Amos Alfred Fries (March 17, 1873 – December 30, 1963) was a general in the United States Army and 1898 graduate of the United States Military Academy. Fries was the second chief of the army's Chemical Warfare Service, established during World War I. Fries served under John J. Pershing in the Philippines and oversaw the construction of the roads and bridges in Yellowstone National Park. He eventually became an important commander in World War I. After he retired from the Army in 1929, Fries wrote two anti-communist books. He died in 1963 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Fries arrived in Europe as World War I raged, he expected to do more engineering work but was instead thrust into heading the fledgling Gas Service Section, AEF. The Gas Service Section was mostly constituted by the 1st Gas Regiment (originally the 30th Engineer Regiment (Gas and Flame)) and Fries commanded the section. He became the chief of the Overseas Division of the Chemical Warfare Service in 1919, and when William L. Sibert retired in 1919, Fries became the first peacetime overall chief of the Chemical Warfare Service the following year.Committee on Finance, United States Senate Hearings Before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate on the proposed Tariff Act of 1921, ( Google Books), U.S. Government Printing Office, 1922, p. 374. He served at that post until he retired from the Army in 1929.van Courtland Moon, John Ellis. "United States Chemical Warfare Policy in World War II: A Captive of Coalition Policy?" ( JSTOR), The Journal of Military History, Vol. 60, No. 3. (July, 1996), pp. 495–511. Retrieved October 21, 2008. For his work with the Chemical Warfare Service he was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal.Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998). Generals in Khaki. Pentland Press, Inc. pp. 135–136. .
Fries use race to justify some of his views. During a lecture at the General Staff College, he declared:
In 1923 Fries' office distributed a "spider chart" to "patriotic groups" across the United States. The chart intended to show that all women's societies and church groups be regarded with suspicion concerning links to radical groups and Communist leadership.Evans, Sara Margaret. Born for Liberty: A History of Women in America, ( Google Books), Simon and Schuster, 1997, p. 190, (). The spider chart listed 21 individual women and 17 organizations, among them the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Later in his life, Fries lobbied for Congress to ban the "teaching or advocating" communism in public schools. In 1935, he also sought to ban books written by progressive historian Carl L. Becker, whom Fries labeled a "well known communist writer" despite Becker explicitly being an anti-communist. Fries two anti-communist books, Communism Unmasked, published in 1937, and Sugar Coating Communism. Fries was a supporter of both Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy as a bulwark against communism in Europe and believed that a fascist dictatorship was the only way to prevent the two countries from becoming communist. When Rabbi Stephen Wise pleaded for the admission of persecuted German Jews, Fries, a nativist who subscribed to the Jewish communist conspiracy theory, argued that the Nazis were only persecuting communists and their sympathizers.Bendersky, Joseph W. The "Jewish Threat", ( Google Books), Basic Books, 2000, p. 470, ().
Anti-communism and chemical warfare advocacy
"The same training that makes for advancement in science, and success in manufacture in peace, gives the control of the body that hold the white man to the firing line no matter what its terrors. A great deal of this comes because the white man has had trained out of him nearly all superstition."
Fries declared that this training set apart from the "negro" as well as the "Gurkha and the Moroccan."
Later life and death
Selected publications
Notes
Further reading
External links
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