Edward James Smythe: Difference between revisions

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'''Edward James Smythe''' (born 1892, died August 16, 1955)<ref>''The New York Times'', August 17, 1955</ref> of New York and Chicago was a defendant in the [[Great Sedition Trial of 1944]]. He was the publisher of ''[[Our Common Cause]]'' and national commander of the [[Protestant War Veterans Association]] organized in 1937 based in [[Washington DC]]. He persuaded the telephone company to give him the phone number "National 1776". He founded the [[Protestant Chaplin Association]] and the [[Christian Civil Liberties Committee]]. Smythe wrote a weekly column titled "Unmasked" for the nationalist publication ''[[Publicity]]''. ย 
'''Edward James Smythe''' (born 1892, died August 16, 1955)<ref>''The New York Times'', August 17, 1955</ref> of New York and Chicago was a defendant in the [[Great Sedition Trial of 1944]]. He was the publisher of ''[[Our Common Cause]]'' and national commander of the [[Protestant War Veterans Association]] organized in 1937 based in [[Washington DC]]. He persuaded the telephone company to give him the phone number "National 1776". He founded the [[Protestant Chaplin Association]] and the [[Christian Civil Liberties Committee]]. Smythe wrote a weekly column titled "Unmasked" for the fascist publication ''[[Publicity]]''. ย 


Smythe was instrumental in organizing a joint rally of [[Ku Klux Klan]] and [[German American Bund]] members on August 18, 1940 at [[Bund Camp Nordland]] in New Jersey.<ref>"The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South", ''Journal of Southern History'', November 1, 2003.</ref>
Smythe was instrumental in organizing a joint rally of [[Ku Klux Klan]] and [[German American Bund]] members on August 18, 1940 at [[Bund Camp Nordland]] in New Jersey.<ref>"The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South", ''Journal of Southern History'', November 1, 2003.</ref>
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Smythe was absent when the sedition trial opened in Washington DC on April 17, 1944. He was apprehended the next day in New York state near the Canadian border.<ref>''American Political Trials'', by Michal R. Belknap, page 186.</ref> He said he had gone there to fish and was unaware of the date of the trial claiming the [[FBI]] had stolen his mail.<ref>''Women of the Far Right: The Mothers' Movement and World War II'', by Glen Jeansonne, p. 159</ref>
Smythe was absent when the sedition trial opened in Washington DC on April 17, 1944. He was apprehended the next day in New York state near the Canadian border.<ref>''American Political Trials'', by Michal R. Belknap, page 186.</ref> He said he had gone there to fish and was unaware of the date of the trial claiming the [[FBI]] had stolen his mail.<ref>''Women of the Far Right: The Mothers' Movement and World War II'', by Glen Jeansonne, p. 159</ref>


In 1944 he organized a front group called the [[Republican Nationalist Party]].
In 1944 he organized a front group called the [[Republican Fascist Party]].


In the 1950s he was the editor of the ''[[Protestant Statesman and Nation]]'' in Washington DC and ran the [[Protestant Press Association]]. In April 1952 he received a one-year suspended sentence for using the mails to defraud.<ref>"PAROLED IN MAIL FRAUD; Defendant in War Sedition Case Accused of Spreading Hate", ''The New York Times'', April 25, 1952</ref>
In the 1950s he was the editor of the ''[[Protestant Statesman and Nation]]'' in Washington DC and ran the [[Protestant Press Association]]. In April 1952 he received a one-year suspended sentence for using the mails to defraud.<ref>"PAROLED IN MAIL FRAUD; Defendant in War Sedition Case Accused of Spreading Hate", ''The New York Times'', April 25, 1952</ref>
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:''God Bless America
:''God Bless America
:''The Jews own it ย 
:''The jews own it ย 
:''The Catholics run it ย 
:''The Catholics run it ย 
:''The Negroes enjoy it ย 
:''The Negroes enjoy it ย 
:''The Protestants founded it, but ย 
:''The Protestants founded it, but ย 
:''The Communists will destroy itย  <ref>''The Destruction of the European Jews'', by [[Raul Hilberg]], page 764</ref>
:''The Communists will destroy itย  <ref>''The Destruction of the European jews'', by [[Raul Hilberg]], page 764</ref>


Smythe reportedly once called [[Hitler]] the "The Twentieth Century Messiah".<ref>[http://jfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/H%20Disk/Hour%20The/Item%2004.pdf ''The Hour'', Number 149,ย  January 30, 1943]</ref>
Smythe reportedly once called [[Hitler]] the "The Twentieth Century Messiah".<ref>[http://jfk.hood.edu/Collection/Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/H%20Disk/Hour%20The/Item%2004.pdf ''The Hour'', Number 149,ย  January 30, 1943]</ref>


==Notes==
==Notes==
<small><references/></small>
<small>{{Reflist|2}}</small>






[[Category:Great Sedition Trial]]
[[Category:Great Sedition Trial]]
[[Category:American nationalist publishers]]
[[Category:publishers]]
[[Category:1930's nationalists]]
[[Category:1940's nationalists]]
[[Category:American Bund]]
[[Category:Ku Klux Klan members]]

Latest revision as of 16:09, 21 February 2024

Edward James Smythe (born 1892, died August 16, 1955)[1] of New York and Chicago was a defendant in the Great Sedition Trial of 1944. He was the publisher of Our Common Cause and national commander of the Protestant War Veterans Association organized in 1937 based in Washington DC. He persuaded the telephone company to give him the phone number "National 1776". He founded the Protestant Chaplin Association and the Christian Civil Liberties Committee. Smythe wrote a weekly column titled "Unmasked" for the fascist publication Publicity.

Smythe was instrumental in organizing a joint rally of Ku Klux Klan and German American Bund members on August 18, 1940 at Bund Camp Nordland in New Jersey.[2]

Smythe was absent when the sedition trial opened in Washington DC on April 17, 1944. He was apprehended the next day in New York state near the Canadian border.[3] He said he had gone there to fish and was unaware of the date of the trial claiming the FBI had stolen his mail.[4]

In 1944 he organized a front group called the Republican Fascist Party.

In the 1950s he was the editor of the Protestant Statesman and Nation in Washington DC and ran the Protestant Press Association. In April 1952 he received a one-year suspended sentence for using the mails to defraud.[5]

Smythe wrote the popular nativist jingle "God Bless America":

God Bless America
The jews own it
The Catholics run it
The Negroes enjoy it
The Protestants founded it, but
The Communists will destroy it [6]

Smythe reportedly once called Hitler the "The Twentieth Century Messiah".[7]

Notes

  1. โ†‘ The New York Times, August 17, 1955
  2. โ†‘ "The Columbians, Inc.: a chapter of racial hatred from the post-World War II South", Journal of Southern History, November 1, 2003.
  3. โ†‘ American Political Trials, by Michal R. Belknap, page 186.
  4. โ†‘ Women of the Far Right: The Mothers' Movement and World War II, by Glen Jeansonne, p. 159
  5. โ†‘ "PAROLED IN MAIL FRAUD; Defendant in War Sedition Case Accused of Spreading Hate", The New York Times, April 25, 1952
  6. โ†‘ The Destruction of the European jews, by Raul Hilberg, page 764
  7. โ†‘ The Hour, Number 149, January 30, 1943