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Date: | Fri, 13 Jul 2001 08:44:11 -0400 |
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But why would an innocent hobbiest have put the perfectly legal and
above-board radio in the basement (since the wires were still hooked up to
it in the niche down in the basement, I believe). I would think the parlor
or living room would have been the place to display one's Nazi radio and
German-American heritage.
-----Original Message-----
From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of ned
heite
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2001 6:31 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Nazi radio
How about a perfectly innocent scenario?
Before the war, a number of German-Americans (and one notorious
Swedish American aeronaut) supported the glorious ideals of the
Reich. It was perfectly legal, and in some neighborhoods, popular, to
be pro-German.
A German-surnamed gentleman, living in a prosperous neighborhood,
could easily have bought and operated a radio during the 'thirties.
Don't forget that German sympathizers regularly demonstrated in
American cities during the period. There was a lot of resentment
among German-American families about the ethnic cleansing that the
United States had imposed in 1917 against them.
As for hiding the antenna, I found exactly this kind of arrangement
in my own house. There was a shortwave antenna, just like the ones
you can buy at Radio Shack today, strung between the gable ends
(about 60 feet) and connected to a wire that had been fished into the
walls below. That would make a pretty fair shortwave reception.
--
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