Bibliography
of Jane Anderson

I. Works by Jane Anderson

“Editorial: Enterprise,” Kidd-Key Journal (Sherman, Texas), December 1, 1908, p. [1].

“With Long Distance [Calls] From 7 to 9 p.m.,” Kidd-Key Journal, December 1, 1908, pp. 13–14.

“Story,” Kidd-Key Journal, December 1, 1908, pp. 17–20.

“The Keeper of the Well,” Harper’s Weekly, 54 (April 23, 1910), 17.

“The Burying of Lil,” Harper’s Weekly, 54 (August 13, 1910), 18–19.

“The Gift of the Hills,” Harper’s Weekly, 55 (October 21, 1911), 24–26.

“The Spur of Courage,” Harper’s Weekly, 56 (January 13, 1912), 16–18.

“El Valiente,” Harper’s Weekly, 56 (June 22, 1912), 16–17, 24.

“Red King,” Harper’s Weekly, 56 (July 13, 1912), 16–18.

“The Reckoning,” Collier’s, 49 (July 13, 1912), 16–17, 27.

“Bob-o-loo,” Harper’s Weekly, 56 (December 14, 1912), 19–20.

“Children of the Dust,” Munsey’s Magazine, 48 (January 1913), 577–583.

“Forbidden Road,” Harper’s Weekly, 57 (February 8, 1913), 16–18.

“Son of Hagar,” Collier’s, 50 (March 8, 1913), 18–19, 35.

“Mr. Warner,” Harper’s Monthly, 127 (June 1913), 18–27.

“Ich Dien,” Munsey’s Magazine, 49 (August 1913), 786–793.

“Submarine’s Fine Achievement. Voyage Home After Being Mined. 300 Miles of Peril,” The Times, May 18, 1916, p. 3. Also in DailyMail.

“A Woman’s Flight Over London. ‘Looping the Loop.’ Mile-and-a-Half Above Hyde Park,” The Times, June 2, 1916, p. 6. Also in New York Tribune, Globe, Sketch, News of the World, Pall Mall Gazette, Westminster Gazette, Standard, Chronicle, Express, Daily News and Daily Mirror.

and Gordon Bruce. Flying, Submarining and Mine Sweeping: In the “Daily Mail,” the “New York Tribune” and the “New York Sun.” London, 1916. 36 pp.

“Human Interest Stories. Sacrifice of People in War. Most Emphasize Women’s Role in War,” Daily Mail, June 14, 1916.

“The Lost Legion,” The Winnie Post (a spoof newspaper), London, June 14, 1916, p. 1.

“Our German Prisoners. How We Treat Them,” Daily Mail, June 28, 1916.

“Over the North Sea in a Messroom Chair,” New York Tribune Magazine, August 27, 1916, pp. 1, 8.

“They Keep Their England Merry Still,” New York Tribune Magazine, October 1, 1916, pp. 1, 6.

“A Woman in the Trenches,” Daily Express, December 27, 1916.

“My Day in the Trenches. Thunderous Waves of Firing That Never Ceased. The Awful Business of War,” Daily Express, December 28, 1916.

“English War Workers. An American Point of View,” The Times, no date.

“I Came to Scorn But I Stayed to Marvel. How Visit to England Changed an American Girl’s Views,” Daily Mail, no date.

“The English Way. An American View,” Daily Mail, no date.

“The Golden Hart. One British Village in War Time,” Daily Mail, no date.

“The Leave Train and the Brave Women of England,” Daily Mail, no date.

“The Boy on the Farm. A Ten-Year-Old Man,” Daily Mail, no date.

“The Happiest Man in the World,” Century, 99 (January 1920), 330–343.

“Horror in Spain,” Catholic Digest, 1 (August 1937), 69–74.

II. Unpublished Material on Jane Anderson

Kitty Barry Crawford papers, courtesy of her Estate.

Joan Givner papers, courtesy of Professor Givner.

Deems Taylor papers, courtesy of Joan Kennedy Taylor.

FBI file. 446 pages.

Letter from Mary Lane, Piedmont College, Demorest, Georgia.

Letters from Dr. Ian Gibson, Madrid, about Jane’s second husband, the Marqués de Cienfuegos.

III. Published Material on Jane Anderson

“Germans’ Lady Haw-Haw Is Native of Atlanta,” Atlanta Journal, January 20, 1942.

Boelcke, Willie. Die Macht des Radio: Weltpolitik und Auslandsrundfunk, 1924–1976. Frankfurt, 1976. Pp. 379–380, 383–385.

Carlson, John Roy. Under Cover. New York, 1943. Pp. 457, 469.

——. The Plotters. New York, 1946. P. 279.

Chrisler, Isabel. Demorest in the Piedmont. Privately printed, 1968. Pp. 25–26.

Conrad, Borys. My Father: Joseph Conrad. London, 1970. Pp. 117–122.

Conrad, Jessie. Joseph Conrad and His Circle. New York, 1935. Pp. 195–197, 204–208.

Conrad, John. Joseph Conrad: Times Remembered. Cambridge, England, 1981. Pp. 107–109.

Conrad, Joseph. The Arrow of Gold. London, 1919.

——. Letters to His Wife. London, 1927.

“Free 3 Who Broadcast for Hitler,” Daily Worker, October 28, 1947, p. 3.

Douglas, Robin. “My Boyhood with Conrad,” Cornhill Magazine, 66 (January 1929), 24.

Drake, Frank. “Lady Haw-Haw’s Girlhood Recalled by Atlanta Kinsmen,” Atlanta Constitution, January 20, 1942, p. 2.

Edwards, John. “Atlanta’s Prodigal Daughter: The Turbulent Life of Jane Anderson as Expatriate and Nazi Propagandist,” Atlanta Historical Journal, 28 (1984), 23–42.

Ettlinger, Harold. The Axis on the Air. New York, 1943. Pp. 52–53.

Givner, Joan. Katherine Anne Porter: A Life. New York, 1982. Pp. 114–115, 117, 120–123, 146, 151–152, 157, 160, 229, 360, 415, 523–524.

The Goebbels Diaries, 1939–1941. Trans. and ed. Fred Taylor. New York, 1983. Pp. 26, 357.

Halverson, John and Ian Watt. “Notes on Jane Anderson, 1955–1989,” Conradiana, 23 (Spring 1991).

Hayes, Jess. Sheriff Thompson’s Day: Turbulence in the Arizona Territory. Tucson, 1968. Pp. 24–25.

Knoblaugh, H. Edward. Correspondent in Spain. New York, 1937. P. 194.

Neville, Charles. “The Georgia Peach Who Became Lady Haw-Haw,” New York Journal American, May 5, 1943.

“U.S. Drops Treason Charge Against Hitler’s Lady Ha-Ha [sic],” New York News, December 10, 1947.

New York Times, October 11, 1936, p. 35.

New York Times, October 15, 1936, p. 2.

New York Times, February 28, 1938, p. 3.

New York Times, January 14, 1943, p. 1.

New York Times, July 27, 1943, pp. 1–2.

New York Times, September 20, 1945, p. 10.

New York Times, October 19, 1946, p. 7.

New York Times, October 28, 1947, p. 27.

O’Duffy, Eoin. Crusade in Spain. Dublin, 1938. P. 73.

“These People Joined [Merwin] Hart in Crying ‘Communist,’ ” PM, June 12, 1941, p. 16.

Porter, Katherine Anne. “A Letter to the Editor of the Saturday Review of Literature” (1949). Collected Essays. New York, 1973. Pp. 212–213.

——. Ship of Fools. Boston, 1962. Pp. xii, 105, 107, 114–116, 117–122, 171–173.

——. Letters. Ed. Isabel Bayley. New York, 1990. P. 354.

Retinger, J. H. Conrad and His Contemporaries. New York, 1943. P. 98.

Retinger, Joseph. Memoirs of an Eminence Grise. Ed. John Pomian. Brighton, Sussex, 1972. Pp. 37–39, 45.

Rolo, Charles. Radio Goes to War. New York, 1942. Pp. 105–106.

Schofield, William. Treason Trail. New York, 1964. Pp. 25, 202–222.

Secor, Robert and Marie. The Return of the Good Soldier: Ford Madox Ford and Violet Hunt’s 1917 Diary. Victoria, B.C., 1983. P. 71.

Seldes, George. Witness to a Century. New York, 1987. Pp. 53–57.

Shirer, William. “The American Radio Traitors,” Harper’s, 187 (October 1943), 397–404.

Sington, Derek and Arthur Weidenfeld. The Goebbels Experiment: A Study of the Nazi Propaganda Machine. New Haven, 1943. Pp. 187–188.

Thrapp, Dan. Al Sieber: Chief of Scouts. Norman, Okla., 1964. Pp. 390–391.

“Lady Haw-Haw,” Time, 39 (January 19, 1942), 30.

“Germany: Sweets and Cookies,” Time, 39 (April 6, 1942), 30.

“Death Penalty Urged for U.S. ‘Haw-Haws,’ ” Washington Post, August

27, 1942.

“1943 Charges of Treason Dropped Against 3 Americans,” Washington Times Herald, December 10, 1947, p. 5.

Weekly People, January 24, 1942.

Weyl, Nathaniel. Treason: The Story of Disloyalty and Betrayal in American History. Washington, D.C., 1950. Pp. 374–376.

Winchell, Walter, Daily Mirror, January 22, 1942.