The America First Committee, founded in September 1940 to keep
the United States out of what became the Second World War, was the
largest antiwar organization in American history. Its 800,000
members spanned the political spectrum from conservative Republican
to Socialist; its spokesmen were prairie populists, Eastern
patricians, and, most controversially, the aviator Charles A.
Lindbergh. Written in 1942, but unpublished until now, this study
of the America First Committee by its chief researcher and Senate
lobbyist, Ruth Sarles, sheds new light on this frequently
misunderstood and misrepresented group. An introduction by Bill
Kauffman assesses the place of Ruth Sarles and America First in
American history.
Ruth Sarles was at the center of the storm. An Ohio-born peace
activist with the pacifist National Council for Prevention of War,
Sarles knew all of the principals and had a ringside seat for the
great debates that pitted isolationists against interventionists.
In 1942 she wrote a firsthand history of the America First
Committee. But a war was on, and dissent was scarce: her manuscript
remained unpublished--until now. Ruth Sarles tells of America
First's unlikely birth at the Yale Law School, its extraordinary
growth as Middle Americans rallied to the antiwar banner, and the
fierce controversies in which it became enmeshed. In this edition,
Kauffman uncovers some fascinating sidelights to the era, including
a pro-Lindbergh editorial by a student journalist named Kurt
Vonnegut.
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