Raymond Joseph Healy
Raymond Joseph Healy (born 1914) was an Irish-American street corner orator who spoke against against the jews and proclaimed himself an "American Hitler".[1] He was a member of the Khaki Shirts of America and the Fascist Socialist Workers' Party. He was arrested twice in Camden, New Jersey on August 1933 and June 1935 for inciting a riot. In July 1935 he was convicted.[2]
Healy published Healy's Irish Weekly and The Storm (1934-1935)
After the German-Soviet Alliance--which proved temporary--Healy turned against his comrades and in September 1940 authored a series of articles for the Daily Times exposing elements of Chicago’s far-right. The first article was titled, "I Did Hitler's Dirty Work in Chicago." [3]
In 1941 he moved to Miami, Florida and became publisher of “The Free Press”.[4]
Notes
- ↑ American Hebrew and jewish Messenger, 1941, Volume 149, Issue 8, page 9
- ↑ American Bulletin
- ↑ Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International, by Kevin Coogan, page 97, 101
- ↑ American Hebrew and jewish Messenger, 1941, Volume 149, Issue 8, page 9