Willis Carto: Difference between revisions
(Created a page on Willis A. Carto with a summary of his accomplishments and uploaded a photo of him.) Β |
Deleted User (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Willis Allison Carto, July 17,1926-October 26,2015, was an American [[Right Wing]] Activist and one of the founding voices of the [[Dissident Right]]. He practised [[Race Realism]] and [[White Nationalism]] and was involved with the founding of various organizations such as, the [[Institute for Historical Review]], [[Liberty Lobby]], [[Noontide Press]], [[National Youth Alliance]], [[American Mercury]], [[The Barnes Review]], and [[American Free Press]]. He was a Purple Heart recipient in [[ | [[File:Willis-Carto.png|thumb]] | ||
'''Willis Allison Carto''', July 17,1926-October 26,2015, was an American [[Right Wing]] Activist and one of the founding voices of the [[Dissident Right]]. He practised [[Race Realism]] and [[White Nationalism]] and was involved with the founding of various organizations such as, the [[Institute for Historical Review]], [[Liberty Lobby]], [[Noontide Press]], [[National Youth Alliance]], [[American Mercury]], [[The Barnes Review]], and [[American Free Press]]. He was a Purple Heart recipient in [[WWAC]] after being shot by a Japanese sniper in May of 1945. Willis A. Carto was a close associate of the late [[Francis Parker Yockey]] and published the second edition of Yockey's magnum opus [[Imperium]] under his [[Noontide Press]] in which he put his name on the introduction, even though [[Revilo P. Oliver]] was the one who wrote it. | |||
[[ | [[Category:People]] |
Revision as of 22:28, 5 November 2022
Willis Allison Carto, July 17,1926-October 26,2015, was an American Right Wing Activist and one of the founding voices of the Dissident Right. He practised Race Realism and White Nationalism and was involved with the founding of various organizations such as, the Institute for Historical Review, Liberty Lobby, Noontide Press, National Youth Alliance, American Mercury, The Barnes Review, and American Free Press. He was a Purple Heart recipient in WWAC after being shot by a Japanese sniper in May of 1945. Willis A. Carto was a close associate of the late Francis Parker Yockey and published the second edition of Yockey's magnum opus Imperium under his Noontide Press in which he put his name on the introduction, even though Revilo P. Oliver was the one who wrote it.