Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite
In 1947, the former U.S. Minister to Hungary, John Flournoy Montgomery, published these heartfelt memoirs of his Budapest days during World War II. The book was, and remains, a widely read and widely quoted source for examinations of Hungarian pre-war politics, in some measure because it is unique as a thorough Western lens on interwar Hungary.
1013756891
Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite
In 1947, the former U.S. Minister to Hungary, John Flournoy Montgomery, published these heartfelt memoirs of his Budapest days during World War II. The book was, and remains, a widely read and widely quoted source for examinations of Hungarian pre-war politics, in some measure because it is unique as a thorough Western lens on interwar Hungary.
3.99 In Stock
Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite

Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite

by John Flournoy Montgomery
Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite

Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite

by John Flournoy Montgomery

eBook

$3.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

In 1947, the former U.S. Minister to Hungary, John Flournoy Montgomery, published these heartfelt memoirs of his Budapest days during World War II. The book was, and remains, a widely read and widely quoted source for examinations of Hungarian pre-war politics, in some measure because it is unique as a thorough Western lens on interwar Hungary.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789120325
Publisher: Arcole Publishing
Publication date: 02/27/2018
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 201
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

John Flournoy Montgomery (September 20, 1878 - November 7, 1954) was an American businessman and U.S. Minister to Hungary from 1933-1941. This diplomatic assignment placed Montgomery at the center of the seething intrigue and gathering storm that characterized 1930's Hungary and Central Europe; in particular he was witness to the rise of Adolf Hitler's influence in Budapest, and the complex struggle over the alliance between Hungary and Nazi Germany. His memoirs, entitled Hungary: The Unwilling Satellite (1947), are considered a valuable document of that era.
A native of Missouri, Montgomery was born and educated in the town of Sedalia. He built a successful career in the dairy industry and was the president of the International Milk Company in Vermont from 1925-1933. A loyal and generous supporter of the Democratic Party, after Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt claimed the White House in 1932, Montgomery was rewarded with the promise of a diplomatic job.
In June 1933, Montgomery was sworn in as U.S. Minister to Hungary and, from his central location on the Danube, engaged to monitor the goings-on in Hungary's neighbors (Austria, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia) and other countries in the region, including Bulgaria, Poland, Germany and Italy. The most critical trend which Montgomery was required to monitor from Budapest was the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime in Germany, and Hitler's growing influence in Hungarian political circles.
Montgomery was recalled from his posting Budapest in March 1941, three months before Hungary finally joined the Axis as a full war partner during the invasion of the Soviet Union. He remained committed to the well-being of the Regent of the Kingdom of Hungary, Miklós Horthy, who was captured by American troops at the war's end, using his influence in Washington to help extricate Horthy from indictment and the Nuremberg Trials.
Montgomery died in 1954 at the age of 76.



A native of Missouri, Montgomery was born and educated in the town of Sedalia. He built a successful career in the dairy industry and was the president of the International Milk Company in Vermont from 1925-1933. A loyal and generous supporter of the Democratic Party, after Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt claimed the White House in 1932, Montgomery was rewarded with the promise of a diplomatic job.
In June 1933, Montgomery was sworn in as U.S. Minister to Hungary and, from his central location on the Danube, engaged to monitor the goings-on in Hungary’s neighbors (Austria, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia) and other countries in the region, including Bulgaria, Poland, Germany and Italy. The most critical trend which Montgomery was required to monitor from Budapest was the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime in Germany, and Hitler’s growing influence in Hungarian political circles.
Montgomery was recalled from his posting Budapest in March 1941, three months before Hungary finally joined the Axis as a full war partner during the invasion of the Soviet Union. He remained committed to the well-being of the Regent of the Kingdom of Hungary, Miklós Horthy, who was captured by American troops at the war’s end, using his influence in Washington to help extricate Horthy from indictment and the Nuremberg Trials.
Montgomery died in 1954 at the age of 76.

Table of Contents

Preface1
Part 1What Price Independence?
I.The Prewar Line-up in Central Europe15
II.Hungary's So-called Feudalism22
III.Admiral Horthy's Position as Regent33
IV.The Significance of Revisionism in Hungary47
Part 2An Oasis in Hitler's Desert
I.The Murders of Dollfuss and King Alexander63
II.The True Meaning of the Rome-Berlin Axis Pact75
III.Austria: Pivot of European Stability88
IV.A Refuge for One Million Jews99
V.The Breaking up of Czechoslovakia116
VI.The Downfall of Rumania129
VII.Central European Declarations of War145
Part 3An Island in the Soviet Sea
I.Hungarian Attempts at Making Separate Peace159
II.Russia's Responsibility in World War II172
III.The German Invasion of Hungary186
IV.Russian Tactics in Central Europe201
V.The Island Submerged215
VI.America's Responsibility223
Appendix IText of the Secret Protocol of the Russo-German Nonaggression Pact of 1939229
Appendix IIRegent Horthy's Radio Proclamation: October 1944236
Appendix IIISwiss Legation Report of the Russian Invasion of Hungary in the Spring of 1945239
Appendix IVSecret Contacts Between King Alexander of Yugoslavia and Mussolini245
Chronology: Treaties and Agreements Made and Broken, and Territorial Readjustments Affecting Hungary, from 1933 to 1945261
Reference List: Books Dealing with Hungary272
Index276
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews