From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
55 Years Ago:
Lord Haw Haw Silenced
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * January 3, 2001
Fifty-five years ago this week, on January 3, 1946, William Joyce
was silenced. For nearly six years he’d provided Britain with a steady
stream of Nazi propaganda through his regular radio broadcast from Germany.
Early on his listeners referred to him as Lord Haw Haw, a derisive reference
to his haughty tone and affected upper class accent that only partially
obscured his lower class Irish roots. Captured in Germany at war’s
end, he was taken to London, tried and convicted of treason and executed
in early January 1946.
The career of William “Lord Haw Haw” Joyce is one of the most
intriguing stories of World War II. Joyce was born in Brooklyn in
1906 to an Irish father and an English mother. For reasons unknown,
the family moved to Ireland in 1909 when William was just three and settled
in Galway. In 1922, the Joyce’s moved to England. William attended
college at Birbeck and graduated in 1927.
Soon thereafter he joined the British Union of Fascists and rose
to become a trusted assistant of its founder Sir Oswald Mosely. BUF rallies
frequently resulted in clashes with police and Joyce was arrested on several
occasions for assault. In 1937 he broke with Mosely to found the National
Socialist League, a more stridently pro-Hitler fascist organization.
When World War II broke out in early September 1939, agents of Britain’s
secret service went to arrest Joyce only to find that he’d fled to Germany
to offer his services to Josef Goebbel’s propaganda office.
On September 18, 1939 the people of Britain heard for the first
time Joyce’s signature opening “Germany calling! Germany calling!” What
followed was the first of hundreds of Nazi propaganda broadcasts touting
the unstoppable advance of Hitler’s legions and urging the people of Britain
to see the futility of opposing them. The goal of these broadcasts
was to undermine the morale of the British people and soldiers in the field.
In one typical example, after a massive bombing of Cologne in 1942, Winston
Churchill warned Germany that they could expect more of the same hell.
Joyce responded by claiming “The German attitude is, ‘Give us more hell,
as much as you can, and we shall repay the hell with interest.’” One year
later he predicted “German victory is certain. The German people know that
while many blows are yet to be struck, the final blow will be struck by
Adolph Hitler.” For his service to the Third Reich, Joyce was awarded the
Cross of War Merit, First Class in August 1944.
When Joyce’s many predictions of German victory proved wrong,
he donned a disguise and fled to Denmark. Stopped by British soldiers at
the border, he was betrayed by his famous voice. Arrested and transported
to London, Joyce was charged with High Treason.
Joyce denied the charge, noting that he was a citizen of the United
States, not Britain. Prosecutors, however, produced a British transport
Joyce had received in 1934. Valid during the first ten months of his Nazi
broadcasts, the passport carried with it the obligation of loyalty to the
Crown. Interestingly, Joyce had received the passport by lying about
the place of his birth, claiming Galway instead of Brooklyn.
Joyce was found guilty of High Treason and sentenced to hang.
Appeals by his attorneys, including a final one before the House of the
Lords, were all rejected. Appeals to the Truman administration to intervene
on behalf of an American citizen were likewise rebuffed.
On January 3, 1946 Joyce was hanged in the yard of London’s Wandsworth
prison. No one recorded his last words.
Postscript: William Joyce’s remains were reburied in Galway in 1976.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
Jan 4, 1969: Civil Rights marchers are attacked by a Protestant mob
at Burntollet Bridge near Derry.
Jan 5, 1871: The British release thirty Fenian prisoners, including
John Devoy, who eventually settles in America and becomes a key figure
in the nationalist effort to gain Irish freedom.
Jan 5, 1888: Hugh O’Brien is sworn in as the first Irish mayor of Boston.
Jan 7, 1922: The Dail Eireann approves the Anglo-Irish Treaty creating
the Irish Free State.
Jan 7, 1945: World War II flying Ace, Major Tommy McGuire, is shot down
over the Pacific. He is later awarded posthumously the Medal of Honor.
HIBERNIANS BORN THIS WEEK:
Jan 5, 1946: Actress Diane Keaton, in Los Angeles, CA.
Jan 6, 1871: Unionist politician, James Craig, in Belfast.
Jan 6, 1917: Writer Maeve M. Brennan, in Dublin.
Jan 7, 1899: Writer Elizabeth Bowen, born in Dublin.
Jan 8, 1736: First Bishop and Archbishop of Baltimore, John Carroll,
in Upper Marlboro, MD.
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2001
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