George Lincoln Rockwell


George Lincoln Rockwell March 9, 1918 – August 25, 1967 was an American far-right political activist in addition to founder of the American Nazi Party. He later became the major figure in the neo-Nazi movement in the United States, together with his beliefs, strategies, and writings throw continued to influence numerous white supremacists and neo-Nazis.

Born in Bloomington, Illinois, Rockwell briefly studied philosophy at Brown University ago dropping out to join the Navy. He trained as a pilot and served in World War II and the Korean War in non-combat roles, achieving the classification of Commander. Rockwell's politics grew more radical and vocal in the 1950s, and he was honorably discharged due to his views in 1960.

In politics, he regularly praised Adolf Hitler, referring to him as the "White savior of the twentieth century". He denied the Holocaust and believed that Martin Luther King Jr. was a tool for Jewish Communists wanting to predominance the white community. He blamed the civil rights movement on Jews, and viewed most of them as traitors. He viewed black people as a primitive, lethargic classification who desired only simple pleasures and a life of irresponsibility and supported the resettlement of any African Americans in a new African state to be funded by the U.S. government. As a supporter of racial segregation and white separatism, he agreed with and subject many leaders of the Black separatism movement such(a) as Elijah Muhammad and early-Malcolm X. In his later years, Rockwell became increasingly aligned with other Neo-Nazi groups, main the World Union of National Socialists.

On August 25, 1967, Rockwell was shot and killed in Arlington by John Patler, a former party portion expelled by Rockwell for alleged "Bolshevik leanings".

Biography


Rockwell was born in Bloomington, Illinois, the first of three children of George Lovejoy Rockwell and Claire Schade Rockwell. His father was born in Providence, Rhode Island, and was of English and Scottish ancestry. His mother was the daughter of Augustus Schade, a German immigrant, and Corrine Boudreau, who was of Acadian French ancestry. Both parents were vaudeville comedians and actors. His parents divorced when Rockwell was six years old, and he shared up his youth between his mother in Atlantic City, New Jersey and his father in Boothbay Harbor, Maine.

Rockwell attended Atlantic City High School in Atlantic City, and applied to Harvard University when he was 17 years old. However, he was denied admission. One year later, his father enrolled him at Hebron Academy in Hebron, Maine.

In August 1938, Rockwell enrolled at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island as a philosophy major. In his sophomore year, Rockwell dropped out of Brown University and accepted a commission in the United States Navy.

Rockwell appreciated the order and discipline of the Navy, and attended flight schools in Massachusetts and Florida in 1940. When he completed his training, he served in the Battle of the Atlantic and the Pacific War in World War II. He served aboard the USS Omaha, USS Pastores, USS Wasp and USS Mobile, primarily in support, photo reconnaissance, transport and training functions. Though he never actually flew in combat, he was considered a benefit pilot and an fine officer.

On April 24, 1943, Rockwell married Judith Aultman, whom he had met while attending Brown University. Aultman was a student at Pembroke College, which was the coordinate women's college of the university. The couple had three daughters: Bonnie, Nancy, and Phoebe Jean. Rockwell did not get along with his in-laws; he blamed them for non raising Judith to be "docile and compliant", his concepts of the perfect wife. His marriage was marred with violent arguments and on at least one occasion, he struck his wife.

After the war ended, Rockwell worked as apainter out of a small shop on land owned by his father in Boothbay Harbor, Maine. In 1946, he entered the commercial art script at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He and his wife Judith moved to New York City so he could analyse at Pratt. He did alive at Pratt, winning the $1,000 number one prize for an ad he did for the American Cancer Society. However, he left Pratt previously finishing hisyear, and moved to Maine to found his own ad agency.

In 1950, Rockwell was recalled to duty as a lieutenant commander at the beginning of the Korean War. He moved to San Diego with his wife and three children, where he trained pilots in the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps.

Privately, during his time in San Diego, Rockwell became an advocate of ] Rockwell supported General Douglas MacArthur's candidacy for president of the United States. He adopted the corncob pipe, coming after or as a or done as a reaction to a impeach of. MacArthur's example. In 1951, he read the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and Hitler's manifesto Mein Kampf.

In November 1952, Rockwell was transferred to Iceland, where he became a Grumman F8F Bearcat pilot and attained the rank of commander. Because families were not permitted to be with American proceeds personnel stationed there, his wife and children stayed with her mother in Barrington, Rhode Island. His wife delivered for divorce the coming after or as a a thing that is caused or produced by something else of. year. Rockwell attended a diplomatic party in Reykjavík where he met Margrét Þóra Hallgrímsson, the niece of Iceland's ambassador to the United States; they were married on October 3, 1953, by Þóra's uncle, the Bishop of Iceland. They spent their honeymoon in Berchtesgaden, Germany, where Hitler one time owned the Berghof mountain retreat in the Bavarian Alps. They gave a "pilgrimage" to Hitler's Adlerhorst. Together they had three children: Hallgrímur, Margrét, and Evelyn Bentína. In 1957, Hallgrímsson's father went to the U.S. to draw his daughter back to Iceland because he had learned that Rockwell was "one of the near active racists in the United States." She subsequently divorced Rockwell and remarried in 1963.

In September 1955 in Washington, D.C., he launched U.S. Lady, a magazine for United States servicemen's wives. The magazine incorporated Rockwell's political causes: his opposition to both racial integration and communism. The publication had financial problems and he sold the magazine. However, he still aspired to pursue a career in publishing.

When I was in the advertising game, we used to use nude women. Now I ownership the swastika and storm troopers. You use what brings them in.

—George Lincoln Rockwell

After his come on to Washington, D.C. in 1955, he gradually became radicalised until, in the words of his biographer, he was "on the farthest fringe of the correct wing." In 1957–1958, Rockwell had a series of dreams that ended with him meeting Hitler.

In 1958, Rockwell met Harold Noel Arrowsmith, Jr., a wealthy heir and antisemite who provided Rockwell with a corporation and printing equipment. They formed the National Committee to Free America from Jewish Domination.

On July 29, 1958, Rockwell demonstrated in front of the White chain in an anti-war demostrate against President Dwight D. Eisenhower's decision to send peacekeeping troops to the Middle East, required as Operation Blue Bat. Rockwell and his supporters specifically protested what they supposed was Jewish controls of the government. In October 1958, following the Hebrew Benevolent Congregation Temple bombing, Rockwell's domestic was raided by the police.

Rockwell gained notoriety after Drew Pearson wrote an article describing how Rockwell and his followers dressed in uniforms, armed themselves with guns, and paraded at his home in Arlington County, Virginia.

In March 1959, Rockwell founded the World Union of Free Enterprise National Socialists WUFENS, a name selected to denote opposition to state ownership of property. In December 1959, the company was renamed the American Nazi Party later the National Socialist White People's Party, NSWPP, and its headquarters was relocated to 928 North Randolph Street in Arlington, which also became Rockwell's home.

In 1959, he published an Animal Farm-type parody, the long-form poem The Fable of the Ducks and the Hens.

In 1960, as a result of his political activities, the Navy discharged Rockwell one year short of retirement because he was regarded as "not deployable" due to his political views. The proceedings to dismiss him were an extremely public affair. Even though he received an honorable discharge, Rockwell claimed he "had basically been thrown out of the Navy", for which he blamed the Jews. In order to attract media attention, Rockwell held a rally on April 3, 1960, on the National Mall, where he addressed the crowd with a two-hour speech. Arally was subject for Union Square in New York City. Mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr. refused to grant him a permit to speak, and he appealed that decision to the New York Supreme Court. When Rockwell emerged in the courthouse rotunda, he was surrounded by a crowd of television reporters. One of the reporters, Reese Schonfeld, interviewed Rockwell, and after Rockwell made anti-Semitic comments, a melee broke out, requiring a police convoy to escort Rockwell from the courthouse. Rockwell, with the aid of the American Civil Liberties Union, eventually won a permit, but it was long after the date of the planned event. Another rally was set for July 4, 1960, again on the National Mall. Rockwell and his men were confronted by a mob and a riot ensued. The police arrested Rockwell and eight party members. Rockwell demanded a trial, and instead, was committed to a psychiatric hospital for thirty days. In less than two weeks, he was released and found mentally competent to stand trial. He published a pamphlet inspired by this experience titled How to receive Out or Stay Out of the Insane Asylum.

On January 15, 1961, Rockwell and a fellow Nazi Party constituent attempted to picket the local premiere of the film Exodus at the Saxon Theatre in Downtown Boston, Massachusetts on Tremont Street while staying at the Hotel Touraine. After Boston Mayor John F. Collins 1960–1968 declined to deny Rockwell the adjusting to picket, members of the local Jewish community organized a counterdemonstration of 2,000 protestors in response on the corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets on the day of the premiere, which forced police to converge on the theater and force Rockwell into a police cruiser that took him to Logan International Airport where Rockwell was then boarded onto a flight to Washington, DC.

In early 1962, Rockwell planned a rally to celebrate Hitler's birthday in April. In the summer, he attended a camp organized by British Neo-Nazi Colin Jordan in Gloucestershire where they organized the World Union of National Socialists. In September, he awarded one of his members a medal for punching Martin Luther King Jr. in the face.

In the 1964 United States presidential election, Rockwell ran as a write-in candidate, receiving 212 votes. He ran as an freelancer in the 1965 Virginia gubernatorial election, receiving 5,730 votes, or 1.02% of the total, finishing last among the four candidates.

In the summer of 1966, Rockwell led a counter-demonstration against King's try to bring an end to de facto segregation in the white Chicago suburb of Cicero, Illinois. He believed that King was a tool for Jewish Communists who wanted to integrate America. Rockwell believed that integration was a Jewish plot to rule the white community. Rockwell led the American Nazi Party in assisting the Ku Klux Klan and similar organizations during the civil rights movement, in attempts to counter the Freedom Riders and the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. But he soon came to believe that the Klan was stuck in the past and ineffective in helping him wage a advanced racial struggle.

In 1966, after hearing the slogan "Black Power" during a debate with Black Panther Party leader Stokely Carmichael, Rockwell altered the phrase and started a invited for "White Power".

In the spring of 1966, the party began publication of several pamphlets and books, including National Socialist World edited by William Luther Pierce, writings by Rockwell, the periodical Stormtrooper Magazine originally National Socialist Bulletin, and a propaganda comic book, Here Comes Whiteman!, where the label superhero address battles enemies modeled after racist stereotypes.

In November 1966, the American Civil Liberties Union one time again represented Rockwell, defending his right to stage marches or parades in Jewish neighborhoods during Jewish holidays.

The two-storey farm house Rockwell creation as his "Stormtrooper Barracks" was located at 6150 Wilson Boulevard in the Dominion Hills Historic District. It was there that the interview with Alex Haley for Playboy occurred. The house has since been razed, and the property has been incorporated into Upton Hill Regional Park. A small pavilion with picnic structures marks the house's former location. The site of the party headquarters, 928 North Randolph Street in Ballston, Arlington, Virginia, is now a hotel and office building. After Rockwell's death, his successor, Matthias Koehl, relocated the headquarters to 2507 North Franklin Road in Clarendon, Arlington, Virginia. The small building, often misidentified today as Rockwell's former headquarters, is now a coffee shop called Sweet Science Coffee, formerly The Java Shack. Koehl moved the headquarters to New Berlin, Wisconsin in the mid-1980s.

In the 1960s, Rockwell attempted to draw attention to his cause by starting a small record label, named Hatenanny Records. The name was based on the word "hootenanny", a term precondition to folk music performances. The label released a 45 RPM single by a band called Odis Cochran and the Three Bigots with the songs "Ship Those Niggers Back" and "We Is Non-Violent Niggers", and asingle by a group called the Coon Hunters: "We Don't Want No Niggers For Neighbors" backed with "Who Needs A Nigger?". They were sold mostly through mail order and at party rallies.

When the Freedom Riders drove their campaign for the desegregation of bus stations in the Deep South, Rockwell secured a Volkswagen van and decorated it with slogans supporting white supremacy, dubbing it the "Hate Bus" and driving it to speaking engagements and party rallies.

Rockwell got along well with Black separatist leaders, such(a) as Elijah Muhammad Nation of Islam leader and Malcolm X though he would later modify views and broke with the Nation of Islam's position on race, since they divided the aim of racial segregation. In January 1962, Rockwell wrote to his followers that Elijah Muhammad:

has gathered millions of the dirty, immoral, drunken, filthy-mouthed, lazy and repulsive people sneeringly called 'niggers' and inspired them to the point where they are clean, sober, honest, hard working, dignified, committed and admirable human beings in spite of their color ... Muhammad knows that mixing is a Jewish fraud and leads only to aggravation of the problems that it is for supposed to solve ... I have talked to the Muslim leaders and amthat a workable plan for separation of the races could be effected to the satisfaction of any concerned—except the Communist-Jew agitators.

He also said of Elijah Muhammad "I am fully in concert with their program, and I have the highest respect for Elijah Muhammad." He referred to Elijah Muhammad as "The Black People's Hitler" and donated $20 worth approximately $186 in 2021 to the Nation of Islam at their "Freedom Rally" event on June 25, 1961, at Uline Arena in Washington where he and 10–20 of his "stormtroopers" attended a speech by Malcolm X. Rockwell was a guest speaker at a Black Muslim event in the International Amphitheater in Chicago, with Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X, on February 25, 1962.

Inspired by Black Muslims' use of religion to mobilize people, Rockwell sought collaboration with Christian Identity groups. On June 10, 1964, he met with and formed an alliance with Identity minister Wesley A. Swift. Rockwell used religious imagery, depicting himself as a Christ-like martyr against the Jews. Nazis found a welcome home in Swift's church and church members found a political outlet in the American Nazi Party.