russian citizen in Am. etc. Seem most unwise to give — the distinction of publicity.
It
was agreed to suppress this material and the files conclude, "I think we
have the whole thing in cold storage."
Another
document marked "Most Secret" is included with this batch of
material. The provenance of the document is unknown; it is perhaps FBI or
military intelligence. It reviews a translation of the Protocols of the
Meetings of the Wise Men of Zion, and concludes:
In
this connection a letter was sent to Mr. W. enclosing a memorandum from us with
regard to certain information from the American Military Attache to the effect
that the British authorities had letters intercepted from various groups of
international Jews setting out a scheme for world dominion. Copies of this
material will be very useful to us.
This
information was apparently developed and a later British intelligence report
makes the flat accusation:
SUMMARY:
There is now definite evidence that Bolshevism is an international movement
controlled by Jews; communications are passing between the leaders in America,
France, Russia and England with a view to concerted action....4
However,
none of the above statements can be supported with hard empirical evidence. The
most significant information is contained in the paragraph to the effect that
the British authorities possessed "letters intercepted from various groups
of international Jews setting out a scheme for world dominion." If indeed
such letters exist, then they would provide support (or nonsupport) for a
presently unsubstantiated hypothesis: to wit, that the Bolshevik Revolution and
other revolutions are the work of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy.
Moreover,
when statements and assertions are not supported by hard evidence and where
attempts to unearth hard evidence lead in a circle back to the starting point —
particularly when everyone is quoting everyone else — then we must reject the
story as spurious. There is no concrete
evidence that Jews were involved in the Bolshevik Revolution because they were
Jewish. There may indeed have been a higher proportion of Jews involved,
but given tsarist treatment of Jews, what else would we expect? There were
probably many Englishmen or persons of English origin in the American
Revolution fighting the redcoats. So what? Does that make the American
Revolution an English conspiracy? Winston Churchill's statement that Jews had a
"very great role" in the Bolshevik Revolution is supported only by
distorted evidence. The list of Jews involved in the Bolshevik Revolution must
be weighed against lists of non-Jews involved in the revolution. When this
scientific procedure is adopted, the proportion of foreign Jewish Bolsheviks
involved falls to less than twenty percent of the total number of
revolutionaries — and these Jews were mostly deported, murdered, or sent to
Siberia in the following years. Modern Russia has in fact maintained tsarist
anti-Semitism.
It
is significant that documents in the State Department files confirm that the
investment banker Jacob Schiff, often cited as a source of funds for the
Bolshevik Revolution, was in fact against
support of the Bolshevik regime.5 This
position, as we shall see, was in direct contrast to the Morgan-Rockefeller
promotion of the Bolsheviks.
The
persistence with which the Jewish-conspiracy myth has been pushed suggests that
it may well be a deliberate device to divert attention from the real issues and
the real causes. The evidence provided in this book suggests that the New York
bankers who were also Jewish had relatively minor roles in supporting the Bolsheviks,
while the New York bankers who were also Gentiles (Morgan, Rockefeller,
Thompson) had major roles.
What
better way to divert attention from the real
operators than by the medieval bogeyman of anti-Semitism?
Footnotes:
1See Appendix 3 for Schiff's actual
role.
2The anonymous author was a Russian
employed by the U.S. War Trade Board. One of the three directors of the U.S.
War Trade Board at this time was John Foster Dulles.
3U.S. State Dept. Decimal File,
861.00/5399.
4Great Britain, Directorate of Intelligence,
A Monthly Review of the Progress of
Revolutionary Movements Abroad, no. 9, July 16, 1913 (861.99/5067).
5See Appendix 3.
Appendix III
SELECTED DOCUMENTS FROM
GOVERNMENT FILES OF THE
UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN
Note:
Some documents comprise several papers that form a related group.
DOCUMENT NO. 1 Cable from Ambassador
Francis in Petrograd to U.S. State Department and related letter from Secretary
of State Robert Lansing to President Woodrow Wilson (March 17, 1917)
DOCUMENT NO. 2 British Foreign Office
document (October 1917) claiming Kerensky was in the pay of the German
government and aiding the Bolsheviks
DOCUMENT NO. 3 Jacob Schiff of Kuhn,
Loeb & Company and his position on the Kerensky and Bolshevik regimes
(November 1918)
DOCUMENT NO. 4 Memorandum from William
Boyce Thompson, director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, to the
British prime minister David Lloyd George (December 1917)
DOCUMENT NO. 5 Letter from Felix Frankfurter
to Soviet agent Santeri Nuorteva (May 9, 1918)
DOCUMENT NO. 6 Personnel of the Soviet
Bureau, New York, 1920; list from the New York State Lusk Committee files
DOCUMENT NO. 7 Letter from National
City Bank to the U.S. Treasury referring to Ludwig Martens and Dr. Julius
Hammer (April 15, 1919)
DOCUMENT NO. 8 Letter from Soviet agent
William (Bill) Bobroff to Kenneth Durant (August 3, 1920)
DOCUMENT NO. 9 Memo referring to a
member of the J. P. Morgan firm and the British director of propaganda Lord Northcliffe
(April 13, 1918)
DOCUMENT NO. 10 State Department Memo
(May 29, 1922) regarding General Electric Co.
DOCUMENT NO. 1
Cable from Ambassador Francis in
Petrograd to the Department of State in Washington, D.C., dated March 14, 1917,
and reporting the first stage of the Russian Revolution (861.00/273).
Petrograd
Dated March 14, 1917,
Recd. 15th, 2:30 a.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington
Washington
1287. Unable to send a cablegram since
the eleventh. Revolutionists have absolute control in Petrograd and are making
strenuous efforts to preserve order, which successful except in rare instances.
No cablegrams since your 1251 of the ninth, received March eleventh.
Provisional government organized under the authority of the Douma which refused
to obey the Emperor's order of the adjournment. Rodzianko, president of the
Douma, issuing orders over his own signature. Ministry reported to have
resigned. Ministers found are taken before the Douma, also many Russian
officers and other high officials. Most if not all regiments ordered to
Petrograd have joined the revolutionists after arrival. American colony safe.
No knowledge of any injuries to American citizens.
FRANCIS,
American Ambassador
American Ambassador
On receipt of the preceding cable,
Robert Lansing, Secretary of State, made its contents available to President
Wilson (861.00/273):
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
My Dear Mr. President:
I enclose to you a very important
cablegram which has just come from Petrograd, and also a clipping from the New
York WORLD of this morning, in which a statement is made by Signor Scialoia,
Minister without portfolio in the Italian Cabinet, which is significant in view
of Mr. Francis' report. My own impression is that the Allies know of this
matter and I presume are favorable to the revolutionists since the Court party
has been, throughout the war, secretly pro-German.
Faithfully
yours,
ROBERT LANSING
ROBERT LANSING
Enclosure:
The President,
The White House
The President,
The White House
COMMENT
The significant phrase in the
Lansing-Wilson letter is "My own impression is that the Allies know of
this matter and I presume are favorable to the revolutionists since the Court
party has been, throughout the war, secretly pro-German." It will be
recalled (chapter two) that Ambassador Dodd claimed that Charles R. Crane, of
Westinghouse and of Crane Co. in New York and an adviser to President Wilson,
was involved in this first revolution.
DOCUMENT NO. 2
Memorandum from Great Britain Foreign
Office file FO 371/ 2999 (The War — Russia), October 23, 1917, file no. 3743.
DOCUMENT
Personal (and) Secret.
Disquieting rumors have reached us from
more than one source that Kerensky is in German pay and that he and his
government are doing their utmost to weaken (and) disorganize Russia, so as to
arrive at a situation when no other course but a separate peace would be
possible. Do you consider that there is any ground for such insinuations, and
that the government by refraining from any effective action are purposely
allowing the Bolshevist elements to grow stronger?
If it should be a question of bribery
we might be able to compete successfully if it were known how and through what
agents it could be done, although it is not a pleasant thought.
COMMENT
Refers to information that Kerensky was
in German pay.
DOCUMENT NO. 3
Consists of four parts:
(a) Cable from Ambassador Francis,
April 27, 1917, in Petrograd to Washington, D.C., requesting transmission of a
message from prominent Russian Jewish bankers to prominent Jewish bankers in
New York and requesting their subscription to the Kerensky Liberty Loan
(861.51/139).
(b) Reply from Louis Marshall (May 10,
1917) representing American Jews; he declined the invitation while expressing
support for the American Liberty Loan (861.51/143).
(c) Letter from Jacob Schiff of Kuhn,
Loeb (November 25, 1918) to State Department (Mr. Polk) relaying a message from
Russian Jewish banker Kamenka calling for Allied help against the Bolsheviks ("because Bolshevist government does
not represent Russian People").
(d) Cable from Kamenka relayed by Jacob
Schiff.
DOCUMENTS
(a) Secretary of State
Washington.
1229, twenty-seventh.
Washington.
1229, twenty-seventh.
Please deliver following to Jacob
Schiff, Judge Brandies [sic], Professor Gottheil, Oscar Strauss [sic], Rabbi Wise, Louis Marshall and
Morgenthau:
"We Russian Jews always believed
that liberation of Russia meant also our liberation. Being deeply devoted to
country we placed implicit trust temporary Government. We know the unlimited
economic power of Russia and her immense natural resources and the emancipation
we obtained will enable us to participate development country. We firmly believe
that victorious finish of the war owing help our allies and United States is
near.
Temporary Government issuing now new
public loan of freedom and we feel our national duty support loan high vital
for war and freedom. We are sure that Russia has an unshakeable power of public
credit and will easily bear a.11 necessary financial burden. We formed special
committee of Russian Jews for supporting loan consisting representatives
financial, industrial trading circles and leading public men.
We inform you here of and request our
brethren beyong [sic] the seas to support freedom of Russian
which became now case humanity and world's civilization. We suggest you form
there special committee and let us know of steps you may take Jewish committee
support success loan of freedom. Boris Kamenka, Chairman, Baron Alexander
Gunzburg, Henry Silosberg."
FRANCIS
* * * * *
(b) Dear Mr. Secretary:
After reporting to our associates the
result of the interview which you kindly granted to Mr. Morgenthau, Mr. Straus
and myself, in regard to the advisability of calling for subscriptions to the
Russian Freedom Loan as requested in the cablegram of Baron Gunzburg and
Messrs. Kamenka and Silosberg of Petrograd, which you recently communicated to
us, we have concluded to act strictly upon your advice. Several days ago we
promised our friends at Petrograd an early reply to their call for aid. We
would therefore greatly appreciate the forwarding of the following cablegram,
provided its terms have your approval:
"Boris Kamenka,
Don Azov Bank, Petrograd.
Don Azov Bank, Petrograd.
Our State Department which we have
consulted regards any present attempt toward securing public subscriptions here
for any foreign loans inadvisable; the concentration of all efforts for the
success of American war loans being essential, thereby enabling our Government
to supply funds to its allies at lower interest rates than otherwise possible.
Our energies to help the Russian cause most effectively must therefore
necessarily be directed to encouraging subscriptions to American Liberty Loan.
Schiff, Marshall, Straus, Morgenthau, Wise, Gonheil."
You are of course at liberty to make
any changes in the phraseology of this suggested cablegram which you may deem
desirable and which will indicate that our failure to respond directly to the
request that has come to us is due to our anxiety to make our activities most
efficient.
May I ask you to send me a copy of the
cablegram as forwarded, with a memorandum of the cost so that the Department
may be promptly reimbursed.
I
am, with great respect,
Faithfully yours,
[sgd.] Louis Marshall
Faithfully yours,
[sgd.] Louis Marshall
The Secretary of State
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
*
* * * *
(c) Dear Mr. Polk:
Will you permit me to send you copy of
a cablegram received this morning and which I think, for regularity's sake,
should be brought to the notice of the Secretary of State or your good self,
for such consideration as it might be thought well to give this.
Mr. Kamenka, the sender of this
cablegram, is one of the leading men in Russia and has, I am informed, been
financial advisor both of the Prince Lvoff government and of the Kerensky
government. He is President of the Banque de Commerce de l'Azov Don of
Petrograd, one of the most important financial institutions of Russia, but had,
likely, to leave Russia with the advent of Lenin and his "comrades."
Let me take this opportunity to send
sincere greetings to you and Mrs. Polk and to express the hope that you are now
in perfect shape again, and that Mrs. Polk and the children are in good health.
Faithfully
yours,
[sgd.] Jacob H. Schiff
[sgd.] Jacob H. Schiff
Hon. Frank L. Polk
Counsellor of the State Dept.
Washington, D.C.
Counsellor of the State Dept.
Washington, D.C.
MM-Encl.
[Dated November 25, 1918]
*
* * * *
(d) Translation:
The complete triumph of liberty and
right furnishes me a new opportunity to repeat to you my profound admiration
for the noble American nation. Hope to see now quick progress on the part of
the Allies to help Russia in reestablishing order. Call your attention also to
pressing necessity of replacing in Ukraine enemy troops at the very moment of
their retirement in order to avoid Bolshevist devastation. Friendly
intervention of Allies would be greeted everywhere with enthusiasm and looked
upon as democratic action, because Bolshevist government does not represent
Russian people. Wrote you September 19th. Cordial greetings.
[sgd.]
Kamenka
COMMENT
This is an important series because it
refutes the story of a Jewish bank conspiracy behind the Bolshevik Revolution.
Clearly Jacob Schiff of Kuhn, Loeb was not interested in supporting the
Kerensky Liberty Loan and Schiff went to the trouble of drawing State
Department attention to Kamenka's pleas for Allied intervention against the
Bolsheviks. Obviously Schiff and fellow banker Kamenka, unlike J.P. Morgan and
John D. Rockefeller, were as unhappy about the Bolsheviks as they had been about
the tsars.
DOCUMENT NO. 4
Description
Memorandum from William Boyce Thompson
(director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York) to Lloyd George (prime
minister of Great Britain), December 1917.
DOCUMENT
FIRST
The Russian situation is lost and
Russia lies entirely open to unopposed German exploitation unless a radical
reversal of policy is at once undertaken by the Allies.
SECOND
Because of their shortsighted
diplomacy, the Allies since the Revolution have accomplished nothing
beneficial, and have done considerable harm to their own interests.
THIRD
The Allied representatives in Petrograd
have been lacking in sympathetic understanding of the desire of the
Russian people to attain democracy. Our representatives were first connected
officially with the Czar's regime. Naturally they have been influenced by that
environment.
FOURTH
Meanwhile, on the other hand, the
Germans have conducted propaganda that has undoubtedly aided them materially in
destroying the Government, in wrecking the army and in destroying trade and
industry. If this continues unopposed it may result in the complete
exploitation of the great country by Germany against the Allies.
FIFTH
I base my opinion upon a careful and
intimate study of the situation both outside and inside official circles,
during my stay in Petrograd between August 7 and November 29, 1917.
SIXTH
"What can be done to improve the
situation of the Allies in Russia"?
The diplomatic personnel, both British
and American, should be changed to one democratic in spirit and capable of
sustaining democratic sympathy.
There should be erected a powerful,
unofficial committee, with headquarters in Petrograd, to operate in the
background, so to speak, the influence of which in matters of policy should be
recognized and accepted by the DIPLOMATIC, CONSULAR and MILITARY officials of
the Allies. Such committee should be so composed in personnel as to make it
possible to entrust to it wide discretionary powers. It would presumably
undertake work in various channels. The nature of which will become obvious as
the task progresses; it. would aim to meet all new conditions as they might
arise.
SEVENTH
It is impossible now to define at all
completely the scope of this new Allied committee. I can perhaps assist to a
better understanding of its possible usefulness and service by making a brief
reference to the work which I started and which is now in the hands of Raymond
Robins, who is well and favorably known to Col. Buchan — a work which in the
future will undoubtedly have to be somewhat altered and added to in order to
meet new conditions. My work has been performed chiefly through a Russian
"Committee on Civic Education" aided by Madame Breshkovsky, the
Grandmother of the Revolution. She was assisted by Dr. David Soskice, the
private secretary of the then Prime Minister Kerensky (now of London); Nicholas
Basil Tchaikovsky, at one time Chairman of the Peasants Co-operative Society,
and by other substantial social revolutionaries constituting the saving element
of democracy as between the extreme "Right" of the official and
property-owning class, and the extreme "Left" embodying the most
radical elements of the socialistic parties. The aim of this committee, as
stated in a cable message from Madame Breshkovsky to President Wilson, can be
gathered from this quotation: "A widespread education is necessary to make
Russia an orderly democracy. We plan to bring this education to the soldier in
the camp, to the workman in the factory, to the peasant in the village."
Those aiding in this work realized that for centuries the masses had been under
the heel of Autocracy which had given them not protection but oppression; that
a democratic form of government in Russian could be maintained only BY THE
DEFEAT OF THE GERMAN ARMY; BY THE OVERTHROW OF GERMAN AUTOCRACY. Could free
Russia, unprepared for great governmental responsibilities, uneducated,
untrained, be expected long to survive with imperial Germany her next door
neighbor? Certainly not. Democratic Russia would become speedily the greatest
war prize the world has even known.
The Committee designed to have an
educational center in each regiment of the Russian army, in the form of
Soldiers' Clubs. These clubs were organized as rapidly as possible, and
lecturers were employed to address the soldiers. The lecturers were in reality
teachers, and it should be remembered that there is a percentage of 90 among
the soldiers of Russia who can neither read nor write. At the time of the
Bolshevik outbreak many of these speakers were in the field making a fine
impression and obtaining excellent results. There were 250 in the city of
Moscow alone. It was contemplated by the Committee to have at least 5000 of
these lecturers. We had under publication many newspapers of the "A B
C" class, printing matter in the simplest style, and were assisting about
100 more. These papers carried the appeal for patriotism, unity and
co-ordination into the homes of the workmen and the peasants.
After the overthrow of the last
Kerensky government we materially aided the dissemination of the Bolshevik
literature, distributing it through agents and by aeroplanes to the German
army. If the suggestion is permissible, it might be well to consider whether it
would not be desirable to have this same Bolshevik literature sent into Germany
and Austria across the West and Italian fronts.
EIGHTH
The presence of a small number of
Allied troops in Petrograd would certainly have done much to prevent the
overthrow of the Kerensky government in November. I should like to suggest for
your consideration, if present conditions continue, the concentration of all
the British and French Government employees in Petrograd, and if the necessity
should arise it might be formed into a fairly effective force. It might be
advisable even to pay a small sum to a Russian force. There is also a large
body of volunteers recruited in Russia, many of them included in the
Intelligentsia of "Center" class, and these have done splendid work
in the trenches. They might properly be aided.
NINTH
If you ask for a further programme I
should say that it is impossible to give it now. I believe that intelligent and
courageous work will still prevent Germany from occupying the field to itself
and thus exploiting Russia at the expense of the Allies. There will be many
ways in which this service can be rendered which will become obvious as the
work progresses.
COMMENT
Following this memorandum the British
war cabinet changed its policy to one of tepid pro-Bolshevism. Note that
Thompson admits to distribution of Bolshevik literature by his agents. The confusion
over the date on which Thompson left Russia (he states November 29th in this
document) is cleared up by the Pirnie papers at the Hoover Institution. There
were several changes of travel plans and Thompson was still in Russia in early
December. The memorandum was probably written in Petrograd in late November.
DOCUMENT NO. 5
DESCRIPTION
Letter dated May 9, 1918, from Felix
Frankfurter (then special assistant to the secretary of war) to Santeri
Nuorteva (alias for Alexander Nyberg), a Bolshevik agent in the United States.
Listed as Document No. 1544 in the Lusk Committee files, New York:
DOCUMENT
WAR
DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
May 9, 1918
WASHINGTON
May 9, 1918
My dear Mr. Nhorteva [sic]:
Thank you very much for your letter of
the 4th. I knew you would understand the purely friendly and wholly unofficial
character of our talk, and I appreciate the prompt steps you have taken to
correct your Sirola* letter. Be wholly
assured that nothing has transpired which diminishes my interest in the
questions which you present. Quite the contrary. I am much interested in** the considerations
you are advancing and for the point of view you are urging. The issues*** at stake are the
interests that mean much for the whole world. To meet them adequately we need
all the knowledge and wisdom we can possibly get****.
Cordially
yours,
Felix Frankfurter
Felix Frankfurter
Santeri Nuorteva, Esq.
*
Yrjo Sirola was a Bolshevik and commissar in Finland.
** Original text, "continually grateful to you for."
*** Original text, "interests."
**** Original text added "these days."
** Original text, "continually grateful to you for."
*** Original text, "interests."
**** Original text added "these days."
COMMENT
This letter by Frankfurter was written
to Nuorteva/Nyberg, a Bolshevik agent in the United States, at a time when
Frankfurter held an official position as special assistant to Secretary of War
Baker in the War Department. Apparently Nyberg was willing to change a letter
to commissar "Sirola" according to Frankfurter's instructions. The
Lusk Committee acquired the original Frankfurter draft including Frankfurter's
changes and not the letter received by Nyberg.
THE SOVIET BUREAU IN 1920
Position
|
Name
|
Citizenship
|
Born
|
Former Employment
|
Representa
tive of USSR
|
Ludwig
C.A.K. MARTENS
|
German
|
Russia
|
V-P
of Weinberg & Posner Engineer ing (120 Broadway)
|
Office
manager
|
Gregory
WEINSTEIN
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
Journalist
|
Secretary
|
Santeri
NUORTEVA
|
Finnish
|
Russia
|
Journalist
|
Assistant
secretary
|
Kenneth
DURANT
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
(1)
U.S. Committee on Public Information
(2) Former aide to Colonel House |
Private
secre tary to NUOR TEVA
|
Dorothy
KEEN
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
High
school
|
Translator
|
Mary
MODELL
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
School
in Russia
|
File
clerk
|
Alexander
COLEMAN
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
High
school
|
Telephone
clerk
|
Blanche
ABUSHEVITZ
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
High
school
|
Office
attendant
|
Nestor
KUNTZEVICH
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
—
|
Military
expert
|
Lt.
Col. Boris Tagueeff Roustam BEK
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
Military
critic on Daily Express (London)
|
Commercial Department
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
A.
HELLER
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
International
Oxy gen Company
|
Secretary
|
Ella
TUCH
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
firms
|
Clerk
|
Rose
HOLLAND
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
Gary
School League
|
Clerk
|
Henrietta
MEEROWICH
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
Social
worker
|
Clerk
|
Rose
BYERS
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
School
|
Statistician
|
Vladimir
OLCHOVSKY
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
Russian
Army
|
Information
Department
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Evans
CLARK
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
Princeton
University
|
Clerk
|
Nora
G. SMITHMAN
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
Ford
Peace Expedition
|
Steno
|
Etta
FOX
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
War
Trade Board
|
—
|
Wilfred
R. HUMPHRIES
|
U.K.
|
—
|
American
Red Cross
|
Technical
Dept.
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Arthur
ADAMS
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
—
|
Educational
Dept.
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
William
MALISSOFF
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
Columbia
University
|
Medical
Dept.
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Leo
A. HUEBSCH
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
Medical
doctor
|
|
D.
H. DUBROWSKY
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
Medical
doctor
|
Legal
Dept.
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Morris
HILLQUIT
|
Lithuanian
|
—
|
—
|
|
Counsel
retained:
|
|
|
|
|
Charles
RECHT
|
|
|
|
|
Dudley
Field MALONE
|
|
|
|
|
George
Cordon BATTLE
|
|
|
|
Dept.
of Economics & Statistics
|
|
|
|
|
Director
|
Isaac
A. HOURWICH
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
Bureau of Census
|
|
Eva
JOFFE
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
National
Child
Labor Commission |
Steno
|
Elizabeth
GOLDSTEIN
|
Russian
|
U.S.
|
Student
|
Editorial
Staff of Soviet Russia
|
|
|
|
|
Managing
editor
|
Jacob
w. HARTMANN
|
U.S.
|
U.S.
|
College
of City
of New York |
Steno
|
Ray
TROTSKY
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
Student
|
Translator
|
Theodnre
BRESLAUER
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
—
|
Clerk
|
Vastly
IVANOFF
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
—
|
Clerk
|
David
OLDFIELD
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
—
|
Translator
|
J.
BLANKSTEIN
|
Russian
|
Russia
|
—
|
SOURCE: |
U.S., House, Conditions in Russia (Committee on Foreign Affairs), 66th Cong., 3rd sess. (Washington, D.C., 1921). |
|||
|
See also British list in U.S. State
Department Decimal File, 316-22-656, which also has the name of Julius
Hammer.
|
DOCUMENT NO. 7
DESCRIPTION
Letter from National City Bank of New
York to the U.S. Treasury, April 15, 1919, with regard to Ludwig Martens and
his associate Dr. Julius Hammer (316-118).
DOCUMENT
The
National City Bank of New York
New York, April 15, 1919
New York, April 15, 1919
Honorable Joel Rathbone,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D.C.
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. Rathbone:
I beg to hand you herewith photographs
of two documents which we have received this morning by registered mail from a
Mr. L. Martens who claims to be the representative in the United States of the
Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic, and witnessed by a Dr. Julius Hammer
for the Acting Director of the Financial Department.
You will see from these documents that
there is a demand being made upon us for any and all funds on deposit with us
in the name of Mr. Boris Bakhmeteff, alleged Russian Ambassador in the United
States, or in the name of any individual, committee, or mission purporting to
act in behalf of the Russian Government in subordination to Mr. Bakhmeteff or
directly.
We should be very glad to receive from
you whatever advice or instructions you may care to give us in this matter.
Yours
respectfully,
[sgd.] J. H. Carter,
Vice President.
[sgd.] J. H. Carter,
Vice President.
JHC:M
Enclosure
COMMENTS
The significance of this letter is
related to the long-time association (1917-1974) of the Hammer family with the
Soviets.
DOCUMENT NO. 8
DESCRIPTION
Letter dated August 3, 1920, from
Soviet courier "Bill" Bobroff to Kenneth Durant, former aide to
Colonel House. Taken from Bobroff by U.S. Department of Justice.
DOCUMENT
Department of Justice
Bureau of Investigation,
15 Park Row, New York City, N. Y.,
August 10, 1920
Bureau of Investigation,
15 Park Row, New York City, N. Y.,
August 10, 1920
Director Bureau of Investigation
United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.
United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.
Dear Sir: Confirming telephone
conversation with Mr. Ruch today, I am transmitting herewith original documents
taken from the effects of B. L. Bobroll, steamship Frederick VIII.
The letter addressed Mr. Kenneth
Durant, signed by Bill, dated August 3, 1920, together with the translation
from "Pravda," July 1, 1920, signed by Trotzki, and copies of
cablegrams were found inside the blue envelope addressed Mr. Kenneth Durant,
228 South Nineteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. This blue envelope was in turn
sealed inside the white envelope attached.
Most of the effects of Mr. Bobroff
consisted of machinery catalogues, specifications, correspondence regarding the
shipment of various equipment, etc., to Russian ports. Mr. Bobroff was closely
questioned by Agent Davis and the customs authorities, and a detailed report of
same will be sent to Washington.
Very
truly yours,
G. F. Lamb,
Division Superintendent
G. F. Lamb,
Division Superintendent
LETTER TO KENNETH DURANT
Dear Kenneth: Thanks for your most
welcome letter. I have felt very much cut off and hemmed in, a feeling which
has been sharply emphasized by recent experiences. I have felt distressed at
inability to force a different attitude toward the bureau and to somehow get
funds to you. To cable $5,000 to you, as was done last week, is but a sorry
joke. I hope the proposal to sell gold in America, about which we have been
cabling recently, will soon be found practicable. Yesterday we cabled asking if
you could sell 5,000,000 rubles at a minimum of 45 cents, present market rate
being 51.44 cents. That would net at least $2,225,000. L's present need is
$2,000,000 to pay Niels Juul & Co., in Christiania, for the first part of
the coal shipment from America to Vardoe, Murmansk, and Archangel. The first
ship is nearing Vardoe and the second left New York about July 28. Altogether,
Niels Juul & Co., or rather the Norges' Bank, of Christiania, on their and
our account, hold $11,000,000 gold rubles of ours, which they themselves
brought from Reval to Christiania, as security for our coal order and the
necessary tonnage, but the offers for purchase of this gold that they have so
far been able to get are very poor, the best being $575 per kilo, whereas the
rate offered by the American Mint or Treasury Department is now $644.42, and
considering the large sum involved it would be a shame to let it go at too
heavy a loss. I hope that ere you get this you will have been able to effect
the sale, at the same time thus getting a quarter of a million dollars or more
for the bureau. If we can't in some way pay the $2,000,000 in Christiania, that
was due four days ago, within a very short time, Niels Juul & Co. will have
the right to sell our gold that they now hold at the best price then
obtainable, which, as stated above, is quite low.
We don't know yet how the Canadian
negotiations are going on. We understand Nuorteva turned over the strings to
Shoen when N.'s arrest seemed imminent. We don't at this writing know where
Nuorteva is. Our guess is that after his enforced return to England from
Esbjerg, Denmark, Sir Basil Thomson had him shipped aboard a steamer for Reval,
but we have not yet heard from Reval that he has arrived there, and we
certainly would hear from Goukovski or from N. himself. Humphries saw Nuorteva
at Esbjerg, and is himself in difficulties with the Danish police because of
it. All his connections are being probed for; his passport has been taken away:
he has been up twice for examination, and it looks as if he will be lucky if he
escapes deportation. It was two weeks ago that Nuorteva arrived at Esbjerg, 300
miles from here, but having no Danish visa, the Danish authorities refused to
permit him to land, and he was transferred to a steamer due to sail at 8
o'clock the following morning. By depositing 200 kroner he was allowed shore
leave for a couple of hours. Wanting to get Copenhagen on long-distance wire
and having practically no more money, he once more pawned that gold watch of
his for 25 kroner, therewith getting in touch with Humphries, who within half
an hour jumped aboard the night train, slept on the floor, and arrived at
Esbjerg at 7:30. Humphries found Nuorteva, got permission from the captain to
go aboard, had 20 minutes with N., then had to go ashore and the boat sailed.
Humphries was then invited to the police office by two plain-clothes men, who
had been observing the proceedings. He was closely questioned, address taken,
then released, and that night took train back to Copenhagen. He sent telegrams
to Ewer, of Daily Herald, Shoen, and to Kliskho, at 128 New Bond Street, urging
them to be sure and meet Nuorteva's boat, so that N. couldn't again be spirited
away, but we don't know yet just what happened. The British Government vigorously
denied that they had any intention of sending him to Finland. Moscow has
threatened reprisals if anything happens to him. Meantime, the investigation of
H. has begun. He was called upon at his hotel by the police, requested to go to
headquarters (but not arrested), and we understand that his case is now before
the minister of justice. Whatever may be the final outcome, Humphries comments
upon the reasonable courtesy shown him, contrasting it with the ferocity of the
Red raids in America.
He found that at detective headquarters
they knew of some of his outgoing letters and telegrams.
I was interested in your favorable
comment upon the Krassin interview of Tobenken's (you do not mention the
Litvinoff one), because I had to fight like a demon with L. to get the
opportunities for Tobenken. Through T. arrived with a letter from Nuorteva, as
also did Arthur Ruhl, L. brusquely turned down in less than one minute the
application T. was making to go into Russia, would hardly take time to hear
him, saying it was impossible to allow two correspondents from the same paper
to enter Russia. He gave a visa to Ruhl, largely because of a promise made last
summer to Ruhl by L. Ruhl then went off to Reval, there to await the permission
that L. had cabled asking Moscow to give. Tobenken, a nervous, almost a broken
man because of his turn down, stayed here. I realized the mistake that had been
made by the snap judgment, and started in on the job of getting it changed.
Cutting a long story short, I got him to Reval with a letter to Goukovsky from
L. In the meantime Moscow refused Ruhl, notwithstanding L's visa. L. was
maddened at affront to his visa, and insisted that it be honored. It was, and
Ruhl prepared to leave. Suddenly word came from Moscow to Ruhl revoking the
permission and to Litvinoff, saying that information had reached Moscow that
Ruhl was in service of State Department. At time of writing, both Tobenken and
Ruhl are in Reval, stuck.
I told L. this morning of the boat
leaving tomorrow and of the courier B. available, asked him if he had anything
to write to Martens, offered to take it in shorthand for him, but no, he said
he had nothing to write about that I might perhaps send duplicates of our
recent cables to Martens.
Kameneff passed by here on a British
destroyer en route to London, and didn't stop off here at all, and Krassin went
direct from Stockholm. Of the negotiations, allied and Polish, and of the
general situation you know about as much as we do here. L's negotiations with
the Italians have finally resulted in establishing of mutual representation.
Our representative, Vorovsky, has already gone to Italy and their
representative, M. Gravina, is en route to Russia. We have just sent two ship
loads of Russian wheat to Italy from Odessa.
Give my regards to the people of your
circle that I know. With all good wishes to you.
Sincerely
yours,
Bill
Bill
The batch of letters you sent — 5
Cranbourne Road, Charlton cum Hardy, Manchester, has not yet arrived.
L's recommendation to Moscow, since M.
asked to move to Canada, is that M. should be appointed there, and that N.,
after having some weeks in Moscow acquainting himself first hand, should be
appointed representative to America.
L. is sharply critical of the bureau
for giving too easily visés and recommendations. He was obviously surprised and
incensed when B. reached here with contracts secured in Moscow upon strength of
letters given to him by M. The later message from M. evidently didn't reach
Moscow. What L. plans to do about it I don't know. I would suggest that M. cable
in cipher his recommendation to L. in this matter. L. would have nothing to do
with B. here. Awkward situation may be created.
L. instanced also the Rabinoff
recommendation.
Two envelopes, Mr. Kenneth Durant, 228
South Nineteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.
SOURCE: U.S. State Department Decimal
File, 316-119-458/64.
NOTE: IDENTIFICATION OF INDIVIDUALS
William
(Bill) L. BOBROFF
|
Soviet
courier and agent. Operated Bobroff Foreign Trading and Engineering Company
of Milwaukee. Invented the voting system used in the Wisconsin Legilature.
|
Kenneth
DURANT
|
Aide
to Colonel House; see text.
|
SHOEN
|
Employed
by International Oxygen Co., owned by Heller, a prominent financier and
Communist.
|
EWER
|
Soviet
agent, reporter for London Daily Herald.
|
KLISHKO
|
Soviet
agent in Scandinavia
|
NUORTEVA
|
Also
known as Alexander Nyberg, first Soviet representative in United States; see
text.
|
Sir
Basil THOMPSON
|
Chief
of British Intelligence
|
"L"
|
LITVINOFF.
|
"H"
|
Wilfred
Humphries, associated with Martens and Litvinoff, member of Red Cross in
Russia.
|
KRASSIN
|
Bolshevik
commissar of trade and labor, former head of Siemens-Schukert in Russia.
|
COMMENTS
This letter suggests close ties between
Bobroff and Durant.
DOCUMENT NO. 9
DESCRIPTION
Memorandum referring to a request from
Davison (Morgan partner) to Thomas Thacher (Wall Street attorney associated
with the Morgans) and passed to Dwight Morrow (Morgan partner), April 13, 1918.
DOCUMENT
The
Berkeley Hotel, London
April 13th, 1918.
April 13th, 1918.
Hon. Walter H. Page,
American Ambassador to England,
London.
American Ambassador to England,
London.
Dear Sir:
Several days ago I received a request
from Mr. H. P. Davison, Chairman of the War Council of the American Red Cross,
to confer with Lord Northcliffe regarding the situation in Russia, and then to
proceed to Paris for other conferences. Owing to Lord Northcliffe's illness I
have not been able to confer with him, but am leaving with Mr. Dwight W.
Morrow, who is now staying at the Berkeley Hotel, a memorandum of the situation
which Mr. Morrow will submit to Lord Northcliffe on the latter's return to
London.
For your information and the
information of the Department I enclose to you, herewith, a copy of the
memorandum.
Respectfully yours,
[sgd.] Thomas D. Thacher.
[sgd.] Thomas D. Thacher.
COMMENT
Lord Northcliffe had just been
appointed director of propaganda. This is interesting in the light of William
B. Thompson's subsidizing of Bolshevik propaganda and his connection with the
Morgan-Rockefeller interests.
DOCUMENT NO. 10
DESCRIPTION
This document is a memorandum from D.C.
Poole, Division of Russian Affairs in the Department of State, to the secretary
of state concerning a conversation with Mr. M. Oudin of General Electric.
DOCUMENT
May
29, 1922
Mr. Secretary:
Mr. Oudin, of the General Electric
Company, informed me this morning that his company feels that the time is
possibly approaching to begin conversations with Krassin relative to a
resumption of business in Russia. I told him that it is the view of the
Department that the course to be pursued in this matter by American firms is a
question of business judgment and that the Department would certainly interpose
no obstacles to an American firm resuming operations in Russia on any basis
which the firm considered practicable.
He said that negotiations are now in
progress between the General Electric Company and the Allgemeine Elektrizitats
Gesellschaft for a resumption of the working agreement which they had before
the war. He expects that the agreement to be made will include a provision for
cooperation of Russia.
Respectfully,
DCP D.C. Poole
DCP D.C. Poole
COMMENT
This is an important document as it
relates to the forthcoming resumption of relations with Russia by an important
American company. It illustrates that the initiative came from the company, not
from the State Department, and that no consideration was given to the effect of
transfer of General Electric technology to a self-declared enemy. This GE
agreement was the first step down a road of major technical transfers that led
directly to the deaths of 100,000 Americans and countless allies.
Selected
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