Category: Food Fear
- The Fifth Column in the Suburbs
The Fifth Column in the Suburbs was a late-1930s and early wartime panic that ordinary domestic workers, tradesmen, shopkeepers, and especially food handlers of German background might form an unseen internal enemy. In one of its more vivid rumor forms, German bakers were said to be poisoning American bread as part of a fifth-column campaign to soften or panic suburban communities from within. The historical basis for the broader panic is strong: by the late 1930s the term “fifth column” had become widely used for internal subversion, and fear of Nazi sympathizers in the United States spread through politics, media, and popular suspicion. The bread-poisoning version turned that broad fear into an intimate domestic nightmare centered on the daily loaf.