Theodore Stephen Hamerow (August 24, 1920 – February 16, 2013) was a Polish-born American historian, focusing on modern history, especially German history of the 19th and 20th century.[1][2]
Restoration, Revolution, Reaction: Economics and Politics in Germany, 1815–1871 (1958)
Social Foundations of German Unification, 1858–1871, 2 vols. (1969–72)
(ed.), The Age of Bismarck: Documents and Interpretations (Harper/Evanston, New York, NY/London 1972)
Reflections on History and Historians (1987)
On the Road to Wolf's Lair: German Resistance to Hitler (1997)
Why We Watched: Europe, America, and the Holocaust (2008)
Further reading
Theodore S. Hamerow, Remembering a Vanished World. A Jewish Childhood in Interwar Poland (2001)
Andreas Daum, "Refugees from Nazi Germany as Historians: Origins and Migrations, Interests and Identities", in The Second Generation: Émigrés from Nazi Germany as Historians. With a Biobibliographic Guide, ed. Daum, Hartmut Lehmann, James J. Sheehan. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016, ISBN978-1-78238-985-9, 1‒52.