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A. K. Chesterton

Arthur Kenneth Chesterton MC (1 May 1899 – 16 August 1973) was a British journalist and political activist. From 1933 to 1938, he was a member of the British Union of Fascists (BUF). Disillusioned with Oswald Mosley, he left the BUF in 1938. Chesterton established the League of Empire Loyalists in 1954, which merged with a short-lived British National Party in 1967 to become the National Front. He founded and edited the magazine Candour in 1954 as the successor of Truth, of which he had been co-editor.

A. K. Chesterton
Personal details
Born
Arthur Kenneth Chesterton

(1899-05-01)1 May 1899
Krugersdorp, South African Republic
Died16 August 1973(1973-08-16) (aged 74)
London, United Kingdom
Political party
RelationsG. K. Chesterton (first cousin, once removed)
Cecil Chesterton (first cousin, once removed)

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

Arthur Kenneth Chesterton was born on 1 May 1899 in Krugersdorp, South African Republic, the son of Arthur George Chesterton (1871–1900), a secretary at the local gold mine, and Harriet Ethel Chesterton (née Down).[1][2] He was the first cousin once removed of the author and poet G. K. Chesterton and the journalist Cecil Chesterton, his paternal grandfather being an older brother of G. K. and Cecil's father Edward.[3] The young A. K. held his two cousins in high regard, seeing Cecil as his "exemplar".[4]

Just after the outbreak of the Second Boer War in October 1899, Chesterton and his mother were sent to England. His father later died of pneumonia at 28 on his journey to join the family.[2] In May 1902, after the end of the conflict, Chesterton returned to Krugersdorp with his paternal uncle and his mother. His mother soon married a Scottish mine administrator named George Horne, and the reconstituted family settled in Witwatersrand, near Johannesburg. In 1911, aged 12, Chesterton was sent again to England to live with his paternal grandfather in Herne Hill. He attended Dulwich College and Berkhamsted School, Hertfordshire,[5] where he was a schoolmate of Ben Greene and Rex Tremlett.[6]

World War I edit

In October 1915, Chesterton's mother and step-father visited him in England, and he persuaded them to bring him back to South Africa. Shortly after disembarking, Chesterton decided to join the army, but too young to enlist at 16, he falsified his age to enroll in the 5th South African Light Infantry to fight in German East Africa.[7][8] In his memoirs, Chesterton alluded to two battles against the Germans at Salaita Hill on 12 February 1916, and at Latema Nek on 11–12 March 1916.[2] During a march in 1916, Chesterton collapsed from fever and was left on the roadside to die. He was eventually rescued by two African porters and sent home to his family in Johannesburg.[9]

After a period of convalescence, then aged 17, Chesterton decided to join the army again and went to Ireland to train as an officer with a cadet battalion.[2] In August 1918, he received his commission as second lieutenant and was transferred to the 2/2 Battalion, City of London Regiment, Royal Fusiliers.[10] Chesterton served over two years on the Western Front.[2] At the end of the war, he was awarded the Military Cross for his actions during the battle of Épehy on 18–19 September 1918. Chesterton was at the head of a platoon reinforcing an assault against a German position near the village of Pezières in northern France.[11]

After the end of the war, Chesterton suffered from chronic symptoms of malaria and dysentery lingered from the East African campaign, and from permanent respiratory issues caused by a gas attack in Europe. Like many veterans, he developed an addiction to alcohol, punctuated by "nervous breakdowns" and episodes of "neurasthenia".[2] Traumatised by trench warfare, Chesterton wrote that he had recurring nightmares of dead bodies and wrote that he began to experience the world as "one vast necropolis".[4]

Career as a journalist edit

Shortly before his 21st birthday in 1919, Chesterton moved back to South Africa, where he worked as a journalist for The Johannesburg Star.[2][4] In 1924 he returned to England and, under the tutelage of G. Wilson Knight, Chesterton developed a reputation as a Shakespearean critic. He secured a job as a journalist and festival critic at the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald, then as a public relation officer at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre. In 1928, he edited the short-lived monthly Shakespearean Review, where he developed his ideas about cultural decay.[4]

In 1929 Chesterton met his future wife, Doris Terry, a schoolteacher from Torquay. The couple married in 1933 and moved to Kingston upon Thames. Doris was a Fabian socialist and did not share her husband's later political views.[12]

Between 1929 and 1931, he worked as a journalist for the Torquay Times,[4] and served as the chairman of the South Devon branch of the National Union of Journalists.[13] In November 1933 Chesterton joined the British Union of Fascists (BUF) while still employed by the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, after being recruited by Rex Tremlett, his former schoolmate at Berkhamsted and then the editor of BUF's newspapers Fascist Week and The Blackshirt.[14][4]

British Union of Fascists edit

Six months after joining the BUF, Chesterton was appointed officer-in-charge of Warwickshire and Staffordshire, and in April 1934 officer-in-charge of the "Midlands Area" for the party. Oswald Mosley, the leader of the BUF, later appointed him Director of Press Propaganda, a subsection of the BUF Propaganda Department, and in March 1935 to the BUF "Research Directory", the "inner circle" of the party's strategists. During the spring of 1935, Chesterton started to drink again. He was said to frequently arrive at BUF headquarters "in a drunken state", and some members began to call for his expulsion. In July, Blackshirt euphemistically reported that Chesterston was "having a well-deserved rest, on the strict orders of his doctor." Mosley eventually paid for Chesterton to be treated by a neurologist in Germany.[4]

Following his return to Britain in April 1937, Chesterton was appointed in June "Director of Publicity and Propaganda", and in August the editor of The Blackshirt. This position provided a pulpit for his increasingly "vituperative" anti-Semitic rhetoric, the magazine promoting The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as "the most astounding book ever published".[4] Chesterton also wrote the officially sanctioned biography of Mosley entitled Oswald Mosley: Portrait of a Leader (1937),[15] in fact a hagiography of Mosley in which Chesterton claims that the BUF leader had an "unconquerable spirit, with its grandeur of courage and resolve", closing the book with the salutation "Hail, Mosley, patriot, revolutionary and leader of men!"[16]

World War II edit

In the late 1930s Chesterton became gradually disillusioned with the myth of "The Leader" and came to lose confidence in Mosley after 1937. On 18 March 1938, he resigned from the BUF; Mosley soon had his memory erased from the history of the party. The same year, Chesterton attended a meeting of the National Socialist League (NSL). The NSL published his pamphlet Why I left Mosley in 1938, although Chesterton never joined the organisation. He became involved with the short-lived British Council against European Commitments (BCAE), an anti-Bolshevik movement which had emerged during the Munich crisis to resist war with Germany, and he contributed to Lord Lymington's journal New Pioneer.[4]

In June 1939, Chesterton established his own group, British Vigil. He regularly spoke at meetings of the Nordic League,[17] and became involved with the Right Club, a secretive organization founded in May 1939 to consolidate existing right-wing British organizations into a unified body.[2] Archibald Ramsay, founder of the Right Club, explained its ideology and purpose:[18]

"The main object of the Right Club was to oppose and expose the activities of Organized Jewry, in the light of the evidence which came into my possession in 1938. Our first objective was to clear the Conservative Party of Jewish influence, and the character of our membership and meetings were strictly in keeping with this objective."

In 1939, at the outbreak of World War II, Chesterton re-enlisted in the British Army and served in Kenya and Somaliland. He relapsed into alcoholism and relinquished his commission on grounds of ill health in the spring of 1943.[4] Upon his return to Britain, he set up the short-lived National Front after Victory (NF after V) and was involved with the relaunched British Peoples Party.[19][2]

Chesterton applied for work at the BBC, but MI5 intervened to ensure that he could not be employed. He found work in sub-editing at the Sheffield Evening Telegraph, but was forced to resign due to a bout of malaria. Afterwards, he worked for the Southport Guardian and the Liverpool Evening Express, and partly as a freelance journalist to supplement his living, including for The Weekly Review. In August 1943, the Daily Worker published an attack on Chesterton accusing him of treachery for his past association with William Joyce. Chesterton sued the Daily Worker and The Jewish Chronicle, which had repeated the accusation, for libel. The case was dropped for lack of funds, but Chesterton did manage to elicit an apology. In September 1944, he was appointed deputy editor of Truth.[4]

Post-war activism edit

In February 1945 Chesterton helped establish the National Front, a coalition of underground minor fascist groups with policies including the safeguarding of a strong "national and Empire economy", preserving Christian traditions and finding "an honourable, just and lasting solution" to the "real Jewish problem". The movement was headed first by Collin Brooks then by Chesterton.[20]

From 1950 to 1958, Chesterton authored a reoccurring article titled "The International Situation" for every issue of The Journal of the Royal United Services Institution, nowadays often known as the RUSI Journal.[4]

Chesterton became literary advisor to Lord Beaverbrook, who offered him jobs at The Daily Express and the Evening Standard. Chesterton ghostwrote his autobiography Don't Trust To Luck (1954). In October 1953, whilst still in Beaverbrook's employ, Chesterton founded the magazine Candour,[4] which is still published today, though increasingly erratically as of 2012.[21] He has claimed that Beaverbrook sacked him upon learning of Candour's existence; in fact, his contract expired in January 1954 and was not renewed.[4]

Following the collapse of the National Front due to infighting, Chesterton founded in 1954 the League of Empire Loyalists (LEL), a political pressure group which gathered many future far-right leaders the likes of Colin Jordan, John Bean, John Tyndall, or Martin Webster.[19] The movement was publicly known in the 1950s for its political stunts, especially in interrupting Conservative conferences while chanting "Save the Empire" and "Tory Traitors".[22]

1960s edit

In July 1965, Chesterton published The New Unhappy Lords, a self-described study of the "power elites" which takes the form, in the words of scholar Graham Macklin, of an "elegantly written antisemitic tirade on the subversive and occult conspiracy against the British Empire, and Western civilisation in general, that he believed was striving behind the scenes to create a 'One-World' Jewish super-state."[23] Following the demise of Nazi Germany for its "revolt against the Money Power", Chesterton argued that the British Empire and Commonwealth were then the decisive impediment to the global money-power conspiracy, mainly thanks to their system of Imperial preference.[24] The book received damning reviews in the mainstream media, but it had sold in excess of 17,000 copies by June 1969.[23] Along with Phyllis Schlafly's A Choice Not an Echo, published one year earlier, the book was one of the first to highlight the Bilderberg Group as a decisive actor in global conspiracy theories.[24]

After failing to make gains in the 1966 general election, Chesterton founded in February 1967 a second National Front (NF); he was elected the party's first chairman and remained its Policy Director until 1970.[25][19] The National Front brought together the LEL and British National Party. A faction of the Racial Preservation Society decided to join them, but radicals and openly neo-Nazis figures like Jordan, Tyndall or Webster were excluded to avoid public backlash.[26] In June 1967, however, Chesterton eventually welcomed Tyndall and members of the Greater Britain Movement (GBM) into the party.[27]

Later life and death edit

At the end of his life, Chesterton became increasingly ill from the emphysema he had contracted in the gas attack during World War I, living part-time in his native South Africa.[22] While Chesterton was holidaying in South Africa, a faction led by Gordon Brown—formerly of Tyndall's GBM—launched a leadership challenge against him. On realising that his support was weak, Chesterton resigned in 1970.[28]

Chesterton spent the remainder of his days editing Candour until his death from emphysema on 16 August 1973, aged 74.[22][23]

Views edit

According to historian Richard Thurlow, Chesterton's "weird mixture of racism, ethnocentrism and conspiracy theory in its racial theory and its paternalism, monarchism (particularly reverence for Edward I who expelled the Jews), cultural pessimism, Social Darwinism and dialectical mode of argument in its political theory are more akin to patterns of thought prevalent in pre-Nazi German Conservatism than to any English equivalent."[29]

After the war, Chesterton repudiated fascism and resolutely denied accusations to the effect that he was pursuing a "neo-fascist" agenda.[4] He toned down the antisemitic imagery of his pre-war writings, although the Jews remained at the centre of his conspiracy theories. Described as "far more parasitic and corrupt than any baby could conceive" in Blackshirt (1935), they were still "the principal promoters of the idea of integrating peoples of disparate racial stocks" in his 1965 book The New Unhappy Lords.[30]

Although he conceded in 1973 that "any competent Jewish writer can make a nonsense of attempts to prove their authenticity", Chesterton regarded The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a Tsarist antisemitic forgery, as a "masterly analysis of the weaknesses of Gentile society" in The New Happy Lord (1965).[31] In his later life, he came to consider the use of crude antisemitism a "liability and a menace" to the nationalist movement. Chesterton launched in September 1970 a public attack on anti-Semitic conspiracy theorist Eustace Mullins in Candour, under the title "This man is dangerous".[32]

Influence edit

John Tyndall, who established the British National Party (BNP) in 1982, has declared in 1971, "Without hesitation, what understanding I have of political affairs I have I owe much more to A.K. than any other person"; Tyndall kept on recommending Chesterton's writings until his death in July 2005. Martin Webster, the National Front national activities organiser from 1969 to 1983, stressed in 2009 the "tremendous impact" of the intellectual framework provided by Chesterton book The New Happy Lord "because it tied together the threads of what is happening, why and who's doing it".[33] Chesterton was also a long-time friend of Revilo P. Oliver; they regularly wrote to each other until Chesterton's death in 1973.[23]

Works edit

Chesterton's works (including some previously only published within Candour magazine) have been re-edited by the A. K. Chesterton Trust from 2013 onward. In 1945, Chesterton penned an anti-Labour satire under the pseudonym Caius Marcius Coriolanus, the name of Shakespeare's Roman tragedy, published by writer and British Housewives League member Dorothy Crisp.

Books

  • Adventures in Dramatic Appreciation (1931)
  • Brave Enterprise: A History of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon (1934)
  • Creed of a Fascist Revolutionary (1935)
  • Oswald Mosley: Portrait of a Leader (1937)
  • Why I Left Mosley (1938)
  • No Shelter for Morrison [a play]. London: Dorothy Crisp & Co., Ltd. (1945)
Published under the pseudonym Caius Marcius Coriolanus.

Articles

  • British Union Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 2, April/June 1937, pp. 45–54.

Pamphlets

  • Not Guilty: An Account of the Historic Race Relations Trial at Lewes Assizes in March 1968 (1968)

Plays

  • Leopard Valley: A Play in Three Acts (1943)

See also edit

  • Candour – British far-right-wing magazine

References edit

  1. ^ Baker 1996, p. 15.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i LeCras 2019.
  3. ^ Baker 1996, p. 15: "A. K. was a second cousin to G. K., his grandfather being an older brother of G. K.’s father, Edward."; Macklin 2020: "Chesterton grew up in awe of his second cousins, the renowned Catholic journalists Gilbert and Cecil Chesterton."
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Macklin 2020.
  5. ^ Baker 1996, p. 35.
  6. ^ LeCras 2019: "Greene was a former schoolmate of Chesterton and Rex Tremlett at the Berkhamstead School."
  7. ^ Baker 1996, p. 40.
  8. ^ Macklin 2020: "Too young to enlist when the First World War broke out in 1914, Chesterton joined the 5th South African Light Infantry in the following year after his family returned to South Africa, falsifying his age in order to do so."
  9. ^ LeCras 2019: "Chestertons's campaign in East Africa ended when, still aged only 16, he collapsed from fever while marching through the 'vast wasted of East Africa'. He was saved only by the intervention of two local porters who carried him over the Kipengere mountain range to safety, wherefrom he made his back to his family's home in Johannesburg."; Macklin 2020: "Campaigning against Germany in East Africa, he became too ill to continue marching and was left at the roadside to die. (...) Rescued and cared for, ironically, by a group of Africans, Chesterton transferred to fight with the British army in Europe..."
  10. ^ LeCras 2019; Macklin 2020; see also "No. 30824". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 July 1918. p. 9101.
  11. ^ Baker 1996, p. 2; LeCras 2019; see also "No. 31480". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 July 1919. p. 9722.
  12. ^ LeCras, Luke (2017). p. 118.
  13. ^ Baker 1996, p. 74.
  14. ^ Baker 1996, p. 124.
  15. ^ Macklin 2020: "Mosley entrusted him to write his officially sanctioned biography, Oswald Mosley: Portrait of a Leader (1936), a sycophantic paean of praise, lauding Mosley as 'an outstanding leader of men' - a notion that was soon to desert its author."
  16. ^ Spurr 2003, pp. 310–311.
  17. ^ Macklin 2012, p. 272.
  18. ^ http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk 27 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine, article on Hugh Grosvenor, 2nd Duke of Westminster, retrieved 30 August 2012,
  19. ^ a b c Neiberg 2017.
  20. ^ Shaffer, Ryan (2013). "The soundtrack of neo-fascism: youth and music in the National Front". Patterns of Prejudice. 47 (4–5): 461–462. doi:10.1080/0031322X.2013.842289. ISSN 0031-322X. S2CID 144461518.
  21. ^ Macklin 2012, p. 288.
  22. ^ a b c Baker 1996, p. 197.
  23. ^ a b c d Macklin 2012, p. 273.
  24. ^ a b Macklin 2012, p. 274.
  25. ^ Thurlow 1974, p. 23.
  26. ^ Walker 1977, pp. 62–65.
  27. ^ Walker 1977, pp. 76–78.
  28. ^ Walker 1977, pp. 93–95.
  29. ^ Thurlow 1974, p. 29.
  30. ^ Thurlow 1974, p. 26.
  31. ^ Macklin 2012, p. 275.
  32. ^ Macklin 2012, p. 276.
  33. ^ Macklin 2012, pp. 276–277.

Bibliography edit

  • Baker, David L. (1985). "A. K. Chesterton, the Strasser Brothers and the Politics of the National Front". Patterns of Prejudice. 19 (3): 23–33. doi:10.1080/0031322X.1985.9969821. ISSN 0031-322X.
  • Baker, David L. (1996). Ideology of obsession : A.K. Chesterton and British fascism. London: Tauris Academic Studies. ISBN 978-1788310444. OCLC 35053264.
  • LeCras, Luke (2019). A.K. Chesterton and the Evolution of Britain's Extreme Right, 1933–1973. Milton: Routledge. ISBN 978-0429792328. OCLC 1130011715.
  • Macklin, Graham (2012). "Transatlantic Connections and Conspiracies: A.K. Chesterton and The New Unhappy Lords". Journal of Contemporary History. 47 (2): 270–290. doi:10.1177/0022009411431723. ISSN 0022-0094. S2CID 153984405.
  • Macklin, Graham (2020). Failed Führers: A History of Britain's Extreme Right. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-44880-8.
  • Mulhall, Joe (2016). "From apathy to obsession: the reactions of A. K. Chesterton and the British far right to imperial decline". Patterns of Prejudice. 50 (4–5): 458–477. doi:10.1080/0031322X.2016.1243348. ISSN 0031-322X. S2CID 151857660.
  • Neiberg, Michael S. (2017). Fascism. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-15834-3.
  • Spurr, Michael A. (2003). "'Living the Blackshirt Life': Culture, Community and the British Union of Fascists, 1932–1940". Contemporary European History. 12 (3): 305–322. doi:10.1017/S0960777303001231. ISSN 1469-2171. S2CID 145478045.
  • Thurlow, Richard C. (1974). "Ideology of obsession on the model of A. K. Chesterton". Patterns of Prejudice. 8 (6): 23–29. doi:10.1080/0031322X.1974.9969219. ISSN 0031-322X.
  • Walker, Martin (1977). The National Front. London: Fontana. ISBN 978-0-00-634824-5.

External links edit

  • Works by A. K. Chesterton at HathiTrust
  • Candour & A.K. Chesterton Trust official website
  • Catalogue of the Papers and Correspondence of Arthur Kenneth Chesterton (1899-1973) at University of Bath

chesterton, confused, with, chesterton, arthur, kenneth, chesterton, 1899, august, 1973, british, journalist, political, activist, from, 1933, 1938, member, british, union, fascists, disillusioned, with, oswald, mosley, left, 1938, chesterton, established, lea. Not to be confused with G K Chesterton Arthur Kenneth Chesterton MC 1 May 1899 16 August 1973 was a British journalist and political activist From 1933 to 1938 he was a member of the British Union of Fascists BUF Disillusioned with Oswald Mosley he left the BUF in 1938 Chesterton established the League of Empire Loyalists in 1954 which merged with a short lived British National Party in 1967 to become the National Front He founded and edited the magazine Candour in 1954 as the successor of Truth of which he had been co editor A K ChestertonMCPersonal detailsBornArthur Kenneth Chesterton 1899 05 01 1 May 1899Krugersdorp South African RepublicDied16 August 1973 1973 08 16 aged 74 London United KingdomPolitical partyBritish Union of Fascists 1933 1938 National Front from 1967 RelationsG K Chesterton first cousin once removed Cecil Chesterton first cousin once removed Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 World War I 1 3 Career as a journalist 1 4 British Union of Fascists 1 5 World War II 1 6 Post war activism 1 7 1960s 1 8 Later life and death 2 Views 3 Influence 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksBiography editEarly life and education edit Arthur Kenneth Chesterton was born on 1 May 1899 in Krugersdorp South African Republic the son of Arthur George Chesterton 1871 1900 a secretary at the local gold mine and Harriet Ethel Chesterton nee Down 1 2 He was the first cousin once removed of the author and poet G K Chesterton and the journalist Cecil Chesterton his paternal grandfather being an older brother of G K and Cecil s father Edward 3 The young A K held his two cousins in high regard seeing Cecil as his exemplar 4 Just after the outbreak of the Second Boer War in October 1899 Chesterton and his mother were sent to England His father later died of pneumonia at 28 on his journey to join the family 2 In May 1902 after the end of the conflict Chesterton returned to Krugersdorp with his paternal uncle and his mother His mother soon married a Scottish mine administrator named George Horne and the reconstituted family settled in Witwatersrand near Johannesburg In 1911 aged 12 Chesterton was sent again to England to live with his paternal grandfather in Herne Hill He attended Dulwich College and Berkhamsted School Hertfordshire 5 where he was a schoolmate of Ben Greene and Rex Tremlett 6 World War I edit In October 1915 Chesterton s mother and step father visited him in England and he persuaded them to bring him back to South Africa Shortly after disembarking Chesterton decided to join the army but too young to enlist at 16 he falsified his age to enroll in the 5th South African Light Infantry to fight in German East Africa 7 8 In his memoirs Chesterton alluded to two battles against the Germans at Salaita Hill on 12 February 1916 and at Latema Nek on 11 12 March 1916 2 During a march in 1916 Chesterton collapsed from fever and was left on the roadside to die He was eventually rescued by two African porters and sent home to his family in Johannesburg 9 After a period of convalescence then aged 17 Chesterton decided to join the army again and went to Ireland to train as an officer with a cadet battalion 2 In August 1918 he received his commission as second lieutenant and was transferred to the 2 2 Battalion City of London Regiment Royal Fusiliers 10 Chesterton served over two years on the Western Front 2 At the end of the war he was awarded the Military Cross for his actions during the battle of Epehy on 18 19 September 1918 Chesterton was at the head of a platoon reinforcing an assault against a German position near the village of Pezieres in northern France 11 After the end of the war Chesterton suffered from chronic symptoms of malaria and dysentery lingered from the East African campaign and from permanent respiratory issues caused by a gas attack in Europe Like many veterans he developed an addiction to alcohol punctuated by nervous breakdowns and episodes of neurasthenia 2 Traumatised by trench warfare Chesterton wrote that he had recurring nightmares of dead bodies and wrote that he began to experience the world as one vast necropolis 4 Career as a journalist edit Shortly before his 21st birthday in 1919 Chesterton moved back to South Africa where he worked as a journalist for The Johannesburg Star 2 4 In 1924 he returned to England and under the tutelage of G Wilson Knight Chesterton developed a reputation as a Shakespearean critic He secured a job as a journalist and festival critic at the Stratford upon Avon Herald then as a public relation officer at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre In 1928 he edited the short lived monthly Shakespearean Review where he developed his ideas about cultural decay 4 In 1929 Chesterton met his future wife Doris Terry a schoolteacher from Torquay The couple married in 1933 and moved to Kingston upon Thames Doris was a Fabian socialist and did not share her husband s later political views 12 Between 1929 and 1931 he worked as a journalist for the Torquay Times 4 and served as the chairman of the South Devon branch of the National Union of Journalists 13 In November 1933 Chesterton joined the British Union of Fascists BUF while still employed by the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre after being recruited by Rex Tremlett his former schoolmate at Berkhamsted and then the editor of BUF s newspapers Fascist Week and The Blackshirt 14 4 British Union of Fascists edit Six months after joining the BUF Chesterton was appointed officer in charge of Warwickshire and Staffordshire and in April 1934 officer in charge of the Midlands Area for the party Oswald Mosley the leader of the BUF later appointed him Director of Press Propaganda a subsection of the BUF Propaganda Department and in March 1935 to the BUF Research Directory the inner circle of the party s strategists During the spring of 1935 Chesterton started to drink again He was said to frequently arrive at BUF headquarters in a drunken state and some members began to call for his expulsion In July Blackshirt euphemistically reported that Chesterston was having a well deserved rest on the strict orders of his doctor Mosley eventually paid for Chesterton to be treated by a neurologist in Germany 4 Following his return to Britain in April 1937 Chesterton was appointed in June Director of Publicity and Propaganda and in August the editor of The Blackshirt This position provided a pulpit for his increasingly vituperative anti Semitic rhetoric the magazine promoting The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as the most astounding book ever published 4 Chesterton also wrote the officially sanctioned biography of Mosley entitled Oswald Mosley Portrait of a Leader 1937 15 in fact a hagiography of Mosley in which Chesterton claims that the BUF leader had an unconquerable spirit with its grandeur of courage and resolve closing the book with the salutation Hail Mosley patriot revolutionary and leader of men 16 World War II edit In the late 1930s Chesterton became gradually disillusioned with the myth of The Leader and came to lose confidence in Mosley after 1937 On 18 March 1938 he resigned from the BUF Mosley soon had his memory erased from the history of the party The same year Chesterton attended a meeting of the National Socialist League NSL The NSL published his pamphlet Why I left Mosley in 1938 although Chesterton never joined the organisation He became involved with the short lived British Council against European Commitments BCAE an anti Bolshevik movement which had emerged during the Munich crisis to resist war with Germany and he contributed to Lord Lymington s journal New Pioneer 4 In June 1939 Chesterton established his own group British Vigil He regularly spoke at meetings of the Nordic League 17 and became involved with the Right Club a secretive organization founded in May 1939 to consolidate existing right wing British organizations into a unified body 2 Archibald Ramsay founder of the Right Club explained its ideology and purpose 18 The main object of the Right Club was to oppose and expose the activities of Organized Jewry in the light of the evidence which came into my possession in 1938 Our first objective was to clear the Conservative Party of Jewish influence and the character of our membership and meetings were strictly in keeping with this objective In 1939 at the outbreak of World War II Chesterton re enlisted in the British Army and served in Kenya and Somaliland He relapsed into alcoholism and relinquished his commission on grounds of ill health in the spring of 1943 4 Upon his return to Britain he set up the short lived National Front after Victory NF after V and was involved with the relaunched British Peoples Party 19 2 Chesterton applied for work at the BBC but MI5 intervened to ensure that he could not be employed He found work in sub editing at the Sheffield Evening Telegraph but was forced to resign due to a bout of malaria Afterwards he worked for the Southport Guardian and the Liverpool Evening Express and partly as a freelance journalist to supplement his living including for The Weekly Review In August 1943 the Daily Worker published an attack on Chesterton accusing him of treachery for his past association with William Joyce Chesterton sued the Daily Worker and The Jewish Chronicle which had repeated the accusation for libel The case was dropped for lack of funds but Chesterton did manage to elicit an apology In September 1944 he was appointed deputy editor of Truth 4 Post war activism edit In February 1945 Chesterton helped establish the National Front a coalition of underground minor fascist groups with policies including the safeguarding of a strong national and Empire economy preserving Christian traditions and finding an honourable just and lasting solution to the real Jewish problem The movement was headed first by Collin Brooks then by Chesterton 20 From 1950 to 1958 Chesterton authored a reoccurring article titled The International Situation for every issue of The Journal of the Royal United Services Institution nowadays often known as the RUSI Journal 4 Chesterton became literary advisor to Lord Beaverbrook who offered him jobs at The Daily Express and the Evening Standard Chesterton ghostwrote his autobiography Don t Trust To Luck 1954 In October 1953 whilst still in Beaverbrook s employ Chesterton founded the magazine Candour 4 which is still published today though increasingly erratically as of 2012 21 He has claimed that Beaverbrook sacked him upon learning of Candour s existence in fact his contract expired in January 1954 and was not renewed 4 Following the collapse of the National Front due to infighting Chesterton founded in 1954 the League of Empire Loyalists LEL a political pressure group which gathered many future far right leaders the likes of Colin Jordan John Bean John Tyndall or Martin Webster 19 The movement was publicly known in the 1950s for its political stunts especially in interrupting Conservative conferences while chanting Save the Empire and Tory Traitors 22 1960s edit In July 1965 Chesterton published The New Unhappy Lords a self described study of the power elites which takes the form in the words of scholar Graham Macklin of an elegantly written antisemitic tirade on the subversive and occult conspiracy against the British Empire and Western civilisation in general that he believed was striving behind the scenes to create a One World Jewish super state 23 Following the demise of Nazi Germany for its revolt against the Money Power Chesterton argued that the British Empire and Commonwealth were then the decisive impediment to the global money power conspiracy mainly thanks to their system of Imperial preference 24 The book received damning reviews in the mainstream media but it had sold in excess of 17 000 copies by June 1969 23 Along with Phyllis Schlafly s A Choice Not an Echo published one year earlier the book was one of the first to highlight the Bilderberg Group as a decisive actor in global conspiracy theories 24 After failing to make gains in the 1966 general election Chesterton founded in February 1967 a second National Front NF he was elected the party s first chairman and remained its Policy Director until 1970 25 19 The National Front brought together the LEL and British National Party A faction of the Racial Preservation Society decided to join them but radicals and openly neo Nazis figures like Jordan Tyndall or Webster were excluded to avoid public backlash 26 In June 1967 however Chesterton eventually welcomed Tyndall and members of the Greater Britain Movement GBM into the party 27 Later life and death edit At the end of his life Chesterton became increasingly ill from the emphysema he had contracted in the gas attack during World War I living part time in his native South Africa 22 While Chesterton was holidaying in South Africa a faction led by Gordon Brown formerly of Tyndall s GBM launched a leadership challenge against him On realising that his support was weak Chesterton resigned in 1970 28 Chesterton spent the remainder of his days editing Candour until his death from emphysema on 16 August 1973 aged 74 22 23 Views editAccording to historian Richard Thurlow Chesterton s weird mixture of racism ethnocentrism and conspiracy theory in its racial theory and its paternalism monarchism particularly reverence for Edward I who expelled the Jews cultural pessimism Social Darwinism and dialectical mode of argument in its political theory are more akin to patterns of thought prevalent in pre Nazi German Conservatism than to any English equivalent 29 After the war Chesterton repudiated fascism and resolutely denied accusations to the effect that he was pursuing a neo fascist agenda 4 He toned down the antisemitic imagery of his pre war writings although the Jews remained at the centre of his conspiracy theories Described as far more parasitic and corrupt than any baby could conceive in Blackshirt 1935 they were still the principal promoters of the idea of integrating peoples of disparate racial stocks in his 1965 book The New Unhappy Lords 30 Although he conceded in 1973 that any competent Jewish writer can make a nonsense of attempts to prove their authenticity Chesterton regarded The Protocols of the Elders of Zion a Tsarist antisemitic forgery as a masterly analysis of the weaknesses of Gentile society in The New Happy Lord 1965 31 In his later life he came to consider the use of crude antisemitism a liability and a menace to the nationalist movement Chesterton launched in September 1970 a public attack on anti Semitic conspiracy theorist Eustace Mullins in Candour under the title This man is dangerous 32 Influence editJohn Tyndall who established the British National Party BNP in 1982 has declared in 1971 Without hesitation what understanding I have of political affairs I have I owe much more to A K than any other person Tyndall kept on recommending Chesterton s writings until his death in July 2005 Martin Webster the National Front national activities organiser from 1969 to 1983 stressed in 2009 the tremendous impact of the intellectual framework provided by Chesterton book The New Happy Lord because it tied together the threads of what is happening why and who s doing it 33 Chesterton was also a long time friend of Revilo P Oliver they regularly wrote to each other until Chesterton s death in 1973 23 Works editChesterton s works including some previously only published within Candour magazine have been re edited by the A K Chesterton Trust from 2013 onward In 1945 Chesterton penned an anti Labour satire under the pseudonym Caius Marcius Coriolanus the name of Shakespeare s Roman tragedy published by writer and British Housewives League member Dorothy Crisp Books Adventures in Dramatic Appreciation 1931 Brave Enterprise A History of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Stratford upon Avon 1934 Creed of a Fascist Revolutionary 1935 Oswald Mosley Portrait of a Leader 1937 Why I Left Mosley 1938 No Shelter for Morrison a play London Dorothy Crisp amp Co Ltd 1945 Published under the pseudonym Caius Marcius Coriolanus dd The Menace of the Money Power An Analysis of World Government by Finance 1946 Alternative for Britain 1946 Juma the Great 1947 The Importance of Being Oswald 1947 The Tragedy of Anti Semitism with Joseph Leftwich 1948 Sound the Alarm A Warning to the British Nations 1954 Stand By The Empire 1954 The Menace of World Government amp Britain s Graveyard 1957 Tomorrow A Plan for the British Future 1961 The New Unhappy Lords An Exposure of Power Politics 1965 Common Market Suicide 1971 B B C A National Menace 1972 Facing the Abyss posthumous 1976 Fascism and the Press posthumous 2013 Articles British Union Quarterly Vol 1 No 2 April June 1937 pp 45 54 Pamphlets Not Guilty An Account of the Historic Race Relations Trial at Lewes Assizes in March 1968 1968 Plays Leopard Valley A Play in Three Acts 1943 See also editCandour British far right wing magazineReferences edit Baker 1996 p 15 a b c d e f g h i LeCras 2019 Baker 1996 p 15 A K was a second cousin to G K his grandfather being an older brother of G K s father Edward Macklin 2020 Chesterton grew up in awe of his second cousins the renowned Catholic journalists Gilbert and Cecil Chesterton a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Macklin 2020 Baker 1996 p 35 LeCras 2019 Greene was a former schoolmate of Chesterton and Rex Tremlett at the Berkhamstead School Baker 1996 p 40 Macklin 2020 Too young to enlist when the First World War broke out in 1914 Chesterton joined the 5th South African Light Infantry in the following year after his family returned to South Africa falsifying his age in order to do so LeCras 2019 Chestertons s campaign in East Africa ended when still aged only 16 he collapsed from fever while marching through the vast wasted of East Africa He was saved only by the intervention of two local porters who carried him over the Kipengere mountain range to safety wherefrom he made his back to his family s home in Johannesburg Macklin 2020 Campaigning against Germany in East Africa he became too ill to continue marching and was left at the roadside to die Rescued and cared for ironically by a group of Africans Chesterton transferred to fight with the British army in Europe LeCras 2019 Macklin 2020 see also No 30824 The London Gazette Supplement 30 July 1918 p 9101 Baker 1996 p 2 LeCras 2019 see also No 31480 The London Gazette Supplement 29 July 1919 p 9722 LeCras Luke 2017 A K Chesterton and the Problem of British Fascism 1915 1973 p 118 Baker 1996 p 74 Baker 1996 p 124 Macklin 2020 Mosley entrusted him to write his officially sanctioned biography Oswald Mosley Portrait of a Leader 1936 a sycophantic paean of praise lauding Mosley as an outstanding leader of men a notion that was soon to desert its author Spurr 2003 pp 310 311 Macklin 2012 p 272 http www spartacus schoolnet co uk Archived 27 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine article on Hugh Grosvenor 2nd Duke of Westminster retrieved 30 August 2012 a b c Neiberg 2017 Shaffer Ryan 2013 The soundtrack of neo fascism youth and music in the National Front Patterns of Prejudice 47 4 5 461 462 doi 10 1080 0031322X 2013 842289 ISSN 0031 322X S2CID 144461518 Macklin 2012 p 288 a b c Baker 1996 p 197 a b c d Macklin 2012 p 273 a b Macklin 2012 p 274 Thurlow 1974 p 23 Walker 1977 pp 62 65 Walker 1977 pp 76 78 Walker 1977 pp 93 95 Thurlow 1974 p 29 Thurlow 1974 p 26 Macklin 2012 p 275 Macklin 2012 p 276 Macklin 2012 pp 276 277 Bibliography edit Baker David L 1985 A K Chesterton the Strasser Brothers and the Politics of the National Front Patterns of Prejudice 19 3 23 33 doi 10 1080 0031322X 1985 9969821 ISSN 0031 322X Baker David L 1996 Ideology of obsession A K Chesterton and British fascism London Tauris Academic Studies ISBN 978 1788310444 OCLC 35053264 LeCras Luke 2019 A K Chesterton and the Evolution of Britain s Extreme Right 1933 1973 Milton Routledge ISBN 978 0429792328 OCLC 1130011715 Macklin Graham 2012 Transatlantic Connections and Conspiracies A K Chesterton and The New Unhappy Lords Journal of Contemporary History 47 2 270 290 doi 10 1177 0022009411431723 ISSN 0022 0094 S2CID 153984405 Macklin Graham 2020 Failed Fuhrers A History of Britain s Extreme Right Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 44880 8 Mulhall Joe 2016 From apathy to obsession the reactions of A K Chesterton and the British far right to imperial decline Patterns of Prejudice 50 4 5 458 477 doi 10 1080 0031322X 2016 1243348 ISSN 0031 322X S2CID 151857660 Neiberg Michael S 2017 Fascism Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 15834 3 Spurr Michael A 2003 Living the Blackshirt Life Culture Community and the British Union of Fascists 1932 1940 Contemporary European History 12 3 305 322 doi 10 1017 S0960777303001231 ISSN 1469 2171 S2CID 145478045 Thurlow Richard C 1974 Ideology of obsession on the model of A K Chesterton Patterns of Prejudice 8 6 23 29 doi 10 1080 0031322X 1974 9969219 ISSN 0031 322X Walker Martin 1977 The National Front London Fontana ISBN 978 0 00 634824 5 External links editWorks by A K Chesterton at HathiTrust Candour amp A K Chesterton Trust official website Catalogue of the Papers and Correspondence of Arthur Kenneth Chesterton 1899 1973 at University of Bath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A K Chesterton amp oldid 1221154366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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