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Julien Bryan
Julien Bryan
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Julien Hequembourg Bryan (23 May 1899 in Titusville, Pennsylvania – 20 October 1974) was an American photographer, filmmaker, and documentarian who documented the daily life in Poland, Soviet Union, and Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1939, in the leadup to and early days of the Second World War. He was honored with a Decoration of Honor Meritorious for Polish Culture during his last visit in Poland (1974) for showing the truth about the Invasion of Poland.[1]

Key Information

His documentary film Siege reported on Poland's defense of its capital against Nazi Germany in September 1939. It is stored and viewable online at the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in a digitally restored form in HD.[2]

Before World War II

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Julien Bryan in 1917 in France writing "Ambulance 464"

Bryan was the son of an elder in the Presbyterian Church with a long missionary tradition.[3] At seventeen after graduating from high school, he volunteered to serve in the American Field Service for the French Army in World War I, driving an ambulance in Verdun and the Argonne,[4][5] and wrote a book Ambulance 464 about this experience illustrated by his photographs.[6]

He graduated from Princeton University in 1921 and finished Union Theological Seminary, though he chose not to be ordained as a minister. Afterwards he directed YMCA in Brooklyn, NY At this time Bryan started traveling abroad taking photographs, making films and writing travelogues along the way. He funded his travels by giving slideshow lectures about countries he visited[5] and by selling his films to various companies including ERPI.[3] Many of the films from those travels can be found in United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive.[7] Those human-interest movies chronicle travels through China, Caucasus and Georgia (1933), Soviet Union (1930 and 1935), Poland (1936), Germany (1937), Switzerland and the Netherlands (1939). His films and photographs from Nazi Germany chronicled party rallies, daily life on the streets, anti-Jewish propaganda and Nazi leaders. They were incorporated into two ’’March of Time’’ films. His slide lectures were held in concert halls including Carnegie Hall.[5] Bryan shot over 25,000 feet of film for Inside Nazi Germany, one of the first American anti-Nazi films.[8]

World War II

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Bryan found Polish girl Kazimiera Kostewicz (12) and her dead sister Anna (14), just shot by a German plane in September 1939
Bryan comforted and cried with the girl after photographing her. They met again 20 years later.

Bryan learned about the German invasion of Poland on September 3 while traveling by train to Warsaw. He arrived in Warsaw on September 7 carrying his Leica still camera, Bell & Howell movie camera and 6000 feet of film, just as all foreigners, diplomats and government officials were fleeing the capital. He contacted mayor of Warsaw Stefan Starzynski who provided him with a car, guide and interpreter Stefan Radlinski and permit to travel and photograph across Warsaw. In two weeks between September 7 and September 21, he managed to take hundreds of still photographs, including color Kodachromes, and 5000 feet of motion picture film documenting the Siege of Warsaw and the bombing of the city by German Luftwaffe. He recalled:

As we drove by a small field at the edge of town we were just a few minutes too late to witness a tragic event, the most incredible of all. Seven women had been digging potatoes in a field. There was no flour in their district, and they were desperate for food. Suddenly two German planes appeared from nowhere and dropped two bombs only two hundred yards away on a small home. Two women in the house were killed. The potato diggers dropped flat upon the ground, hoping to be unnoticed. After the bombers had gone, the women returned to their work. They had to have food. But the Nazi fliers were not satisfied with their work. In a few minutes they came back and swooped down to within two hundred feet of the ground, this time raking the field with machine-gun fire. Two of the seven women were killed. The other five escaped somehow. While I was photographing the bodies, a little ten-year old girl came running up and stood transfixed by one of the dead. The woman was her older sister. The child had never before seen death and couldn't understand why her sister would not speak to her...The child looked at us in bewilderment. I threw my arm about her and held her tightly, trying to comfort her. She cried. So did I and the two Polish officers who were with me...[9]

In 2009, the grown-up girl, Kazimiera Mika, spoke about the event and said she was 12 at the time.[10] They first reunited in 1958, when Bryan returned to Warsaw.[2] (She married and lived to the age of 93).

Bryan is credited as the only foreign journalist in Warsaw at that time.[11] Through Polish Radio he also made an appeal to the American president Franklin Delano Roosevelt to help civilians targeted by enemy bombers.[12] During his stay in Warsaw, he lived in the abandoned Consulate of the United States. He left Warsaw on September 21 after Germans declared a cease-fire to allow citizens of neutral countries to depart by train through East Prussia. In Königsberg, fearing confiscation of his material, he decided to smuggle out his already developed films. He managed to hide some of his films in souvenir gas mask containers collected by a fellow traveler from the US,[5] and by one account he hid some movies by wrapping them around his torso.[4]

After arriving in New York in the fall of 1939, Bryan published some of his photographs. Life magazine printed 15 of his images in the October 23 issue[13] and Look magazine published another 26 in the December 5 issue.[11][14] Bryan produced in 1940 as a short documentary film Siege, released by RKO Radio Pictures,[15] and wrote a book with the same title. The film was nominated for an Academy Award the following year for Best Short Subject, One-reel.[16] Although the film Siege is only 10 minutes long, Julien Bryan presented Franklin Delano Roosevelt his 80-minute-long film from fighting Warsaw.[17]

In 1940, Bryan was hired by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA) to make a series of 23 educational movies on Latin American culture and customs. Afterwards, State Department hired him to create another five movies about the US.

After World War II

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Siege by Julien Bryan
Commemorative plaque at 35 Ostroroga Street in Warsaw

Bryan returned to Poland in 1946. As part of an official UNRRA delegation, he revisited Gdańsk and Warsaw. His Kodachrome footage of recently destroyed Gdańsk is probably the first post-war film shot in that city.[18][19]

In 1958, Bryan revisited Poland and published one hundred of his 1939 photographs from Warsaw. Working with daily newspaper Express Wieczorny, they launched a big campaign, with a page of the 1939 pictures in each issue, and the words: "Do you recognize yourself, your relatives, your house and street? The Express is helping American photographer Julien Bryan to find the heroes of his film from besieged Warsaw in 1939." Readers who recognized anything in his pictures were asked to come to the newspaper's offices with that information. That way he met and recorded stories of many people in his photographs.[11][12] He wrote about his experiences in Warsaw: 1939 siege, 1959 Warsaw Revisited published in 1959 in Poland.

In 1945, Bryan started the International Film Foundation (IFF), and for the remainder of his career he made short documentary films for the school market. Son Sam Bryan joined IFF in 1960. Bryan died in 1974, just two months after receiving a medal from the Polish government for his still photography. After his death, IFF was operated by Sam. In 2003, Sam Bryan donated both his father's still and motion picture footage of wartime Europe to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.[18] Many of his works are currently held by the Library of Congress and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive.[7] In 2006, Siege was named to the National Film Registry of the US by the Librarian of Congress as "a unique, horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war".[16][20] It was also nominated for an Academy Award.

His World War II experiences in Warsaw were fictionalized in the 1978 film ... Gdziekolwiek jesteś Panie Prezydencie (Wherever you may be, Mr. President) by Andrzej Trzos-Rastawiecki [pl]. The role of unnamed "American journalist" based on Julien Bryan was portrayed by Jack Recknitz.[21]

Director Eugeniusz Starky assembled Bryan's 1939 footage, including previously unseen archival material, into the documentary film Korespondent Bryan, premiering in Warsaw in 2010.[22]

Honours

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In 2022, the President of Poland Andrzej Duda awarded Bryan with Virtus et Fraternitas Medal for his contribution in documenting World War II in Poland.[23]

References

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Works cited

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Julien Bryan is an American documentary filmmaker and photographer known for his groundbreaking documentation of daily life in interwar Europe, including the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, and especially for his unique footage captured during the German siege of Warsaw in 1939. His 1939 Warsaw photographs and films, smuggled out of the besieged city, provided some of the earliest visual records of the invasion of Poland to reach Western audiences, resulting in the book Siege and the Oscar-nominated short film Siege (1940). Born on May 23, 1899, in Titusville, Pennsylvania, Bryan served as an ambulance driver with the American Field Service in France during World War I, an experience he chronicled in his book Ambulance 464. After graduating from Princeton University, he financed extensive international travels through public lectures illustrated with his photographs and motion pictures, beginning in the 1920s and intensifying in the 1930s with trips to the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany that produced significant documentary material on everyday life, cultural events, and political realities. His 1937 footage from Nazi Germany, including scenes of anti-Jewish measures and Hitler Youth activities, contributed to the controversial "March of Time" newsreel Inside Nazi Germany (1938). During World War II, Bryan produced documentaries for the U.S. government on Latin American cultures to promote hemispheric solidarity, and in 1945 he founded the nonprofit International Film Foundation to create educational films aimed at fostering international understanding and reducing prejudice. Over the following decades, the foundation produced numerous ethnographic and cultural documentaries distributed to schools worldwide, with Bryan collaborating with animators, filmmakers, and educators until his death on October 20, 1974. His extensive archives, particularly those related to Poland and Nazi Germany, are preserved at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Julien Bryan was born on May 23, 1899, in Titusville, Pennsylvania. He was the son of an elder in the Presbyterian Church. Growing up in a religious household in Pennsylvania, Bryan was exposed to accounts of distant countries shared by traveling missionaries, which sparked his early fascination with other lands and cultures. This family connection to missionary work and the stories he heard in his youth contributed to his lifelong interest in international human experiences and documentation. He graduated from high school at the age of seventeen.

Education and Early Influences

Julien Bryan graduated from Princeton University in 1921. Growing up as the son of a Presbyterian elder, he developed an early fascination with foreign cultures through stories shared by traveling missionaries who visited his home. He subsequently attended Union Theological Seminary in New York, where he studied for the ministry, but ultimately decided against pursuing ordination. After completing his seminary studies, Bryan spent several years directing boys' work at the YMCA in Brooklyn, New York. This role allowed him to engage with social and educational themes that would later inform his documentary interests.

World War I Ambulance Service

Julien Bryan volunteered at the age of 17, immediately after graduating from high school, to serve with the American Field Service driving ambulances for the French Army during World War I. He was assigned to the Verdun and Argonne sectors, serving seven months near Verdun and the Argonne Forest. This frontline experience exposed him to the brutal realities of war and marked the beginning of his serious engagement with photography, as he documented scenes during periods of rest. In 1918, Bryan published Ambulance 464: Encore des Blessés, a memoir of his wartime service with the American Field Service, illustrated throughout with his own photographs taken during the experience.

Pre-World War II Career

International Travel and Lecture Tours

Following his World War I ambulance service and early lantern-slide lectures during his Princeton years, Julien Bryan launched his professional career as a travel-film lecturer in 1933. He joined established lecturer Burton Holmes for a joint tour presenting material on Russia, with Bryan offering contemporary footage under the title “Russia As It Is” during their first appearance at Orchestra Hall in Chicago. From the mid-1930s onward, Bryan maintained an active presence on the U.S. travel-lecture circuit, delivering illustrated presentations that combined slides and motion pictures with live commentary and audience question periods. Bryan financed his extensive international travels through these lectures at auditoriums and concert halls nationwide, supplemented by sales of his footage to educational and newsreel producers. He sold material to Eastman Kodak for release as teaching films and to the March of Time series, while also providing content to ERPI Classroom Films for educational shorts, such as the 1939 production Children of Holland depicting rural family routines, school life, and traditional practices. His documentaries and photographs consistently emphasized human-interest themes, prioritizing natural, unposed depictions of ordinary people in their daily work, family interactions, recreation, and cultural settings rather than dramatic or purely scenic views. Reviewers noted the authenticity and social focus of his work, which highlighted everyday activities and processes to convey realistic insights into foreign societies. This approach established Bryan as a prominent figure in educational filmmaking and public lecturing before World War II.

Documentaries on the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, and Poland

During the 1930s, Julien Bryan conducted multiple filming expeditions to the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, and Poland, producing footage that captured daily life, cultural practices, and emerging political realities in these countries. These efforts built on his earlier pattern of funding international travel through public lectures, where he presented slide shows and later motion picture material to American audiences in concert halls and auditoriums. Bryan began his Soviet Union work with a trip in 1930 and continued with several daring journeys across the decade, traveling from Moscow to the tribal regions of the Caucasus Mountains. He documented a broad range of subjects, including avant-garde and Jewish theater performances, dance festivals, the newly established U.S. Embassy, and everyday local life. Specific footage from this period includes scenes in Georgia in 1933 and other Russian locations in 1936. In 1937, Bryan made an extended trip to Nazi Germany, where he filmed German citizens at work and at leisure, Hitler Youth groups marching and resting in rural areas, Nazi Party rallies such as the Nuremberg event, daily life in cities and on farms, and clear evidence of anti-Jewish measures including restrictive signage. This material supported his U.S. lecture tours and was incorporated into March of Time newsreels, most notably the 1938 release Inside Nazi Germany, which exposed elements of Nazi persecution and aggression, generating significant controversy in the United States and consternation in Germany. In the mid-1930s, Bryan filmed in Poland, recording unique scenes of Jewish life in the quarters of Warsaw and Kraków, as well as rural areas in the countryside. His 1936 footage from Kraków included the old market square and Kazimierz Jewish district, while Warsaw's Jewish quarter and city center appeared in 1936–1937 material.

World War II: Siege of Warsaw

Filming During the September 1939 Siege

Julien Bryan arrived in Warsaw on September 7, 1939, becoming the only accredited foreign correspondent remaining in the besieged city as most foreign reporters, diplomats, and government officials fled ahead of the German advance. He contacted Mayor Stefan Starzyński, who granted him a special permit to photograph and film freely throughout Warsaw and provided a camouflaged car, a guide, and an interpreter named Stefan Radlinski to enable safe movement across the embattled districts. Over the following two weeks until September 21, Bryan documented the siege intensively, capturing hundreds of still photographs—including color images on Kodachrome film—and approximately 5,000 feet of motion-picture film depicting civilian experiences amid the bombardment. His material recorded scenes of ordinary life disrupted by war, such as civilians digging anti-tank ditches and building barricades, as well as widespread destruction from German aerial bombings, artillery shelling, and incendiary attacks that deliberately targeted hospitals, churches, and civilian infrastructure. The footage also showed German planes strafing refugee columns fleeing the city and groups of non-combatants, including women and children harvesting potatoes in open fields. Among the most harrowing images is a photograph taken on September 13, 1939, showing ten-year-old Kazimiera Mika mourning beside the body of her older sister Anna, who had been killed moments earlier when German aircraft strafed women digging potatoes in a field on the outskirts of Warsaw. Bryan, who arrived shortly after the attack, described the child standing transfixed in bewilderment, unable to comprehend why her sister would not respond, and recounted holding and comforting her as she cried—an experience that moved him and the Polish officers accompanying him to tears as well.

Production, Release, and Impact of Siege (1940)

After departing Warsaw on September 21, 1939, Julien Bryan smuggled his raw footage and photographs out of Poland by concealing them in the chemical container of a gas mask carried as a souvenir by a fellow American. His images from the siege soon appeared in prominent American magazines, with photographs published in Life on October 23, 1939, and in Look on December 5, 1939. Bryan then edited the material into a 10-minute documentary titled Siege, released in 1940 by RKO Radio Pictures as part of its Realism Series. He narrated the film himself, providing firsthand commentary on the events depicted. The short was notable as the first non-Nazi-produced footage of the start of World War II to reach U.S. theater audiences, offering an uncensored view of the German invasion and the siege's impact on civilians. Bryan also published a book titled Siege in 1940 through Doubleday, Doran, which expanded on his photographic and written record of the events. ) The documentary received critical recognition with a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (One-reel) in 1941. In 2006, the Librarian of Congress selected Siege for inclusion in the United States National Film Registry, citing its value as an astonishing and unique firsthand visual record of the German blitzkrieg and bombardment of Warsaw, preserving its historical significance as a document of war's brutality.

Wartime and Immediate Post-War Work

Commissioned Films on Latin America and the United States

Following the release of his acclaimed documentary Siege in 1940, Julien Bryan was hired by the U.S. government's Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (under Nelson Rockefeller) to produce educational films promoting the Good Neighbor Policy toward Latin America. These shorts aimed to foster mutual understanding between the United States and Latin American nations by introducing American audiences—particularly students and adults—to the region's culture, customs, geography, education, health services, and wartime cooperation with the U.S. Bryan completed 23 documentary shorts between 1941 and 1945, beginning with Americans All (1941), which provided a historical overview of Latin America while emphasizing youth education, health improvements, and hemispheric solidarity amid Europe's conflict. Subsequent titles explored specific countries and themes, such as Argentine Primer (1942), Colombia Crossroads (1942), Young Uruguay (1943), and Housing in Chile (1943), often highlighting modernization efforts, rural and urban life, and positive U.S. economic influence. The films were screened widely in U.S. schools, frequently with Bryan's live narration to enhance their educational impact. The success of the Latin American series prompted the U.S. State Department to commission Bryan to produce five additional films depicting facets of life in the United States. These were translated into forty languages for distribution abroad, serving to explain American culture and values to international viewers during and after the war.

1946 Return to Poland

In 1946, Julien Bryan returned to Poland as part of an official delegation from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) to document the country's postwar condition and relief efforts. Having previously filmed in Poland during the 1939 siege, he focused on the widespread destruction in Gdańsk and Warsaw. Bryan captured extensive footage of devastated Gdańsk on Kodachrome color film, showing ruined buildings along the river with reflections in the water, damaged structures bearing lingering German-language signs, elderly residents walking through rubble, men digging among bricks, and destroyed landmarks such as the Deutschebank. This material, filmed in the winter of 1945/1946 or 1946/1947, is regarded as among the very early postwar color motion picture records of the heavily damaged city. In Warsaw, he recorded snow-covered ruins, destroyed buildings including the Deutsche Bank facade, horse-drawn carriages navigating rubble-filled streets, and emotional scenes at cemeteries where civilians placed flowers and candles at graves marked with dates from the occupation, including those of Auschwitz victims. His 1946 work also documented UNRRA supplies, such as stacked crates and unloading from ships, alongside early signs of recovery amid the devastation.

International Film Foundation

Founding and Educational Documentary Production

In 1945, Julien Bryan founded the International Film Foundation as a non-profit organization to produce and distribute documentary films that would promote better understanding among the peoples of the world. The foundation focused on creating short educational documentaries intended primarily for school audiences, marking a shift toward sustained emphasis on instructional media following his wartime and immediate postwar government-commissioned projects. These films centered on life in foreign countries, with particular attention to Europe and Latin America, aiming to foster global awareness and cross-cultural insight among young viewers through authentic on-location footage. Bryan directed and produced numerous such shorts under the foundation's banner, leveraging his extensive travel experience to document everyday realities abroad in a style suited to classroom use. Bryan served as executive director of the International Film Foundation until his death in 1974, overseeing ongoing production and distribution of these educational works throughout the postwar decades.

Collaborations and Organizational Legacy

The International Film Foundation benefited from key collaborations with innovative filmmakers and artists to enhance its educational documentaries. Julien Bryan collaborated with Francis Thompson, an Academy Award-winning director known for pioneering the 70mm IMAX format, and with Jules Bucher, a specialist in educational films about foreign countries in Europe and Latin America. Bryan and Bucher together captured rare footage of Martha Graham performing her dance Frontier shortly after she choreographed it in 1935; this material was publicly shown for the first time at the gala opening of the Martha Graham Dance Company in New York City in 1987. Choreographer Merce Cunningham narrated one of Bryan's films. Bryan's son, Sam Bryan, a teacher and historian, joined the organization in 1960, participating fully in film production processes and the planning and execution of filming expeditions. After Julien Bryan's death in 1974, Sam Bryan became Executive Director of the International Film Foundation and sustained its operations, including ongoing distribution of its educational titles.

Later Years, Death, and Legacy

1958-1959 Warsaw Revisited Project

In 1958, Julien Bryan returned to Warsaw nearly two decades after documenting the September 1939 siege, seeking to revisit sites and locate individuals he had photographed during the German invasion. He published 100 of his original 1939 photographs in the Polish newspaper Express Wieczorny across multiple issues in late September and early October, accompanying them with a public appeal asking readers if they recognized themselves, their relatives, houses, or streets in the images. This campaign prompted responses from the public, allowing Bryan to identify and reconnect with some of the people depicted in his wartime photographs and footage. He located twenty-five such individuals during the visit and recorded their stories, current circumstances, and reunions. Bryan incorporated these accounts and reflections on the transformed city into his 1959 book Warsaw: 1939 Siege, 1959 Warsaw Revisited, published by Polonia Publishing House in Warsaw, which reprinted his earlier Siege narrative alongside the new material documenting the identifications and postwar changes.

Awards, Honors, and Archival Preservation

Julien Bryan's documentary film Siege (1940) was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Short Subject, One-reel category at the 13th Academy Awards in 1941. In 2006, Siege was selected for inclusion in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in recognition of its cultural, historical, and aesthetic significance as a firsthand visual record of the 1939 siege of Warsaw. In 1974, during his last visit to Poland, Bryan received the Decoration of Honor Meritorious for Polish Culture (Odznaka Honorowa „Zasłużony dla Kultury Polskiej”) in acknowledgment of his documentation of the invasion and suffering of the Polish people. Bryan died on October 20, 1974, in Bronxville, New York. In 2022, he was posthumously awarded the Virtus et Fraternitas Medal by the President of Poland for his contributions to documenting World War II atrocities in Poland and preserving historical memory. In 2003, Bryan's son Sam donated a substantial collection of his father's wartime still photographs and motion picture footage to the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This donation includes a digitally restored high-definition version of Siege, ensuring ongoing access to and preservation of these significant historical materials.

References

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