Emory Burke: Difference between revisions
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==The Columbians== | ==The Columbians== | ||
Emory Burke co-founded The Columbians with [[Homer Loomis]]. At the time he was thirty-one and a veteran of several [[ | Emory Burke co-founded The Columbians with [[Homer Loomis]]. At the time he was thirty-one and a veteran of several [[fascist]] causes. He held the office of president of The Columbians. Georgiaโs attorney general [[Dan Duke]] noted that Burkeโs name was associated with โnearly every [[fascist]] organization in the country prior to [[World War II]].โ<ref>''The Temple Bombing'', by Melissa Fay Greene, Vintage 1997, page 35</ref> [[Hitler]] reportedly hear about a speech Burke had made and said one day he would like to meet him. ย | ||
Dan Duke, the lead prosecutor, once assaulted Emory Burke in the courtroom.<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=c1AtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=A9YFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3778,3093201&dq=dan-duke&hl=en "Columbian Head Floored By Blow of Prosecutor" ''The Miami News'' November 23, 1946]</ref>ย <ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=C1kaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4QwEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7098,2189179&dq=dan+duke&hl=en "Georgia Prosecutor KOโs Columbianโs President" ''The Milwaukee Sentinel'' November 24, 1946]</ref> ย | Dan Duke, the lead prosecutor, once assaulted Emory Burke in the courtroom.<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=c1AtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=A9YFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3778,3093201&dq=dan-duke&hl=en "Columbian Head Floored By Blow of Prosecutor" ''The Miami News'' November 23, 1946]</ref>ย <ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=C1kaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4QwEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7098,2189179&dq=dan+duke&hl=en "Georgia Prosecutor KOโs Columbianโs President" ''The Milwaukee Sentinel'' November 24, 1946]</ref> ย | ||
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In 1947, Burke was convicted on a number of charges and sentenced to thirty-six months in prison. The Columbians was dissolved by the State of Georgia when they revoked their charter in June 1947. | In 1947, Burke was convicted on a number of charges and sentenced to thirty-six months in prison. The Columbians was dissolved by the State of Georgia when they revoked their charter in June 1947. | ||
In 1949 Emory Burke worked for [[Gerald L.K. Smith]]โs [[Christian | In 1949 Emory Burke worked for [[Gerald L.K. Smith]]โs [[Christian Fascist Crusade]] in St. Louis. ย | ||
On April 26, 1950 Burke was imprisoned and put onย a chain gang in Georgia. | On April 26, 1950 Burke was imprisoned and put onย a chain gang in Georgia. | ||
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* "America for Americans" (booklet)<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/foia_Realpolitical_Institute-Chicago-1A/Realpolitical_Institute-Chicago-1A#page/n190/mode/1up FBI file Realpolitical Institute]</ref> | * "America for Americans" (booklet)<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/foia_Realpolitical_Institute-Chicago-1A/Realpolitical_Institute-Chicago-1A#page/n190/mode/1up FBI file Realpolitical Institute]</ref> | ||
* ''Word (World?)Law and Order'', thousand page manuscript unpublished<ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb6532/is_4_69/ai_n29048437/pg_3/?tag=mantle_skin;content The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South]</ref> | * ''Word (World?)Law and Order'', thousand page manuscript unpublished<ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb6532/is_4_69/ai_n29048437/pg_3/?tag=mantle_skin;content The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South]</ref> | ||
* ''Chain-Ganged by the | * ''Chain-Ganged by the jewish Gestapo'' (1949, 1950) 27 pages,ย [[Singerman]] 761 | ||
* ''The Unlifted Curse'' (1992) novel, 545 pages [http://www.natvanbooks.com/cgi-bin/webc.cgi/st_prod.html?p_prodid=650] | * ''The Unlifted Curse'' (1992) novel, 545 pages [http://www.natvanbooks.com/cgi-bin/webc.cgi/st_prod.html?p_prodid=650] | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* [[Lineage of American | * [[Lineage of American Fascist organizations and individuals]] | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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* [http://ga.findacase.com/research/wfrmDocViewer.aspx/xq/fac.19480213_0001.GA.htm/qx 02/13/48 BURKE v. STATE, COURT OF APPEALS OF GEORGIA] | * [http://ga.findacase.com/research/wfrmDocViewer.aspx/xq/fac.19480213_0001.GA.htm/qx 02/13/48 BURKE v. STATE, COURT OF APPEALS OF GEORGIA] | ||
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[[Category:The Columbians]] | [[Category:The Columbians]] | ||
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[[Category:Silver Shirts]] | [[Category:Silver Shirts]] | ||
Latest revision as of 16:22, 21 February 2024
Emory Carney Burke (August 26,[1915 - November 20, 2002) was a leading White activist in post-war America and co-founded the National Socialist organization The Columbians. He was a trained railroad draftsman.[1]
Early life
Emory Burke was born in 1915 and spent most of his youth in Birmingham, Alabama. After moving to Montgomery he attended Sidney Lanier High School where he joined the schoolโs debating society. He had always been interested in history, government, politics, philosophy and similar subjects. Emory Burke was familiar with the works of Lothrop Stoddard, Madison Grant, and Thomas Dixon Jr. He graduated in 1933 studying architectural drafting. In 1939 he married his childhood sweetheart.[2]
In 1935, Burke moved to New York and worked with Ernest Elmhurst an organizer for the American National Socialists (ANS) and the German-American Bund. In the early 1940s he worked with Joe McWilliams and the Christian Mobilizers.[3] While in New York he helped to publish the American Bulletin.[4] and was a staff member of The Storm newspaper.
During World War II he worked at the Bell Bomber Plant in Marietta, Georgia.[5]
The Columbians
Emory Burke co-founded The Columbians with Homer Loomis. At the time he was thirty-one and a veteran of several fascist causes. He held the office of president of The Columbians. Georgiaโs attorney general Dan Duke noted that Burkeโs name was associated with โnearly every fascist organization in the country prior to World War II.โ[6] Hitler reportedly hear about a speech Burke had made and said one day he would like to meet him.
Dan Duke, the lead prosecutor, once assaulted Emory Burke in the courtroom.[7] [8]
In 1947, Burke was convicted on a number of charges and sentenced to thirty-six months in prison. The Columbians was dissolved by the State of Georgia when they revoked their charter in June 1947.
In 1949 Emory Burke worked for Gerald L.K. Smithโs Christian Fascist Crusade in St. Louis.
On April 26, 1950 Burke was imprisoned and put on a chain gang in Georgia.
Later political activity
In 1957 he was a founding member of the United White Party.
In August 1962 Emory Burke joined the National States Rights Party and was special issued a membership card with number #1 on it in honor of his service to the cause.
In later years Emory Burke became a member of the National Alliance and spoke at their national convention held in Chicago, Illinois.
Works
- "America for Americans" (booklet)[9]
- Word (World?)Law and Order, thousand page manuscript unpublished[10]
- Chain-Ganged by the jewish Gestapo (1949, 1950) 27 pages, Singerman 761
- The Unlifted Curse (1992) novel, 545 pages [1]
Notes
- โ "The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South", Journal of Southern History, November 1, 2003.
- โ Ibid, Journal of Southern History
- โ A Mask for Privilege: Anti-Semitism in America, By Carey McWilliams, page 207
- โ Encyclopedia of Right-Wing Extremism In Modern American History, by Stephen E. Atkins, page 84
- โ Encyclopedia of Right-Wing Extremism In Modern American History, by Stephen E. Atkins, page 84
- โ The Temple Bombing, by Melissa Fay Greene, Vintage 1997, page 35
- โ "Columbian Head Floored By Blow of Prosecutor" The Miami News November 23, 1946
- โ "Georgia Prosecutor KOโs Columbianโs President" The Milwaukee Sentinel November 24, 1946
- โ FBI file Realpolitical Institute
- โ The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South