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Updated: May 27, 2025


The first is dated October 29, 1937, and was sent by Orgell from his home at Great Kills, S.I.: Dear Mr. Gissibl: Many thanks for your prompt reply. My complaint that one cannot get an answer from Chicago refers to the time prior to May, 1937. I assume from your writing that it is not opportune any more to deliver further books to the Arbeitsgemeinschaft, etc. The material which Mr.

On May 20, 1938, E.A. Vennekohl, of the People's Bund for Germans Living Abroad, wrote to Gissibl as follows: Dear Comrade Gissibl: We wrote you yesterday that the 3,000 badges for the singing festival would be sent to you via Orgell; for various reasons we have now divided the badges in ten single packages of which two each went to the following addresses: Friedrich Schlenz, Karl Moeller, Karl Kraenzle, Orgell and two to you.

Five days earlier Orgell had written to Gissibl: "You may perhaps remember that I am in charge of the work for the Volkbund für das Deutschtum im Ausland for the U.S.A." On March 18, 1938, Gissibl, who had been taking instructions from Orgell, received the following letter from Stuttgart: Dear Peter: From your office manager. Comrade Möller, I received a letter dated February 15.

The Committee obtained letters to Guenther Orgell and Peter Gissibl, but quietly placed them in their files without telling anyone about the existence of these documents. They did not subpoena or question the men involved.

Among those who attended were Walter Kappe, Fritz Gissibl and Zahn three active Hitler agents assigned to the Mid-West area; William Dudley Pelley, leader of the Silver Shirts; Harry A. Jung, the ultra-"patriot"; George W. Christians of Chattanooga, Tenn., head of the American fascists; and several others.

The letters the Committee treated so cavalierly are from E.A. Vennekohl in charge of the foreign division of the Volksbund für das Deutschtum im Ausland with headquarters in Berlin, letters from the foreign division headquarters in Stuttgart, and from Orgell to Gissibl.

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