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John Lowenthal (I)

Relevance: 5%      Posted on: September 3, 2013

"Venona and Alger Hiss" by John Lowenthal, from Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 15, No. 3 (Autumn 2000) The other curious thing about the Hiss case is the psychology of believing that Hiss was a spy, which requires abandoning much of what we know about rational thought. - Molly Ivins, columnist (1996)[1] The Hiss case blazed into public life in 1948 and promptly became an icon of the Cold War in America. It catapulted Richard…

Jeff Kisseloff (2009) – I

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: December 14, 2015

Jeff Kisseloff points to a series of inaccuracies in a book written to put the Hiss case in its historical context, for Yale University Press's "Icons of America" series. "A Battle Lost" by Jeff Kisseloff Susan Jacoby, Alger Hiss and the Battle for History (Yale University Press, New Haven: 2009).   On November 17, 1948, Whittaker Chambers led congressional investigators to the "soon-to-be-famous pumpkin-encased microfilm, containing copies of classified State Department documents, on his Maryland…

Charles Alan Wright (1952)

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: December 13, 2015

In 1973, then-President Richard M. Nixon hired Charles Alan Wright, at that time a professor at the University of Texas Law School, to represent him in his battle to keep the Watergate tapes from the public. Twenty-two years before, Wright wrote an article in the University of Minnesota Law Review, in which he declared that the conviction of Alger Hiss was a miscarriage of justice. In 1952, he again took issue with the verdict, this…

The “Perlo List”

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: November 30, 2015

Introducing a Document Missing From The Haunted Wood By Dr. Svetlana Chervonnaya Anatoly Gorsky's "23 December 1949 report to General S.R. Savchenko" – also known as "Gorsky's List" – is not the only puzzle Alexander Vassiliev, the Russian co-author of Allen Weinstein's The Haunted Wood, produced in the course of his London libel suit against Frank Cass & Co., Ltd. to support his claim that he had seen the name of Alger Hiss in KGB (now…

Bruce Craig

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: September 3, 2013

"Alger Hiss at Yalta," an excerpt from an article by Dr. Bruce Craig about Alger Hiss and his trip to Russia in February 1945 as part of the American delegation to the Yalta Conference. R. Bruce Craig, an American historian who has written extensively about Cold War subjects, is the author of Treasonable Doubt: The Harry Dexter White Spy Case (Lawrence, KS, University Press of Kansas, 2004) and a forthcoming biography of Alger Hiss.  According…

The Berle Notes

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: January 12, 2016

Adolf Berle’s Rediscovered Notes of his 1939 Meeting with Chambers The handwritten notes that Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle took during a conversation at his home, in Washington, DC, with Whittaker Chambers on September 2, 1939 were later typed up by a secretary. Subsequently, in 1943, the FBI made its own typed copy from Berle’s typed copy. The original notes disappeared at some point in 1948, or shortly thereafter, and Berle himself assumed they…

John Lowenthal (II)

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: September 3, 2013

In Memory of John Lowenthal, by Jeff Kisseloff John Lowenthal, who died on September 9, 2003 in London at the age of 78, had a wealth of interests and accomplishments. He was a gifted cellist, a law professor, a film-maker, a champion of Native American rights and, among other things, the principal author of a Connecticut law governing the siting of community antenna television towers. He would probably, however, be content that he may well…

Lewis Hartshorn’s Alger Hiss

Relevance: 4%      Posted on: December 19, 2015

Although 4,800 pages of Hiss case grand-jury testimony were made public in 1999, Lewis Hartshorn’s Alger Hiss, Whittaker Chambers and the Case That Ignited McCarthyism, published in 2013 and years in the making, is the first Hiss-case book to make extensive use of these documents. In an immersive and exhaustive study of the evidence, from the pre-indictment phase of the case that unfolded over the summer and fall of 1948, Hartshorn, an independent scholar based…

David Levin (1976)

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: December 13, 2015

David Levin (1924-1998), who was Thomas Jefferson Professor of Arts and Sciences at the University of Virginia, discusses and compares three firsthand accounts of the Hiss Case: Richard Nixon's Six Crises, Whittaker Chambers' Witness and Alger Hiss's In the Court of Public Opinion, while also explaining how and why he came to believe in Hiss's innocence. Levin's essay was originally published in 1976 in the Virginia Quarterly Review. (This is the first of Levin's three…

Jeff Kisseloff (2007)

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: December 22, 2015

In “The End of the Journey: From Whittaker Chambers to George W. Bush,” a 6,000-word essay that was the cover story in the July 2, 2007 issue of The New Republic, Sam Tanenhaus, the author of a well-received biography of Whittaker Chambers, criticized recent scholarship indicating that Alger Hiss could not have been the World War II Soviet agent codenamed "ALES." In rebuttal, Jeff Kisseloff offered a detailed analysis of the numerous inaccuracies in Tanenhaus’s…

Bruce Craig, 2001

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: August 25, 2015

The Hiss-Chambers Controversy: Records of the House Un-American Activities Committee By Bruce Craig Due to the efforts made on behalf of a coalition of historians and archivists, the records of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA, or more commonly known and hereafter referred to as HUAC), are now open to the public.[1] The records are housed in the National Archives and Records Administration's Center for Legislative Archives in Washington D.C. [2] Access to Committee…

Willert’s Affidavit

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: August 26, 2013

Publisher Paul Willert’s supporting affidavit, dated March 14, 1952, that was submitted with the 1952 Motion for a New Trial in the Hiss case. Supporting Affidavit of Paul Willert PAUL WILLERT, being duly sworn, deposes and says: 1. I live at 14 Halsey Street, London, S.W.3., and am a business executive. I am a British subject by birth and was educated at Eton and later at Balliol College, Oxford, where I took the degree of…

Martin Roberts’ Secret History

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: December 19, 2015

Secret History, a book many years in the making, scrutinizes contested verdicts and miscarriages of justice, with special emphasis on the Hiss case. Martin Roberts, an archivist and British citizen living in Belgium, began his research while still in law school. His book, called “meticulous” and “compelling” by Kirkus Reviews, offers an in-depth analysis of Whittaker Chambers’ veracity, and the first extensive, critical reappraisal of Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case. That 1978 book by Allen Weinstein…

Building a Typewriter

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: August 14, 2013

"The $7,500 Typewriter I Built For Alger Hiss," by Martin Tytell, as told to Harry Kursh (True magazine, August 1952) It began for me in the latter part of March 1950, less than two months after Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury, had implied that he was the victim of a "forgery by typewriter." I was sitting at my desk behind a jungle of papers and typewriter parts, when a tall, lean young man of about 28…

Jeff Kisseloff (2009) – II

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: December 14, 2015

Jeff Kisseloff reviews a book that claims that the Hiss case is now "closed," as a result of information in the notes taken by Alexander Vassiliev, when in the 1990s he was shown records of Soviet intelligence operations in the United States. This review was written with considerable research assistance from the Moscow-based historian, Dr. Svetlana Chervonnaya. To see more of her work related to Soviet espionage during the Cold War, visit her Web site, DocumentsTalk.com.…

About This Site

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: May 7, 2011

“The Alger Hiss Story” website was created in 2001 with grants from The Nation Institute as the online presentation of the case for the defense of Alger Hiss (1904-1996), who was said to have been a Russian spy while part of the New Deal administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. When still only 40, Hiss served as the Secretary General of the 1945 United Nations organizing conference. His federal trial near the beginning of the…

NYU Hiss Conference (2007)

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: November 28, 2015

On April 5, 2007, New York University’s Center for the United States and the Cold War, which had recently been established to create an international community of scholars interested in re-examining the Cold War and its ongoing impact on American life, hosted its inaugural conference, “Alger Hiss and History.” “When Hiss was accused of spying for the Soviet Union and convicted of perjury,” said the conference’s sponsors, this “helped discredit the New Deal, legitimize the…

Max Bedacht

Relevance: 3%      Posted on: August 14, 2013

On Whittaker Chambers (An excerpt from an unpublished memoir) Max Bedacht (1883-1972) was a Communist activist and theoretician. After an impoverished childhood and career as a journeyman, barber, and trade-union leader in Germany and Switzerland, he immigrated to the United States in 1908, where he supported himself as a barber and German language newspaper editor. Bedacht became an early leader of the German Federation of the Socialist Party in California, while continuing to edit German language…

Stephen Jones (1978)

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: December 13, 2015

Stephen Jones, an Enid, Oklahoma defense attorney who has been called "the Atticus Finch of Oklahoma," was a research assistant to former Vice President Richard M. Nixon in 1964 and the legislative assistant to Congressman (later Secretary of Defense) Donald Rumsfeld. As Jones's law firm has noted, for more than 30 years Stephen Jones has been "involved in 'high-profile' cases involving alleged acts of terrorism and/or disloyalty, stretching back to the Vietnam war and including…

Brock Brower, 1960

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: December 10, 2015

"The Problems of Alger Hiss" by Brock Brower (Esquire, December 1960) Even at a glance - a second glance really, because the first is an almost instinctive reaction to the name itself, still evocative of enshadowed political events from a decade ago: a pumpkin stuffed with microfilm, a manila envelope crammed with typescripts of State Department documents and hidden down a dumb-waiter, a gift-horse red rug, a thrice-denied 1929 Ford, a ludicrously ominous prothonotary warbler,…