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John Wheeler-Bennett

Sir John Wheeler Wheeler-Bennett GCVO CMG OBE FBA FRSL (13 October 1902 – 9 December 1975) was a conservative English historian of German and diplomatic history, and the official biographer of King George VI. He was well known in his lifetime, and his interpretation of the role of the German Army influenced a number of British historians.

Early life

Wheeler-Bennett was born in Kent, the son of the prosperous importer John Wheeler-Bennett and his Canadian-born wife, Christine (née McNutt). He was educated at Wellington House school in Westgate on Sea[1] and then at Malvern College and did not regard his youth as a happy one. His health was poor; he did not attend university or join the military.

In the early 1920s he worked as an aide to Major-General Sir Neill Malcolm in the Middle East and Berlin, then from 1923-24 was in the publicity department of the League of Nations in Geneva. After that, he was appointed as director of the information department of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and was editor of its Bulletin of International News between 1924 and 1932.

Wheeler-Bennett and Pre-War Nazi Germany

Wheeler-Bennett lived in Germany between 1927 and 1934 and witnessed at first-hand the final years of the Weimar Republic and the rise of Nazi Germany. During his time in Berlin, he became an unofficial agent and advisor to the British government on international events. He also enjoyed some success as a horse-breeder.

In 1933, Wheeler-Bennett told the Royal Institute of International Affairs:

Hitler, I am convinced, does not want a war. He is susceptible to reason in matters of foreign policy. He is greatly anxious to make Germany self-respecting and is himself anxious to be respectable. He may be described as the most moderate member of his party.[2]

Wheeler-Bennett abandoned this view after reading Mein Kampf, which caused him to recognize that Hitler had more radical goals.[3] He published a biography of Generalfeldmarschall Paul von Hindenburg, and his book The Forgotten Peace was a study of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

In the years before the Second World War, Wheeler-Bennett befriended or was on speaking terms with a number of significant people in Europe. He had contact with Heinrich Brüning, Basil Liddell Hart, Franz von Papen, Lord Tweedsmuir, Carl Friedrich Goerdeler, Leon Trotsky, Hans von Seeckt, Max Hoffmann, Lewis Bernstein Namier, Benito Mussolini, Robert Bruce Lockhart, Karl Radek, Sir Robert Vansittart, Kurt von Schleicher, Isaiah Berlin, Tomáš Masaryk, Engelbert Dollfuss, the former Kaiser Wilhelm II, Adam von Trott zu Solz, Louis Barthou, Lord Lothian, Winston Churchill, and Dr Edvard Beneš.

After the war, Wheeler-Bennett was a critic of Appeasement, and ten years after the Munich Agreement he wrote a book condemning it.

Wartime and post-war career as a government official

In 1939, Wheeler-Bennett went to the United States to serve as a lecturer on international relations at the University of Virginia. He was strongly pro-American, and the South was always his favourite part of the United States.

From 1940 onward, Wheeler-Bennett helped to establish the British Information Service in New York City, an agency charged with trying to persuade the United States to enter the war on the Allied side and better present the British case to the US press.[4] He was a supporter of the German Resistance to Hitler and became friendly with Adam von Trott zu Solz.

In 1942, Wheeler-Bennett returned home to take up a position in the Political Warfare Department of the British government's Foreign Office in London. He was promoted to Assistant Director General of the Political Intelligence Department, later serving in the Political Adviser's Department in SHAEF in 1944–1945. In 1945–1946, he assisted the British prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials.

Views on the German Resistance

As a member of the Foreign Office's Political Intelligence Department, Wheeler-Bennett wrote on 25 July 1944 that:

It may now be said with some definiteness that we are better off with things as they are today than if the plot of 20 July had succeeded and Hitler had been assassinated... By the failure of the plot we have been spared the embarrassments, both at home and in the United States, which might have resulted from such a move, and, moreover, the present purge [by the Gestapo] is presumably removing from the scene numerous individuals which might have caused us difficulty, not only had the plot succeeded, but also after the defeat of Nazi Germany... The Gestapo and the SS have done us an appreciable service in removing a selection of those who would undoubtedly have posed as 'good' Germans after the war... It is to our advantage therefore that the purge should continue, since the killing of Germans by Germans will save us from future embarrassment of many kinds."[5]

Wheeler-Bennett's views on Germany and the German Resistance caused unease to some of his wartime colleagues, and an internal paper of his of February 1944 was condemned by Professor Thomas Marshall, of the Foreign Office Research Department, as a "vitriolic little paper" and "hardly worthy of its distinguished author."[6]

Career after 1945

In 1945 Wheeler-Bennett married an American, Ruth Risher, and after the end of the Second World War they settled at Garsington Manor, near Oxford. Despite his lack of a university education and his non-academic status as a historian, Wheeler-Bennett was appointed to teach International Relations at St Antony's College and also taught at New College, Oxford, from 1946 to 1950.

In 1946 the British government's Foreign Office appointed Wheeler-Bennett as the British editor-in-chief of Documents on German Foreign Policy. This publication was based on the captured archives of the German Foreign Office, which had fallen into British and American hands in April 1945, and was a tripartite project of British, American, and French historians. In 1947, in his capacity as editor-in-chief Wheeler-Bennett convened a group called the Joint Consultative Committee. Its self-defined task was to advise the British Foreign Office on all matters pertaining to captured German records. Wheeler-Bennett himself was adamantly opposed to returning any captured records to Germany, and the committee complied with this policy. The project was reconstituted in 1959, after which the West Germans continued it on a quadripartite basis under the title Akten zur deutschen Auswaertigen Politik.[7]

After the death of King George VI in 1952 Wheeler-Bennett was appointed as his official biographer, and his biography appeared in 1958. In History in Our Time, David Cannadine criticized the book as "courtly and obsequious", the history of "an icon rather than of an individual," and a "sanitised sarcophagus".

The Nemesis of Power

Wheeler-Bennett was best known for his The Nemesis of Power (1953), which documented the German Army's involvement in politics and reiterated Wheeler-Bennet's hostile views on the German Resistance. His thesis was that under Seeckt's leadership during the Weimar period, the Reichswehr had formed a "State within the State" that largely preserved its autonomy from the politicians in Berlin, but did not, however, play an active role in day-to-day politics.

After Seeckt's downfall in 1926, which had been engineered by Schleicher, the Reichswehr became increasingly engaged in political intrigues. In Wheeler-Bennett's view, Schleicher was the "Gravedigger of the Weimar Republic" who succeeded in undermining democracy but failed completely to build any sort of stable structure in its place. Thus, by a mixture of cunning, intrigue, and inept manoeuvres, Schleicher had inadvertently paved the way for Adolf Hitler.

In 1964 a revised edition of The Nemesis of Power appeared, in which Wheeler-Bennett continued his narrative up to the 20 July Plot of 1944. He contended that under the leadership of Werner von Blomberg and Werner von Fritsch, the German Army had chosen to acquiesce to the Nazi regime as the kind of government best able to achieve what the Army wanted; namely a militarised society that would ensure in the next war that there would be no repeat of the "stab in the back" (an explanation of the collapse of Germany in November 1918 supported by Hitler and others). By agreeing to support the Nazi dictatorship, the Army had tolerated a regime that quietly and gradually dismantled the "State within the state". After Blomberg's and Fritsch's fall in 1938, the Army had increasingly become a tool of the Nazi regime rather than the independent actor that it had been before. Despite his hostility to the German generals, in the book Wheeler-Bennett acknowledged the courage of Claus von Stauffenberg and others. Overall, he concluded that the conservative opposition within the Wehrmacht had done too little, too late, to overthrow the Nazis.

He was also critical of Germany's largest right-wing party before the Nazi era, the German National People's Party, saying that their failure to accept the Weimar Republic was "more influenced by feelings of disloyalty to the Republic than of loyalty to the Kaiser," and ultimately led them to prop up Hitler.[8]

Final decades

An Anglican, Wheeler-Bennett enjoyed life in the English countryside. In 1958 he became founding chairman of the Ditchley Foundation, the Anglo-American conference group. From 1959 until his death he served as historical adviser to the Royal Archives. In 1972 he was elected to the British Academy.

Wheeler-Bennett was a follower of the Great Man school of history, and his writings usually explained historical events in terms of the leading personalities of the period. This view of history, together with his own conservative outlook, inclined him to make Winston Churchill a principal hero of his writings, as shown in his well-illustrated book The History Makers: Leaders And Statesmen of The 20th Century (1973).[9]

Sir John Wheeler-Bennett died of cancer in London on 9 December 1975, aged 73.

Cultural depictions

Wheeler-Bennett was portrayed by Tristan Sturrock in season 2, episode 6 ("Vergangenheit") of the historical drama television series The Crown (2017).

Works

  • Information on the Reduction of Armaments, with an introduction by Major-General Sir Neill L. Malcolm, 1925. online edition
  • Information on the Renunciation of War, 1927–1928 with an introduction by Philip H. Kerr, 1928. online edition
  • Disarmament And Security Since Locarno 1925–1931; Being The Political And Technical Background of the General Disarmament Conference, 1932, New York: Macmillan, 1932.
  • The Wreck of Reparations, Being The Political Background of the Lausanne Agreement, 1932, 1933. online edition
  • Documents On International Affairs: 1933 editor online
  • The Pipe Dream Of Peace: The Story Of The Collapse Of Disarmament, William Morrow and Company, 1935. online edition
  • Hindenburg: The Wooden Titan, London: Macmillan and Company, 1936. online free
  • Brest-Litovsk: The Forgotten Peace, March 1918, 1938. online free
  • The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and Germany's Eastern Policy, Clarendon Press, 1939.
  • The Defeat of the German Army, 1918, with Cyril Falls, Special Service Division: Army Service Forces, 1943.
  • Munich: Prologue To Tragedy, 1948.
  • The Nemesis Of Power: The German Army In Politics, 1918–1945, 1953, revised edition 1964. online free
  • King George VI, His Life and Reign, St. Martin's Press, 1958. online free
  • John Anderson, Viscount Waverley, St. Martin's Press, 1962. online edition
  • A Wreath To Clio: Studies In British, American and German Affairs, St. Martin's Press, 1967.
  • Action This Day; Working With Churchill. Memoirs by Lord Norman Brook (And Others), edited with an introduction by Sir John Wheeler-Bennett, London: Macmillan and Co., 1968.
  • The Semblance Of Peace: The Political Settlement After The Second World War, with Anthony Nicholls, W.W. Norton and Company, 1972. excerpt
  • The History Makers: Leaders And Statesmen of The 20th Century, edited by Lord Frank Pakenham Longford and Sir John Wheeler-Bennett, chronologies and editorial assistance by Christine Nicholls, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1973.
  • Knaves, Fools And Heroes: In Europe Between The Wars, (Macmillan, 1974). online edition; autobiography vol 1
  • Special Relationships: America In Peace And War, New York: Macmillan, 1975. autobiography

vol 2 online edition;

  • Friends, Enemies, And Sovereigns, New York: Macmillan, 1976 online free; autobiography vol 3

Notes

  1. ^ Who's Who 1974, London : A. & C. Black, 1974, p. 3478
  2. ^ International Affairs, May 1933, pp 318–319
  3. ^ Bouverie, Tim (2019). Appeasement: Chamberlain, Hitler, Churchill, and the Road to War (1 ed.). New York: Tim Duggan Books. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-451-49984-4. OCLC 1042099346.
  4. ^ ONDB "Bennett, Sir John Wheeler Wheeler- (1902–1975), historian and expert on international affairs." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 25 Apr. 2018. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-31826.
  5. ^ British National Archives file FO 371/39062
  6. ^ British National Archives file FO 371/39137
  7. ^ Astrid M. Eckert, The Struggle for the Files: The Western Allies and the Return of German Archives after the Second World War (Cambridge University Press, 2012), pp. 85-94, 194–197, 205–210; ISBN 978-0-521-88018-3
  8. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, John The Nemesis of Power, London: Macmillan, 1967 page 208.
  9. ^ Victoria Schofield, Witness to History: The Life of John Wheeler-Bennett (2012) pp 81, 147, 243, 268

References

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This article is about the British historian For his father see John Wheeler Bennett businessman Sir John Wheeler Wheeler Bennett GCVO CMG OBE FBA FRSL 13 October 1902 9 December 1975 was a conservative English historian of German and diplomatic history and the official biographer of King George VI He was well known in his lifetime and his interpretation of the role of the German Army influenced a number of British historians Contents 1 Early life 2 Wheeler Bennett and Pre War Nazi Germany 3 Wartime and post war career as a government official 4 Views on the German Resistance 5 Career after 1945 6 The Nemesis of Power 7 Final decades 8 Cultural depictions 9 Works 10 Notes 11 ReferencesEarly life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Wheeler Bennett news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wheeler Bennett was born in Kent the son of the prosperous importer John Wheeler Bennett and his Canadian born wife Christine nee McNutt He was educated at Wellington House school in Westgate on Sea 1 and then at Malvern College and did not regard his youth as a happy one His health was poor he did not attend university or join the military In the early 1920s he worked as an aide to Major General Sir Neill Malcolm in the Middle East and Berlin then from 1923 24 was in the publicity department of the League of Nations in Geneva After that he was appointed as director of the information department of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and was editor of its Bulletin of International News between 1924 and 1932 Wheeler Bennett and Pre War Nazi Germany EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Wheeler Bennett news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wheeler Bennett lived in Germany between 1927 and 1934 and witnessed at first hand the final years of the Weimar Republic and the rise of Nazi Germany During his time in Berlin he became an unofficial agent and advisor to the British government on international events He also enjoyed some success as a horse breeder In 1933 Wheeler Bennett told the Royal Institute of International Affairs Hitler I am convinced does not want a war He is susceptible to reason in matters of foreign policy He is greatly anxious to make Germany self respecting and is himself anxious to be respectable He may be described as the most moderate member of his party 2 Wheeler Bennett abandoned this view after reading Mein Kampf which caused him to recognize that Hitler had more radical goals 3 He published a biography of Generalfeldmarschall Paul von Hindenburg and his book The Forgotten Peace was a study of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk In the years before the Second World War Wheeler Bennett befriended or was on speaking terms with a number of significant people in Europe He had contact with Heinrich Bruning Basil Liddell Hart Franz von Papen Lord Tweedsmuir Carl Friedrich Goerdeler Leon Trotsky Hans von Seeckt Max Hoffmann Lewis Bernstein Namier Benito Mussolini Robert Bruce Lockhart Karl Radek Sir Robert Vansittart Kurt von Schleicher Isaiah Berlin Tomas Masaryk Engelbert Dollfuss the former Kaiser Wilhelm II Adam von Trott zu Solz Louis Barthou Lord Lothian Winston Churchill and Dr Edvard Benes After the war Wheeler Bennett was a critic of Appeasement and ten years after the Munich Agreement he wrote a book condemning it Wartime and post war career as a government official EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Wheeler Bennett news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1939 Wheeler Bennett went to the United States to serve as a lecturer on international relations at the University of Virginia He was strongly pro American and the South was always his favourite part of the United States From 1940 onward Wheeler Bennett helped to establish the British Information Service in New York City an agency charged with trying to persuade the United States to enter the war on the Allied side and better present the British case to the US press 4 He was a supporter of the German Resistance to Hitler and became friendly with Adam von Trott zu Solz In 1942 Wheeler Bennett returned home to take up a position in the Political Warfare Department of the British government s Foreign Office in London He was promoted to Assistant Director General of the Political Intelligence Department later serving in the Political Adviser s Department in SHAEF in 1944 1945 In 1945 1946 he assisted the British prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials Views on the German Resistance EditAs a member of the Foreign Office s Political Intelligence Department Wheeler Bennett wrote on 25 July 1944 that It may now be said with some definiteness that we are better off with things as they are today than if the plot of 20 July had succeeded and Hitler had been assassinated By the failure of the plot we have been spared the embarrassments both at home and in the United States which might have resulted from such a move and moreover the present purge by the Gestapo is presumably removing from the scene numerous individuals which might have caused us difficulty not only had the plot succeeded but also after the defeat of Nazi Germany The Gestapo and the SS have done us an appreciable service in removing a selection of those who would undoubtedly have posed as good Germans after the war It is to our advantage therefore that the purge should continue since the killing of Germans by Germans will save us from future embarrassment of many kinds 5 Wheeler Bennett s views on Germany and the German Resistance caused unease to some of his wartime colleagues and an internal paper of his of February 1944 was condemned by Professor Thomas Marshall of the Foreign Office Research Department as a vitriolic little paper and hardly worthy of its distinguished author 6 Career after 1945 EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Wheeler Bennett news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1945 Wheeler Bennett married an American Ruth Risher and after the end of the Second World War they settled at Garsington Manor near Oxford Despite his lack of a university education and his non academic status as a historian Wheeler Bennett was appointed to teach International Relations at St Antony s College and also taught at New College Oxford from 1946 to 1950 In 1946 the British government s Foreign Office appointed Wheeler Bennett as the British editor in chief of Documents on German Foreign Policy This publication was based on the captured archives of the German Foreign Office which had fallen into British and American hands in April 1945 and was a tripartite project of British American and French historians In 1947 in his capacity as editor in chief Wheeler Bennett convened a group called the Joint Consultative Committee Its self defined task was to advise the British Foreign Office on all matters pertaining to captured German records Wheeler Bennett himself was adamantly opposed to returning any captured records to Germany and the committee complied with this policy The project was reconstituted in 1959 after which the West Germans continued it on a quadripartite basis under the title Akten zur deutschen Auswaertigen Politik 7 After the death of King George VI in 1952 Wheeler Bennett was appointed as his official biographer and his biography appeared in 1958 In History in Our Time David Cannadine criticized the book as courtly and obsequious the history of an icon rather than of an individual and a sanitised sarcophagus The Nemesis of Power EditWheeler Bennett was best known for his The Nemesis of Power 1953 which documented the German Army s involvement in politics and reiterated Wheeler Bennet s hostile views on the German Resistance His thesis was that under Seeckt s leadership during the Weimar period the Reichswehr had formed a State within the State that largely preserved its autonomy from the politicians in Berlin but did not however play an active role in day to day politics After Seeckt s downfall in 1926 which had been engineered by Schleicher the Reichswehr became increasingly engaged in political intrigues In Wheeler Bennett s view Schleicher was the Gravedigger of the Weimar Republic who succeeded in undermining democracy but failed completely to build any sort of stable structure in its place Thus by a mixture of cunning intrigue and inept manoeuvres Schleicher had inadvertently paved the way for Adolf Hitler In 1964 a revised edition of The Nemesis of Power appeared in which Wheeler Bennett continued his narrative up to the 20 July Plot of 1944 He contended that under the leadership of Werner von Blomberg and Werner von Fritsch the German Army had chosen to acquiesce to the Nazi regime as the kind of government best able to achieve what the Army wanted namely a militarised society that would ensure in the next war that there would be no repeat of the stab in the back an explanation of the collapse of Germany in November 1918 supported by Hitler and others By agreeing to support the Nazi dictatorship the Army had tolerated a regime that quietly and gradually dismantled the State within the state After Blomberg s and Fritsch s fall in 1938 the Army had increasingly become a tool of the Nazi regime rather than the independent actor that it had been before Despite his hostility to the German generals in the book Wheeler Bennett acknowledged the courage of Claus von Stauffenberg and others Overall he concluded that the conservative opposition within the Wehrmacht had done too little too late to overthrow the Nazis He was also critical of Germany s largest right wing party before the Nazi era the German National People s Party saying that their failure to accept the Weimar Republic was more influenced by feelings of disloyalty to the Republic than of loyalty to the Kaiser and ultimately led them to prop up Hitler 8 Final decades EditAn Anglican Wheeler Bennett enjoyed life in the English countryside In 1958 he became founding chairman of the Ditchley Foundation the Anglo American conference group From 1959 until his death he served as historical adviser to the Royal Archives In 1972 he was elected to the British Academy Wheeler Bennett was a follower of the Great Man school of history and his writings usually explained historical events in terms of the leading personalities of the period This view of history together with his own conservative outlook inclined him to make Winston Churchill a principal hero of his writings as shown in his well illustrated book The History Makers Leaders And Statesmen of The 20th Century 1973 9 Sir John Wheeler Bennett died of cancer in London on 9 December 1975 aged 73 Cultural depictions EditWheeler Bennett was portrayed by Tristan Sturrock in season 2 episode 6 Vergangenheit of the historical drama television series The Crown 2017 Works EditInformation on the Reduction of Armaments with an introduction by Major General Sir Neill L Malcolm 1925 online edition Information on the Renunciation of War 1927 1928 with an introduction by Philip H Kerr 1928 online edition Disarmament And Security Since Locarno 1925 1931 Being The Political And Technical Background of the General Disarmament Conference 1932 New York Macmillan 1932 The Wreck of Reparations Being The Political Background of the Lausanne Agreement 1932 1933 online edition Documents On International Affairs 1933 editor online The Pipe Dream Of Peace The Story Of The Collapse Of Disarmament William Morrow and Company 1935 online edition Hindenburg The Wooden Titan London Macmillan and Company 1936 online free Brest Litovsk The Forgotten Peace March 1918 1938 online free The Treaty of Brest Litovsk and Germany s Eastern Policy Clarendon Press 1939 The Defeat of the German Army 1918 with Cyril Falls Special Service Division Army Service Forces 1943 Munich Prologue To Tragedy 1948 The Nemesis Of Power The German Army In Politics 1918 1945 1953 revised edition 1964 online free King George VI His Life and Reign St Martin s Press 1958 online free John Anderson Viscount Waverley St Martin s Press 1962 online edition A Wreath To Clio Studies In British American and German Affairs St Martin s Press 1967 online edition Action This Day Working With Churchill Memoirs by Lord Norman Brook And Others edited with an introduction by Sir John Wheeler Bennett London Macmillan and Co 1968 The Semblance Of Peace The Political Settlement After The Second World War with Anthony Nicholls W W Norton and Company 1972 excerpt The History Makers Leaders And Statesmen of The 20th Century edited by Lord Frank Pakenham Longford and Sir John Wheeler Bennett chronologies and editorial assistance by Christine Nicholls New York St Martin s Press 1973 Knaves Fools And Heroes In Europe Between The Wars Macmillan 1974 online edition autobiography vol 1 Special Relationships America In Peace And War New York Macmillan 1975 autobiographyvol 2 online edition Friends Enemies And Sovereigns New York Macmillan 1976 online free autobiography vol 3Notes Edit Who s Who 1974 London A amp C Black 1974 p 3478 International Affairs May 1933 pp 318 319 Bouverie Tim 2019 Appeasement Chamberlain Hitler Churchill and the Road to War 1 ed New York Tim Duggan Books p 58 ISBN 978 0 451 49984 4 OCLC 1042099346 ONDB Bennett Sir John Wheeler Wheeler 1902 1975 historian and expert on international affairs Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 25 Apr 2018 http www oxforddnb com view 10 1093 ref odnb 9780198614128 001 0001 odnb 9780198614128 e 31826 British National Archives file FO 371 39062 British National Archives file FO 371 39137 Astrid M Eckert The Struggle for the Files The Western Allies and the Return of German Archives after the Second World War Cambridge University Press 2012 pp 85 94 194 197 205 210 ISBN 978 0 521 88018 3 Wheeler Bennett John The Nemesis of Power London Macmillan 1967 page 208 Victoria Schofield Witness to History The Life of John Wheeler Bennett 2012 pp 81 147 243 268References Edit Bennett Sir John Wheeler Wheeler Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31826 Bullock Alan John Wheeler Wheeler Bennett 1902 1975 Obituary Proceedings of the British Academy 65 1979 799 833 Cull Nicholas Selling War The British Propaganda Against American Neutrality In World War II New York Oxford University Press 1995 Schofield Victoria Witness to History The Life of John Wheeler Bennett New Haven and London Yale University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 300 17901 9 excerpt online review Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Wheeler Bennett amp oldid 1120577880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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