Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pages from the Past: 1938

- — Jeanne Lewis

The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette is printing one page a day from each of the 200 years since the first issue of the Arkansas Gazette was printed Nov. 20, 1819. We chose these pages for reasons that range from historic significan­ce to how legible we can make the antique ink. What was printed in these old pages reflects our history but not necessaril­y our values.

As part of Nazi Fuhrer Adolf Hitler’s attempt to unite all German peoples, in late September 1938 he issued an ultimatum to Czechoslov­akia giving the country until Oct. 1 to surrender Sudetenlan­d, a region including parts of Bohemia and Moravia whose population­s were predominan­tly German.

Hitler had annexed Austria in March 1938.

After “urgings” from Benito Mussolini of Italy and United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt, at the last minute, Hitler invited Prime Minister Neville Chamberlai­n of Great Britain, Premier Edouard Daladier of France and Mussolini to Munich for faceto-face talks on Sept. 29. Negotiatio­ns lasted past midnight.

The Munich Pact granted Hitler four Sudeten zones to be ceded to him by Czechoslov­akia and some of the details of the occupation, such as times set for evacuation and surrender of the zones, would be regulated by an “internatio­nal military commission.”

Excluded from the talks, Czechoslov­akia Prime Minister Gen. Jan Syrovy yielded to the agreement under protest, lamenting that his country had been “abandoned.”

On his return to London, Chamberlai­n “steadfastl­y defended all he had done,” stating that he believed the four leaders at Munich had “averted a catastroph­e which would have ended civilizati­on as we have known it.”

“Expression­s of dismay, humiliatio­n and rage preceded and followed” his remarks in the House of Commons.

Alfred Duff Cooper, who had resigned the week prior from the position of first lord of the Admiralty under Chamberlai­n, rose to respond to the prime minister and “sobbed as he asserted that the price of peace at Munich ‘stuck in [his] throat.’” Cooper accused Chamberlai­n of using the language of “sweet reasonable­ness” with Hitler when he “believed [Hitler] was more open to the language of the mailed fist.” Of Czechoslov­akia, Cooper said, “I think that having accepted the humiliatio­n of partition she should have been spared the ignominy and horror of invasion.”

But invade Hitler did. He began on Oct. 1 with the first Sudeten zone.

On the Front Page of this Oct. 4 edition, the Arkansas Gazette gives an account of Hitler’s welcome by cheering crowds and banners that read “Thanks to our deliverer!” as he entered the third zone on Oct. 3rd. He “rode victorious­ly” for 40 miles in an open car with his retinue of soldiers, airplanes, armored cars and artillery.

Sumner Welles, United States Under Secretary of State, asserted that the U.S. government had taken action “pursuing the course best calculated to aid in preserving peace and in ensuring the safety of this country.”

Welles insisted that the “great underlying needs” now were economic reconstruc­tion and “the limitation and reduction of armaments, together with a world-wide agreement to cease for all time attacks on civilian population­s.”

Contrary to hopes that Hitler would be satisfied after the annexation of Sudetenlan­d, in March 1939 Hitler invaded what was left of Czechoslov­akia.

 ?? More on the 200th anniversar­y of the Arkansas Gazette arkansason­line.com/200 ??
More on the 200th anniversar­y of the Arkansas Gazette arkansason­line.com/200

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