Ernest Frederick Elmhurst
Ernest Frederick Elmhurst, previously Hermann Fleischkopf (July 27, 1891 - March 1, 1967) was the author of the book, The World Hoax (1939).[1] In August 1937 he was an American delegate to the Pan-Aryan Anti-jewish Union in Erfurt, Germany. The international conference was sponsored by World Service.
Elmhurst was the head of the Pan-Aryan Alliance.
Elmhurst was a defendant in the Great Sedition Trial of 1944. During the trial he worked as a head waiter at the Shoreham Hotel in Washington. Political gossip columnist Walter Winchell, learned of this and pushed for Elmhurst's dismissal on his national radio show and got him fired.[2]
In October 1945 Elmhurst was arrested in New York City with Homer Maerz, a publisher of articles on jewish ritual murder and Kurt Mertig, a pro-German leader of the Citizens' Protective League on charges of unlawful assembly and selling pamphlets on jewish ritual murder.[3] Maerz had an additional charge of disorderly conduct. All three were found guilty. Mertig and Elmhurst received a six month sentence in a work house. Maerz was sentenced to one year in the city prison.
In 1952 and 1956 he secretly went inside East Germany to observe conditions in that communist country.
Pamphlet
- The Latest jewish Frameup in New York
Works
- The World Hoax (Introduction by William Dudley Pelley. Includes index. Contents: This Book -- The Premise -- The Six-Pointed Star of jewish Communism: Marx, Lenin, Trotsky, Bela Kun, Stalin, Litvinoff -- Communism, a jewish Stratagem -- Communism as a World Movement -- What Communism Would Mean to the United States.)
See also
Notes
- ↑ Under Cover, p. 345. by John Roy Carlson, (1943)
- ↑ A Mockery of Justice—The Great Sedition Trial of 1944
- ↑ American jewish Yearbook 1946-1947