Salzburg Under Siege: U.S. Occupation, 1945-1955
By (Author) Donald R. Whitnah
By (author) Florentine E. Whitnah
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
943.630523
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
How did mostly unwanted American military and civilian leaders help conquered people restore law and order, reopen schools, and provide food and housing for a nearly starved population swollen with refugees, war prisoners and displaced persons in the aftermath of war Two historians - participants in the U.S. occupation of the province of Salzburg already in 1945 - trace the ins and outs of a ten-year period, at the end of World War II, when Austria was in a precarious situation and when Americans were helping the young republic survive, reviving its economy, and preventing Nazis from returning to office. This unusual success story is based on first-hand accounts then and later, and is written to appeal to veterans, scholars and readers interested generally in military and diplomatic history, intergovernmental administration and European affairs. This case history offers a background for understanding the complex European situation in 1945, and then traces how the Americans helped assist, control, regulate, promote, or even restrict crucial years of the American presence in Salzburg. Despite frictions, a key factor promoting success was the leeway given Austrian officials to plan and govern themselves and the freedom granted to the press. The occupation of the Tyrol and Vorarlberg and the British occupation of Carinthia. This assessment details reactions by Austrians and Americans both, official government evaluations in 1947 and 1955, and scholarly interpretations and misinterpretations. The Whitnahs' book includes illustrations and is based on extensive research and lengthy study of personal letters and papers, oral interviews, and official documents in Washington, D.C. and in Austria.
DONALD R. and FLORENTINE E. WHITNAH worked in the U.S. War Department in Salzburg during 1946 and 1947 and have been engaged in research and writing about Austria ever since. Awarded the Commander's Cross Order of Merit by the Republic of Austria and Distinguished Scholar Award by Northern Iowa University, Donald Whitnah is the author of Government Agencies (Greenwood Press, 1983) and The American Occupation of Austria: Planning and Early Years with Edgar L. Erickson (Greenwood, 1985).