Sunday, October 20, 2019

Rosenbergs essays

Rosenbergs essays THE ROSENBERG CASE Declared the espionage trial of the century, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were accused, convicted, and executed on the basis that they passed the secrets of the Atomic Bomb to the Soviets (Okun pg5). Their execution took place on June 19, 1953 in New Yorks Sing Sing Prison by way of the electric chair( pg5). Their conviction and immediate death sentence sparked controversy and division among the people of America and the people of the world (pg6). Although some believed the Rosenbergs were true war enemies, most people believed they were used as scapegoats for Cold War paranoia which questioned the governments role in securing the There were three defendants, including Julius Rosenberg, Ethel Rosenberg, and Morton Sobell (Radosh pg 13). Julius Rosenberg was born on May 12, 1918 in New York City (pg23). He was the son of Polish immigrants who worked the labor and assembly lines of factories (pg23). Although his father desired Julius to become a rabbi, Julius enrolled at a city college in New York to study electrical engineering (pg23). While in college Julius pursued his other interest, politics. Joining the Steinmetz Club and Young Communists League, he met Morton Sobell, William Pearl, and Joel Barr (pg28). After graduating in 1939, Julius did freelance work until he was hired in 1940 as a civilian employee of the US Army signal Corpse (pg28). Julius became the chairman of Branch 16B in the Communist Party and was later fired for his involvement with the party (pg35). He formed his own business in 1946 with David Greenglass, Bernard Greenglass, and Isadore Goldstein (pg25). To Juliuss surprise, on June 17, 1950, he was arrested on suspicion of espionage after being identified by David Greenglass (pg 15). Although he maintained his innocence throughout the trial, Julius was put to death as a result of his conviction (pg 15)....

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