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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › William_DoddWilliam Dodd - Wikipedia

    William E. Dodd Jr. (1905–1952), U.S. leftist politician, New Dealer, and possible Soviet sympathizer. William Dodd (priest) (1729–1777), English clergyman who was hanged for fraud in 1777. William J. Dodd (1862–1930), American architect. Bill Dodd (1909–1991), Louisiana politician and writer. William Huston Dodd (1844–1930), Member ...

  2. www.historians.org › william-e-dodd › william-e-dodd-biographyWilliam E. Dodd Biography | AHA

    William E. Dodd (October 21, 1869–February 9, 1940) was professor of history at the University of Chicago. Dodd specialized in the history of the American South, and served as ambassador to Germany from 1933–37.

  3. Abstract. This chapter focuses on William Dodd's tenure in Berlin in the 1930s as United States ambassador to Germany. More specifically, it considers Dodd's attitudes toward Adolf Hitler and the Nazis as well as America's increasing isolationism. It also cites Dodd's distress at having to represent a country stripping itself of moral and ...

  4. 9 mag 2011 · Germany, William Dodd. Dodd arrived in Berlin with his wife Mattie and daughter Martha in 1933. At first, Dodd thought Hitler wouldn't last. It took a while before Dodd realized how dangerous Hitler was for Germany and the world. Larson's new book is called "In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin."

  5. 2 mag 2011 · Ambassador Dodd met with him twice in 1933, noting later how unhinged Hitler seemed, says Larson. “Suddenly [in their first meeting] this ordinary statesman becomes absolutely vehement, savage ...

  6. 29 nov 2012 · Abstract. This book offers a look at the life of William Dodd, an American diplomat stationed in Nazi Germany. The book exposes the dark underbelly of 1930s Germany and explores the terrible burden of those who realized the horror that was to come. Dodd was the U.S. Ambassador to Germany from 1933 to 1937, arriving in Berlin with his wife and ...

  7. William E. Dodd to Bessie L. Pierce, August 20, 1934. Writing from the American embassy in Berlin, Dodd argued that the Depression posed the same political dangers as those confronted by Andrew Jackson in his battle with Nicholas Biddle's Bank of the United States a century earlier.