
On American Soil: How Justice Became a Casualty of World War II
Jack Hamann
During the night of August 14, 1944, an Italian prisoner of war was lynched on the Fort Lawton army base in Seattle--a murder that shocked the nation and the international community. It was a time of deep segregation in the army, and the War Department was quick to charge three African American soldiers with first-degree murder, although there was no evidence linking them to the crime. Forty other black soldiers faced lesser charges over the incident, launching one of the largest and longest army trials of World War II.
In this harrowing story of race, privilege, and power, Jack Hamann explores the most overlooked civil rights event in American history. On American Soil raises important questions about how justice is carried out when a country is at war, offering vital lessons on the tensions between national security and individual rights.
A V Ethel Willis White Book
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About Jack Hamann
Reviews for On American Soil: How Justice Became a Casualty of World War II
Journal of African American History
"An interesting and revealing book."
Blue Ridge Business Journal
"A welcome piece of military history, adroitly balancing racism and legal questions in one story."
Kirkus Reviews
"Jack Hamann has crafted an impressive debut book that is painstakingly researched and documented but also manages to be an enthralling read."
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"This book reads like an outstanding piece of literary fiction, but it is investigative reporting of the highest order. Hamann uncovered a web of lies in a book that holds lessons for today on the tensions between national security and individual rights."
Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc.
"A surprisingly relevant work about prejudice, scapegoats, and cover-ups in a time of war."
Daily Nebraskan
"The storyline that Hamann uncovers is compelling enough. But it is the crime's historical context—- wartime racial dynamics, colossal Army incompetence, international political implications, and the (humane) treatment of POWs, for example—- that makes this book so relevant now."
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