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Martin Himler emigrated from Hungary to America in 1907, and he
arrived in New York City with no money and no plan other than to
find work. From these impoverished beginnings, Himler persevered to
become a self-made new American. As a coal mining entrepreneur, he
established the Himler Coal Company-a bold experiment in a
worker-owned mine-founded the small town of Himlerville, Kentucky-a
town almost completely populated by Hungarian immigrants-and
founded and edited a weekly newspaper, the Magyar Banyaszlap
(Hungarian Miners' Journal). During WWII, Himler was called by the
United States government to work for the Office of Strategic
Services (OSS). Colonel Himler arrested more than 300 Nazi war
criminals and interrogated 40 himself. Himler's autobiography tells
in Himler's own words his life story as it evolves into the
American dream, wherein hard work results in success. Himler
captivates readers from his earliest memories of his childhood in
Hungary to his experiences with the OSS. Following Himler's death,
the manuscript of the autobiography was passed down among Himler
family members and then donated to the Martin County Historical and
Genealogical Society, Inez, Kentucky, in 2007. Editor Cathy Cassady
Corbin's annotations enhance Himler's words, while the introduction
by scholar Doug Cantrell provides historical context for Himler's
migration to Appalachia. Finally, Charles Fenyvesi's foreword
analyzes Himler's courageous OSS work.
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