Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: May 21, 2025


Boldt had worked in the Navy Yard since 1931. Dieckhoff and Woulters went to work there within one day of each other in June, 1936. The three men were kept in the Committee's room from one o'clock on the day they were subpoenaed until five in the afternoon.

Like Dieckhoff and Boldt, Harry Woulters, alias Hugo Woulters, the third of the three subpoenaed men, is a naturalized citizen of German extraction. He went to work in the Navy Yard within one day of Dieckhoff. Before that, both had worked on the same four American destroyers at the Staten Island Shipbuilding Company.

We'll get rid of the stinking kikes! Heil Hitler!" The three suspected Nazi spies were subpoenaed on August 23, 1938. They were: Walter Dieckhoff, Badge No. 38117, living at 2654 E. 19th Street, Sheepshead Bay. Hugo Woulters, Badge No. 38166, living at 221 East 16th Street, Brooklyn. Alfred Boldt, Badge No. 38069, living at 64-29 70th Street, Middle Village, L.I.

Sometimes I left them in my tool box overnight." Woulters, during the latter period of construction on the "Brooklyn" and the "Honolulu" had got two jobs which most workers do not like. He had the four to midnight and the midnight to eight A.M. watches. Normally Woulters likes to stay at home with his wife. "While you had these watch duties you had pretty much the run of the ship?"

The house where Woulters lives has a great many Jews in it, judging from the names on the letterboxes, and since Hugo sounded too German, he listed his first name as "Harry." "You and Dieckhoff worked on the same destroyers on Staten Island and you say you never met him there?" I asked. "No, I never met him until the second day after I went to work in the Navy Yard."

Word Of The Day

schwanker

Others Looking