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The Psycho Boys

How a Unit of Refugees, Artists, and Professors Fought Back against the
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They were not your typical World War II soldiers. Most were not in particularly good physical shape, and many had trouble handling their weapons. They differed widely in their ages, politics, and skills. Many worked in academia, media, and the arts. They were a strange mix of Americans and foreign nationals, immigrants, and refugees, linked by their language skills, knowledge of Europe, and a desire to defeat the Axis. During the war, the U.S. Army trained them in psychological warfare at a secret camp on the Gettysburg battlefield and then sent them to Europe. They became known as "Psycho Boys," a group of soldiers who have never received their due respect. In this book Beverly Driver Eddy, author of Ritchie Boy Secrets, tells their rarely heard story and argues for their importance to the Allied war effort. At Gettysburg the Psycho Boys were taught the various skills that would be necessary in the European campaign from D-Day onward: prisoner and civilian interrogation, broadcasting, loudspeaker appeals, leaflet and newspaper production, and technical support. The 800 men were divided into four mobile radio broadcasting companies and sent to Europe to land on D-Day, fight in Normandy and at the Bulge, and participate in the conquest of Germany and the liberation of the concentration camps. Some of the soldiers operated well out in front of Allied lines and - in German - called on enemy soldiers to surrender. Others worked behind the lines, printing propaganda leaflets and making radio broadcasts. Drawing on company histories, memoirs, and interviews, this book traces the history of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Mobile Radio Broadcasting Companies and the men who served. For far too long, these soldiers were maligned as mere "paragraph troopers" who weren't in the line of fire. As Eddy shows, the Psycho Boys made important contributions to victory in World War II by encouraging enemy soldiers to desert or surrender and in other indirect ways. Their story is interesting, important, and vital.
Beverley Driver Eddy is professor emerita of German studies at Dickinson College, with seven books to her credit, including Ritchie Boy Secrets (Stackpole, 2021). She has spoken widely on this topic, including at the U.S. Army Heritage & Education Center, and has appeared on C-SPAN's BookTV podcast. Eddy lives in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania.
Americans fought the war against Germany in many and varied ways. The propaganda war fought by the men of the Mobile Radio Broadcast companies is one of the most fascinating. Beverley Eddy takes us on a journey with these men from their training at Camp Sharpe through combat and postwar Europe. Many of them were German-born Jews fighting the war against their former neighbors. They used the tools of radio and language to make an important impact on the war effort and ultimate victory. These powerful stories are important to our understanding of the diverse experiences of American soldiers in World War II.--Michael Rugel, Director of Programs and Content, National Museum of American Jewish Military History Dr. Eddy's book is another fascinating story of the Greatest Generation who fought and won World War II, this time not through bullets but through broadcasts and other techniques of psychological warfare. The book traces the formation of these psywar soldiers, many of them young Jewish men who came to the United States in the 1930s, into units that conducted operations from Africa to Normandy through the end of the war. And they trained right here on the Gettysburg battlefield in a secret site tucked into McMillan Woods. If you watched the 60 Minutes program on the Ritchie Boys, this book tells the rest of that story. Anyone interested in World War II history, psychological warfare as a military tactic, or the history of Gettysburg needs this book.--Lt. Col. Greg Howe, US Army (Retired) In all my years I did not know as much about Camp Sharpe as I learned by reading The Psycho Boys. Eddy's disclaimer of not being a military historian is invalidated by her expert research and the clarity of her text.--Guy Stern, Ritchie Boy and Director of the Holocaust Memorial Center, Farmington Hills, Michigan In The Psycho Boys, Beverley Eddy has penned a fascinating story of a specially selected group of soldiers--many of them Jewish refugees from Hitler's Germany--who were trained in psychological and propaganda warfare. This is not a boring text laden with dry facts and figures. Drawing upon her own extensive personal interviews Dr. Eddy has crafted a finely tuned study of the men who participated in the war effort--refugees turned American soldiers whose language skills, among other talents, helped vanquish the Nazis. As a professor of Holocaust and World War II studies at Penn State Harrisburg, I am grateful for Dr. Eddy's unique contribution to this arcane facet of the war and the Shoah.--Neil Leifert, Director, Center for Holocaust and Jewish Studies, School of Humanities, Penn State Harrisburg The Allies won World War II for a variety of reasons. Many books have explained the reasons, and, doubtless, many more are yet to appear that will say this or that or something else was the crucial piece for the Allies' success. But every once in a while, a gem will appear that tells us about an operation, until recently top secret, that played an important role in the Allied victory--and is an amazing story as well. Such is the case with Beverley Eddy's The Psycho Boys. It is the story of a group of actors, scholars, artists, business executives, and many others who gathered at Camp Sharpe--a former Civilian Conservation Corps camp near Gettysburg National Military Park--to learn the basics of waging psychological warfare against the Germans. While they learned some of the physical aspects of fighting a war, such as firing a gun, their jobs would be much different. They needed to be fluent in at least one language other than English--many were fluent in several. Some were immigrants, including Jews who had escaped from Germany. They were preparing to follow the Allies after D-Day and perform a variety of functions designed to destroy the morale of German soldiers and thus end the war more quickly. Some showed strong aptitude for interrogating German prisoners. Others created and devised ways to distribute flyers that encouraged Germans to desert. Some created radio transmissions aimed at convincing German soldiers that the war was nearly over and that their side was going lose. Still others did something that probably took more nerve than almost any other part of warfare. They drove large trucks up close to the German lines where they would broadcast messages over loudspeakers that invited their foes to simply desert their posts and come over to the Allied side. Often their broadcasts invited return fire that kept them shaking in their boots as they were pinned to the ground! The Psycho Boys follows these men through the war and many of their lives afterwards and shows us yet another reason why the Allies won the war.--Robert K. Sutton, former Chief Historian of the National Park Service and author of Nazis on the Potomac: The Top-Secret Intelligence Operation that Helped Win World War II The Psycho Boys is a fascinating, exciting page turner, especially about the "black" aspect of Psych Warfare, of which I assumed I was well informed. But I now realize that evidently little got out beyond the actual operatives. This revelation alone assures the book's success.--Si Lewen, Veteran, 2nd and 3rd MRB Companies Tucked away on the edge of the Gettysburg Battlefield in central Pennsylvania was tiny Camp Sharpe where, during World War II, the US Army assembled a host of brilliant and colorful characters to fight against Nazi Germany. Historian Beverley Eddy tells the story of this remarkable band of German and Austrian immigrants who returned to Europe in 1944 as highly trained specialists in the top-secret arts of psychological warfare. The Psycho Boys delivers the tale with zest and intrigue, even as it digs deep in the historical record to uncover a lesser-known aspect of the Allied war effort. After reading Eddy's book, you'll be thankful for the 800 men of the four Mobile Radio Broadcasting companies that trained at Camp Sharpe. And you'll not doubt that their service, while perhaps not making the difference between victory and defeat, shortened the war and saved untold Allied lives.--Todd DePastino, Executive Director, Veterans Breakfast Club
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