Difference between revisions of "Century Group"

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The [[Century Group]] was a pro-allied interventionist group active in the United States prior to American entry into World War Two.  
 
The [[Century Group]] was a pro-allied interventionist group active in the United States prior to American entry into World War Two.  
  
The group evolved over the summer of 1940 out of the earlier [[Miller Group]] which had met at the home of [[Francis Pickens Miller]] in June that year. It took its name from the exclusive Century Club in New York City where it met. By the spring of 1941 it had evolved into the [[Fight for Freedom Committee]]. In this form it was claimed as a British front in a n 1941 report by [[Special Operations Executive|SOE]] agent [[Sydney Morrell]].<ref>Thomas E. Mahl, Desperate Deception, Brassey's,1999, pp.23-24.</ref>
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The group evolved over the summer of 1940 out of the earlier [[Miller Group]] which had met at the home of [[Francis Pickens Miller]] in June that year. It took its name from the exclusive Century Club in New York City where it met. By the spring of 1941 it had evolved into the [[Fight for Freedom Committee]]. In this form it was claimed as a British front in a 1941 report by [[Special Operations Executive|SOE]] agent [[Sydney Morrell]].<ref>Thomas E. Mahl, Desperate Deception, Brassey's,1999, pp.23-24.</ref>
  
 
==People==
 
==People==
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[[Category:British Propaganda]]
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[[Category:British Propaganda]][[Category:WWII Hawks]]

Latest revision as of 03:27, 23 February 2010

The Century Group was a pro-allied interventionist group active in the United States prior to American entry into World War Two.

The group evolved over the summer of 1940 out of the earlier Miller Group which had met at the home of Francis Pickens Miller in June that year. It took its name from the exclusive Century Club in New York City where it met. By the spring of 1941 it had evolved into the Fight for Freedom Committee. In this form it was claimed as a British front in a 1941 report by SOE agent Sydney Morrell.[1]

People

Notes

  1. Thomas E. Mahl, Desperate Deception, Brassey's,1999, pp.23-24.
  2. Mark Lincoln Chadwin, The Hawks of World War II, University of North Caroline Press, 1968, pp.43-65.