Edwards, Sam ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1433-8243 (2022) “A Daily Influence of American Thought”: The Second Air Division Memorial Library, Commemorative Diplomacy, and Anglo-American Relations, 1944-1975. Journal of Cold War Studies. ISSN 1520-3972 (In Press)
|
Accepted Version
Available under License In Copyright. Download (402kB) | Preview |
Abstract
In the summer of 1963, with Cold War tensions still fresh in the wake of the Cuban missile crisis, municipal authorities in Norwich, England, dedicated a memorial to the World War II American military. Originally initiated in 1944 by officers in the Second Air Division (then based in the region), the memorial—a library—provided a space in which the people of Norfolk could encounter a “daily influence of American thought and ideals.” Various dignitaries attended the dedication ceremony (including the Lord Mayor, the Bishop of Norwich, and representatives of the U.S. Embassy), together with a large crowd of locals, several hundred American veterans, and serving members of the U.S. Air Force. This was just one amongst many post-war commemorations of the U.S. Eighth Air Force, the broad contexts and chronologies of which I have discussed elsewhere. However, due to its long gestation together with the fine details of some of those involved, the Second Air Division Memorial Library is also deserving of a fuller analysis. Here is a revealing example of post-1945 cultural diplomacy and all in a region integral to Cold War American national security: eastern England. By 1960, indeed, there were almost 40,000 American service personnel in the region, whilst at the decade’s end an intelligence analyst in the State Department could still record—in a memo for President Johnson—that American “Airfields in England” together with other nearby “real estate for U.S. military Forces” were crucial components of the Atlantic Alliance, and of American defense.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.