Secret Agents Arrive in America
Germany’s interest in the Panama
Canal became acute only after Japan joined the Rome-Berlin
axis “to exchange information about Communism” an
exchange which appears to be more concerned with military
secrets than with Communism.
The activities of Japanese and Nazi
agents in Latin American countries and especially
around the Canal, the organizing of a fascist rebellion
in Mexico to the south of us and intensive propaganda
carried on in Canada to the north, are but part of
the broad invasion of the Western Hemisphere by the
Fifth Column an invasion which began almost
immediately after Hitler got into power. Since
the United States is the most important country in
the Americas, it was and is subject to special concentration
by secret Nazi agents.
The first threads spun spread out
in many directions, with propaganda as the base from
which to broaden espionage activities. One of
the earliest of the secret agents sent to this country
was an American, Colonel Edwin Emerson, soldier of
fortune, mediocre author and fairly competent war
correspondent. Emerson lived at 215 East 15th
Street, New York City and had an office in Room 1923
at 17 Battery Place, the address of the German Consulate
General. Room 1923 was rented by a representative
of the German Consul General. The rent paid was
nominal and in at least one instance, to avoid its
being traced, it was paid in cash by Hitler’s
diplomatic representative. Prior to the renting
of this room, Emerson had desk space with the German
Consulate General for six weeks.
The May 15, 1933, issue of the Amerika
Deutsche Post, a Nazi propaganda organ published
in New York, carried an advertisement stating that
the editor of this paper made his headquarters in
Emerson’s room. This was the first indication
that Emerson had arrived in this country to handle
Nazi propaganda.
For many years Emerson had wandered
about the globe covering assignments for newspapers
and magazines and always bragging about his Americanism
and his “patriotism.” One of his great
boasts was that he was with Roosevelt’s Rough
Riders during the Spanish-American war; what he never
told was that Roosevelt brought him back from Cuba
in irons.
From his room paid for by the German
Consul General, Emerson launched the “Friends
of Germany." This organization was the chief disseminator
of pro-Hitler and anti-democratic propaganda in the
United States, but the Colonel directed the propaganda
somewhat stupidly. The “Friends of Germany”
held meetings with “storm troops” in full
uniform; bitter attacks were made against Jews and
Catholics at large mass meetings. Visiting officers
and sailors, from German ships docked in New York,
appeared at these meetings to preach fascism and Nazism,
until a wave of resentment swept the country.
One of the keynotes of these talks was sounded by
Edward F. Sullivan of Boston at a meeting held at
Turnhalle, Lexington Avenue and 85th Street, on
June 5th, 1934, when he repeatedly referred to Jews
as “dirty, stinking kikes” and announced
that he proposed to organize a strong Nazi group in
Boston.
Propaganda Minister Goebbels in Berlin
became annoyed at the public reaction, and the entire
Nazi foreign propaganda service was reorganized.
Emerson was ordered back to Germany for explicit instructions
on how to carry on propaganda without antagonizing
the entire country.
In October, 1933, Royal Scott Gulden
(who has no connection with the mustard business,
but is a distant relative of the head of it), who
had been cooperating with Emerson, tried to organize
an espionage system to watch Communists. In this
effort Gulden enlisted the aid of Fred R. Marvin,
a professional patriot. At three o’clock
on the afternoon of March 10, 1934, a very secret
meeting was called by Gulden at 139 East 57th Street.
Present were Gulden, J. Schmidt and William Dudley
Pelley, head of the Silver Shirts.
The meeting decided to adopt anti-semitic
propaganda to play on latent anti-semitism as
part of the first campaign to attract followers.
The country was in a serious economic crisis with
considerable unrest throughout the land. Both
Hitler and Mussolini got into power in periods of
great unrest by promising peace and security to the
bewildered people. Men of means were terrified
by fears of “revolution” and this group,
directed by Emerson, began to preach that the revolution
might come any minute and that the Jews were responsible
for Moscow, the Third International, the Mississippi
flood and anything else that troubled the people.
When the meeting ended the “Order of ’76"
had been born and Royal Scott Gulden appointed Secretary
to direct espionage and propaganda.
From the very beginning Emerson tried
to get people into places which would provide access
to important information. On February 22, 1934,
a merger of the Republican Senatorial and Congressional
Campaign Committees to conduct the Party’s Congressional
campaign independent of the Republican National Committee
was announced in a joint statement by Senator Daniel
O. Hastings of Delaware and Representative Chester
C. Bolton of Ohio, chairmen, respectively, of the
two committees.
Several weeks before this announcement,
the two committees had employed Sidney Brooks, for
years head of the research bureau of the International
Telephone and Telegraph Company. Brooks, because
of his position, was close in the confidences of Republican
Senators and Congressmen. He heard state secrets
and had his fingers on the political pulse of the
country.
Shortly after he took charge of the
joint committee for the Senators and Congressmen,
Brooks made a hurried visit to New York. On March
4, 1934, he drove to the Hotel Edison and went directly
to Room 830 where a man registered as “William
D. Goodales Los Angeles,” was awaiting
him. Mr. “Goodales” was William
Dudley Pelley, head of the Silver Shirts, who had
come to New York to confer with Brooks and Gulden.
After this conference the two went to Gulden’s
office where they had a confidential talk that lasted
over an hour during which an agreement was made to
merge the Order of ’76 with the Silver Shirts
so as to carry on their propaganda more effectively.
Brooks himself, on his mysterious
visits to New York, went to 17 Battery Place, which
houses the German Consulate General. At that
address he visited one John E. Kelly. In a letter
to Kelly dated as far back as December 27, 1933, he
wrote: “I will be in New York Friday to
Monday and can be reached in the usual manner Gramercy
5-9193 (care Emerson).”
Sidney Brooks also was a member of
the secret Order of ’76. Before anyone
could join he had to give, in his own handwriting and
sealed with his own fingerprints, certain details
of his life. Brooks’ application for membership
in this espionage group organized with the help of
a Nazi sent to this country, revealed that he was the
son of the Nazi agent, Colonel Edwin Emerson, and
that he was using his mother’s maiden name so
that connection could not be traced too easily.
One of the other early propagandists
who is still active as a “patriot” was
Edward H. Hunter, Executive Secretary of the Industrial
Defense Association, Inc., 7 Water Street, Boston.
Early in 1934, while the negotiations for the merging
of the espionage order and the Silver Shirts were
going on, this rooter for American liberty heard Germany
was spending money in this country and on March 3,
he wrote to the “Friends of Germany”:
“Under separate cover we are
sending you twenty-five copies of our Swan Song
of Hate as requested and you may have as many as
you wish.
“Several times I have conferred
with Dr. Tippelskirch and at one time suggested that
if he could secure the financial backing from Germany,
I could start a real campaign along lines that would
be very effective.
“All that is necessary to return
America to Americans is to organize the many thousands
of persons who are victims of Judaism and I am ready
to do that at any time.”
Dr. Tippelskirch, with whom Hunter
discussed getting money from Germany for anti-semitic
work, was the German Consul in Boston.
The activities of the early agents
ranged from propaganda to smuggling and espionage,
though at the beginning the espionage was on a minor
scale. It took several years of organizing pro-German
groups in this country before they could pick the
most reliable for the more dangerous spy work.
Much of the propaganda was sent in openly through
the mails, but some of it was of so vicious and anti-democratic
character that the Propaganda Ministry in Germany decided
it was wiser to smuggle it in from Nazi ships.
One of the chief smugglers was Guenther
Orgell, at that time head of the “Friends
of Germany,” through whom the propaganda was
distributed to various branches of the organization
throughout the country. In those days Orgell
lived at 606 West 115th Street, New York City,
and was ostensibly employed as an electrical engineer
by the Raymond Roth Co., 25 West 45th Street.
Let me illustrate how he worked:
At twenty minutes to ten on the evening
of March 16, 1934, the North German Lloyd “Europa”
was preparing to sail at midnight. The gaily
illuminated boat was filled with men and women, many
in evening dress, seeing friends off to Europe.
German stewards, all of them members of the ship’s
Nazi Gruppe, stood about smiling, bowing, but
watching every passenger and visitor carefully.
People wandered all over the boat.
Many visited the library on the main promenade deck,
which has a German post office. There was a great
deal of laughter and chatter. Orgell, dressed
in an ordinary business suit and carrying a folded
newspaper in his hands, wandered in. Catching
the post office steward’s eye, he casually took
four letters from his coat pocket and handed them
to the steward who as casually slipped them into his
pocket. There were no stamps on the letters,
which, incidentally, constituted a federal offense.
Still so casual in manner that the
average observer would not even have noticed the transfer
of the letters, Orgell wandered over to a desk in
the library and rapidly wrote another letter so
important, apparently, that he dared not carry it
with him for fear of a mishap. The letter was
sealed and handed to the steward.
The library had a great many visitors.
No one seemed to be paying any attention to this visitor
or passenger talking to the steward. With a quick
glance around him, Orgell took in everyone in the library
and seemed satisfied. He caught the steward’s
eye again and nodded. The steward opened a closet
in the library, the second one left of the main aisle
on the port side toward the stern of the boat.
A thin package was taken from its hiding place and
quickly slipped to Orgell who covered it with his
newspaper and promptly left the ship.
This was the manner in which Nazi
secret instructions and spy reports were sent and
received a procedure that kept up until
the arrest of the Nazi spies who were tried late in
1938.
When Orgell needed trusted men to
deliver messages to and from the boats as well as
to smuggle off material, he usually called upon the
American branch of the Stahlhelm, or Steel Helmets,
which used to drill secretly in anticipation of Der
Tag in this country. Only when he felt that
he was not being watched, or only in the event of the
most important messages, did he go aboard the ships
personally. Orgell’s liaison man in the
smuggling activities was Frank Mutschinski, a painting
contractor who used to live at 116 Garland Court,
Garritsen Beach, N.Y.
Mutschinski came to the United States
from Germany on the S.S. “George Washington,”
June 16, 1920. He was commander of one of the
American branches of the Stahlhelm which had
offices at 174 East 85th Street, New York. While
he was in command, he received his orders direct from
Franz Seldte, subsequently Minister of Labor under
Hitler. Seldte at that time was in Magdeburg,
Germany. Branches of the Stahlhelm were
established by him and Orgell in Rochester, Chicago,
Philadelphia, Newark, Detroit, Los Angeles and Toronto
(the first step in the Fifth Column’s invasion
of Canada).
To help Orgell in his smuggling activities,
Mutschinski supplied him with a chief assistant, Carl
Brunkhorst. It was Brunkhorst’s job to
deliver the secret letters. Nazi uniforms for
American Storm Troopers were smuggled into this country
off German ships by Paul Bante who lived at 186 East
93rd Street, New York City. Bante, at the time
he was engaged in the smuggling activities, was a
member of the 244th Coast Guard as well as the New
York National Guard.
In the early days of organizing the
Nazi web over the United States, the German agents
received cooperation from racketeering “patriots”
who saw possibilities of scaring the wits out of the
American people by announcing that the “revolution”
was just around the corner. The country was in
an economic crisis, the American people were bewildered
and didn’t know which way to turn, there was
considerable unrest in the land, and the Nazi agents
and their American counterparts visualized in Hitler’s
cry that “Communism and the Jews” were
responsible, grand pickings from the scared suckers.
Since Communism, especially in those
restless days in the depths of the depression, was
the bugaboo of the rich, it was inevitable that some
unscrupulous but shrewd observers of the American scene
would take advantage of this fear and capitalize on
it. One of the chief racketeers, a man who subsequently
worked very closely with secret Nazi agents in this
country, was Harry A. Jung, Honorary General Manager
of the American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, Post
Office Box 144, Chicago. This organization was
originally founded to spy on Communists and Socialists.
For a while Jung collected from terrified employers
by promising to inform them about the threat of revolution what
time it would occur and who would lead it. In
return he collected plenty.
In time employers got fed up when
the rowboat loaded with bomb-throwing Bolsheviks failed
to arrive from Moscow. Pickings became slim.
Jung was badly in need of a new terror-inspiring “issue”
with which to collect from the suckers. He found
it at the time Emerson was sent here from Germany.
Gulden, Pelley and their associates were launching
an anti-semitic campaign as the first step to attract
people to the “Friends of Germany.”
Jung likewise discovered the “menace of the
Jew” and peddled it for all it was worth.
There was an air of secrecy about
the whole outfit. Even the location of the office
in the Chicago Tribune Tower was kept from the membership;
all they were given was the post office box number.
As soon as he collected enough material from the Daily
Worker and other Communist publications, he sent
agents to call on the gullible businessmen with horrendous
stories of the Muscovites now on the high seas on
their way to capture the American Government.
The salesmen collected and in turn got forty per cent
of the pickings.
When Jung heard that William Dudley
Pelley was making money on the Jew-and-Catholic scare
and that others like Edward H. Hunter of the Industrial
Defense Association were talking with the German Consul
General about getting money from Germany for propaganda,
he got busy peddling “The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion,” long discredited as forgeries.
Armed with these, Jung’s high pressure salesmen
scoured the country, collecting shekels from Christian
businessmen and getting their forty per cent commissions.
It was not long before Jung, Pelley
and others were working in full swing with secret
Nazi agents sent into this country for propaganda
and espionage purposes.