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  1. Alexander Mitchell Palmer (1919–1921) Born to a Quaker family near White Haven, Pennsylvania, on May 4, 1872, A. Mitchell Palmer attended a Moravian parochial high school in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, graduating later from Swarthmore College in 1891. He began working as the official stenographer of the Forty-third Pennsylvania Judicial District ...

  2. 1 de feb. de 2018 · The Palmer raids, named after Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, produced the violent arrests of suspected leftist radicals and anarchists in 1919 and 1920.

  3. 2 de ene. de 2019 · The Constitution faced a major test on this day in 1920 when raids ordered by Attorney General Mitchell Palmer saw thousands of people detained without warrants merely upon general suspicion. This occurred during the “Red Scare” of the 1920s, a period of anti-Communist fervor in the United States.

  4. Alexander Mitchell Palmer (1872–1936), a lawyer, politician, and attorney general of the United States after World War I, is remembered for directing the notorious “ Palmer raids ,” a series of mass roundups and arrests by federal agents of radicals and political dissenters suspected of subversion. Palmer became attorney general in 1919 ...

  5. 14 de feb. de 2019 · The Palmer Raids were a series of police raids targeting suspected radical leftist immigrants—particularly Italians and Eastern Europeans—during the Red Scare of late 1919 and early 1920. The arrests, which were directed by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, resulted in thousands of people being detained and hundreds being deported from ...

  6. 28 de dic. de 2023 · United States Attorney General Mitchell Palmer captures headlines with the "Red" raids. January 3, 1920. New-York Tribune (New York, NY), Image 1. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Spurred by numerous bombings and strikes, Attorney General Alexander Palmer sets about a campaign to crush radical “Reds” in the United States.

  7. Alexander Mitchell Palmer/Men arrested in raids awaiting deportation hearings. Public domain It was Palmer, with his assistant, the future first FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, who ...