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American Nazi Party

The American Nazi Party (ANP) is an American far-right and neo-Nazi political party founded by George Lincoln Rockwell and headquartered in Arlington, Virginia. The organization was originally named the World Union of Free Enterprise National Socialists (WUFENS), a name to denote opposition to state ownership of property, the same year—it was renamed the American Nazi Party in order to attract 'maximum media attention'.[1] Since the late 1960s, a number of small groups have used the name "American Nazi Party" with most being independent of each other and disbanding before the 21st century. The party is based largely upon the ideals and policies of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party in Germany during the Nazi era, and embraced its uniforms and iconography.[7][A]

American Nazi Party
AbbreviationWUFENS (1959)
ANP (1959–1966/1967)[1]
NSWPP (1966/1967–1983)
FounderGeorge Lincoln Rockwell
FoundedMarch 1959
Succeeded byAmerican Nazi Party:
 • Matthias Koehl (1967–1983)
 • Rocky Suhayda (2014–present)[2]
New Order:
 • Matthias Koehl (1983–2014)
 • Martin Kerr (2014–present)[3][4]
Headquarters(Rockwell's headquarters)
928 North Randolph Street,
Arlington, Virginia, U.S.
NewspaperThe Stormtrooper[5]
Youth wingNSLF (1969–1974)
Membership500[6] (c. 1967)
IdeologyNazism
Political positionFar-right
International affiliationWorld Union of National Socialists
Anthem"Horst-Wessel-Lied"
Party flag
Website
https://www.americannaziparty.com

Shortly after Rockwell's murder in 1967, the organization appointed Rockwell's second in command, Deputy Commander Matt Koehl as the new leader. The American Nazi Party, now under Koehl's command, was subject to ideological disagreements between members in the 1970s and 1980s. "In 1982, Martin Kerr, a leader at the Franklin Road headquarters, announced that the organization was changing its name to the New Order and moving to the Midwest," effective January 1, 1983.[10] Due to recruitment issues along with financial and legal trouble, Koehl was forced to relocate the group's headquarters from the DC area, eventually finding his way to scattered locations in Wisconsin and Michigan. After Koehl's death in 2014, a long-time member and officer of the New Order, Martin Kerr assumed leadership and maintains the New Order website and organization.[11]

A former member of the original American Nazi Party, Rocky Suhayda, founded his own organization using the American Nazi Party name and has been active since at least 2008.[12] Suhayda claims Rockwell as its founder despite no direct legal or financial link between it and Rockwell's legacy organization.[13] The one connection between the original American Nazi Party and Rocky Suhayda's group besides ideology is that they sell reprints of Rockwell's 1960s-era magazine The Stormtrooper on their website.

Headquarters

The WUFENS headquarters was located in a residence on Williamsburg Boulevard in Arlington, but was moved as the ANP headquarters to a house at 928 North Randolph Street (now a hotel and office building site). Rockwell and some party members also established a "Stormtrooper Barracks" in an old mansion owned by the widow of Willis Kern[14] in the Dominion Hills section of Arlington at what is now the Upton Hill Regional Park. After Rockwell's murder, the headquarters was moved again to one side of a duplex brick and concrete storefront at 2507 North Franklin Road which featured a swastika prominently mounted above the front door. This site was visible from busy Wilson Boulevard. Today, the Franklin Road address is often misidentified as Rockwell's headquarters when in fact it was the successor organization's last physical address in Arlington (now a coffeehouse).[15][16][17]

History

Name change and party reform

Under Rockwell, the party embraced Nazi uniforms and iconography.[B]

After several years of living in impoverished conditions, Rockwell began to experience some financial success with paid speaking engagements at universities where he was invited to express his controversial views as exercises in free speech. This prompted him to end the rancorous "Phase One" party tactics and begin "Phase Two", a plan to recast the group as a legitimate political party by toning down the verbal and written attacks against non-whites, replacing the party rallying cry of "Sieg Heil!" with "White Power!", limiting public display of the swastika, and entering candidates in local elections.[18][19][6]

The years 1965 and 1967 were possibly the height of Rockwell's profile.[18] He was interviewed by Playboy magazine, an event that stirred controversy within the ranks.[18][20] At the time Rockwell had about 500 followers.[6] In 1966 or 1967,[C] Rockwell renamed the ANP the National Socialist White People's Party (NSWPP), a move that alienated some hard-line members. The new name was a "conscious imitation" of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Rockwell wanted a more "ecumenical" approach and felt that the swastika banner was impeding organizational growth. Rockwell was killed on August 25, 1967, before he could implement party reforms.[6] Matt Koehl, a purist Neo-Nazi, succeeded Rockwell as the new leader and this ended the American Nazi Party. Thereafter, the members engaged in internecine disputes, and they were either expelled by Koehl or they resigned. After the murder of Rockwell, the party dissipated and ad hoc organizations usurped the American Nazi Party logo. Those included James Burford in Chicago and John Bishop in Iowa.[18]

Murder of Rockwell

An assassination attempt was made on Rockwell on June 28, 1967. As Rockwell returned from shopping, he drove into the long driveway of the "Stormtrooper Barracks" located in Arlington's Dominion Hills subdivision and found it blocked by a felled tree and brush. Rockwell assumed that it was another prank by local teens. As a party member cleared the obstruction, two shots were fired at Rockwell from behind one of the swastika-embossed brick driveway pillars. One of the shots ricocheted off the car, right next to his head. Leaping from the car, Rockwell pursued the gunman. On June 30, Rockwell petitioned the Arlington County Circuit Court for a gun permit; no action was ever taken on his request.[citation needed]

On August 25, 1967, as Rockwell left the Econowash laundromat at the Dominion Hills Shopping Center, a former follower named John Patler shot Rockwell from the roof of the building. Patler fired two bullets into Rockwell's car through the windshield. One missed, the other hit his chest and ruptured his heart. His car rolled backward to a stop and Rockwell staggered out of the front passenger side door of the car, stood briefly while pointing upward at the strip mall's rooftop where the shots had come from and then collapsed on the pavement. He was pronounced dead at the scene.[14][21][22]

Koehl's succession and ideological divisions

Rockwell's second in command, Deputy Commander Matt Koehl, a staunch Hitlerist, assumed the leadership role after a council agreed that he should retain command. Koehl continued some of Rockwell's restructuring of the group by dropping the use of negative verbal and written attacks against racial minorities. Koehl also began emphasizing the positive aspects of Nazism and the glories of a future all-white society. Koehl retained the swastika-festooned party literature and the pseudo-Nazi uniforms of the party's "Storm Troopers" which were modeled on those worn by the Nazi Party's Sturmabteilung. In 1968, Koehl moved the party to a new headquarters on 2507 North Franklin Road, clearly visible from Arlington's main thoroughfare, Wilson Boulevard. He also established a printing press, a "George Lincoln Rockwell Memorial Book Store", and member living quarters on property nearby.[citation needed]

The party began to experience ideological divisions among its followers as it entered the 1970s. In 1970, member Frank Collin, who was himself secretly the son of a Jewish father, broke away from the group and founded the National Socialist Party of America in Chicago, which became famous for its attempt to march through Skokie, Illinois, which was home to many Holocaust survivors. This led to the United States Supreme Court case, National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie. Other dissatisfied members of the NSWPP chose to support William Luther Pierce, and formed the National Alliance in 1974.[citation needed]

Further membership erosion occurred as Koehl, drawing heavily upon the teachings of Hitlerian mystic Savitri Devi, began to suggest that Nazism was more akin to a religious movement than a political one. He espoused the belief that Adolf Hitler was the gift of an inscrutable divine providence who had been sent to rescue the white race from decadence and gradual extinction which had been caused by a declining birth rate and miscegenation. Hitler's death in 1945 was viewed as a type of martyrdom; a voluntary, Christ-like self-sacrifice, that looked forward to a spiritual resurrection of Nazism at a later date when the Aryan race would need it the most. These esoteric beliefs led to disputes with the World Union of National Socialists, which Rockwell had founded and whose leader, Danish neo-Nazi Povl Riis-Knudsen, had been appointed by Koehl. Undaunted, Koehl continued to recast the party as a new religion in formation. Public rallies were gradually phased out in favor of low-key gatherings which were held in private venues. On Labor Day 1979, in a highly unpopular move for some members, Koehl disbanded the party's paramilitary "Storm Troopers."[citation needed]

On November 3, 1979, some members of the NSWPP and a Ku Klux Klan group attacked a Communist Workers' Party protest march in Greensboro, North Carolina. The group of neo-Nazis and Klansmen shot and killed five marchers. Forty Klansmen and neo-Nazis were involved in the shootings with sixteen Klansmen and neo-Nazis being arrested. The six strongest cases were brought to trial first, but the two criminal trials resulted in the acquittal of the defendants by all-white juries. However, in a 1985 civil lawsuit, the survivors won a $350,000 judgment against the city, the Klansmen, and the neo-Nazis after they were all found guilty of violating the civil rights of the demonstrators. The shootings became known as the "Greensboro Massacre."[23]

In 1982 the Internal Revenue Service took action to foreclose on the group's headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.[24] Koehl ceased printing the organization's White Power newspaper, sold its Arlington, Virginia, real estate holdings, and dispersed the group's various operations to scattered locations in Wisconsin and Michigan. A secluded 88-acre (360,000 m2) rural property called "Nordland" was purchased in New Berlin, Wisconsin, to serve as living quarters and to host annual meetings and ceremonial events.

New Order

The Koehl organization changed its name to New Order on January 1, 1983 on the grounds that the people in the area "are not people looking to join revolutionary organizations", saying that it was moving to an area in the Midwest which it would not reveal for security reasons.[25] The name change reflected the group's Nazi mysticism and it was still known by that name in 2010.[26]

The organization briefly attracted the media's attention in October 1983, when it held a private meeting at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia.[27] A non-uniformed gathering of members was held indoors while the police kept a crowd of counter-protesters at bay outside. This event marked the last publicized appearance of Koehl and the New Order in Arlington. From that point forward the only outward sign that the group was still operational was the annual appearance of the swastika and Betsy Ross American Revolutionary War flags flying from the party's nondescript headquarters building on North Franklin Road every April 20 (Hitler's birthday).

Today the New Order operates quietly far from the public spotlight, eschewing the confrontational public rallies that were once a hallmark of its previous incarnations. It maintains a web page and a Milwaukee, Wisconsin, post office box providing information and template material promoting Nazism. It has no members but rather "registered supporters" who pledge to mail in donations on a monthly basis. Financing is also obtained through sales of books and other merchandise under an affiliate business, NS Publications of Wyandotte, Michigan. The NS Bulletin, a newsletter, is sent to supporters on a quarterly basis. The group holds occasional ceremonial gatherings at undisclosed private locations such as an annual observance of Hitler's birthday each April 20.

New Order's Chief of Staff, Martin Kerr, claims that the group is no longer a white supremacist group and focuses on advocating "in favor of [white] people, not against other races or ethnicities...we consider the white people of the world to be a gigantic family of racial brothers and sisters, united by ties of common ancestry and common heritage. Being for our own family does not mean that we hate other families." The SPLC still classifies them as neo-Nazis and as a "hate group."[28][29][30]

In May 2021 two versions of leaflets promoting the white race were scattered in plastic bags containing business cards in a number of Greene County, Virginia neighborhoods.[31]

Namesake organizations

Since the late 1960s, there have been a number of small groups that have used the name "American Nazi Party."

  • Perhaps the first was led by James Warner and Allen Vincent and it consisted of members of the California branch of the NSWPP.[32] This group announced its existence on January 1, 1968. In 1982 James Burford formed another "American Nazi Party" from disaffected branches of the National Socialist Party of America.[33] This Chicago-based group remained in existence until at least 1994.[34]
  • A small American Nazi Party operated from Davenport, Iowa, led by John Robert Bishop until 1985.[35][18][36]
  • The name "American Nazi Party" has also been adopted by a group run by Rocky J. Suhayda, a member of Rockwell's original ANP in 1967. Although Suhayda's ANP states that Rockwell was its founder, there is no direct legal or financial link between it and Rockwell's legacy organization now called the New Order.[citation needed] Headquartered in Westland, Michigan, Suhayda's ANP website sells nostalgic reprints of Rockwell's 1960s-era magazine The Stormtrooper. 2008 Neo-Nazi presidential candidate John Taylor Bowles was a member. Suhayda holds semi-private yearly meetings at his home and a national convention in California. His followers do not wear uniforms, except for the SA, or Security Arm, and they eschew public demonstrations, frequently criticizing the rival organization the National Socialist Movement for "outing" its members with excessive media exposure.[citation needed]

Notable former members

See also

References

Informational notes

  1. ^ Despite sharing ideological roots, the phrase 'American Nazi Party' should not be confabulated with the German American Bund or German American Federation (German: Amerikadeutscher Bund; Amerikadeutscher Volksbund, AV), which was an American Nazi organization established in 1936 to succeed Friends of New Germany (FONG), the new name being chosen to emphasize the group's American credentials after press criticism that the organization was unpatriotic.[6][8] The Bund was to consist only of American citizens of German descent.[9] Reportedly, it had about 20,000 adherents.[6]
  2. ^ "The line between the American Nazi Party, the Ku Klux Klan, and other white supremacists has always been blurry."[6]
  3. ^ The actual date of the change in name is unclear. Kaplan reports it as being in 1966, while Goodrick-Clarke and Green and Stabler report it as occurring on January 1, 1967.[18][19][6]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Rockwell, George Lincoln. From Ivory Tower to Privy Wall: On The Art of Propaganda August 3, 2014, at the Wayback Machine c.1966
  2. ^ Holley, Peter (August 6, 2016). "Top Nazi leader: Trump will be a 'real opportunity' for white nationalists". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Michigan, NSM (2016). (PDF). National Socialist Movement. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 26, 2016. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  4. ^ WETA. "Nazis in Arlington: George Rockwell and the ANP". Boundary Stones: WETA's Washington DC History Blog. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  5. ^ “The Stormtrooper Magazine [American Nazi Party publication],” Social Welfare History Image Portal, accessed June 17, 2020, https://images.socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/items/show/266.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Green & Stabler 2015, p. 390.
  7. ^ Potok, Mark (August 29, 2001). "The Nazi International". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved May 13, 2016.
  8. ^ Wolter & Masters 2004, p. 65.
  9. ^ Van Ells, Mark D. (August 2007). Americans for Hitler – The Bund. America in WWII. Vol. 3. pp. 44–49. Retrieved May 13, 2016.
  10. ^ "Death of an Arlington Nazi". www.northernvirginiamag.com. December 30, 2010. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  11. ^ "LONGTIME NEO-NAZI MATTHIAS "MATT" KOEHL DIES". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  12. ^ . August 12, 2016. Archived from the original on August 12, 2016. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  13. ^ Loeser Consulting. "American Nazi Party (USA), Historical Flags of Our Ancestors - Flags of Extremism - Part 1 (a-m)". www.loeser.us. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  14. ^ a b Schmaltz 2013.
  15. ^ Fenston, Jacob (September 6, 2013). "Arlington's Uneasy Relationship With Nazi Party Founder". WAMU. Retrieved May 13, 2016.
  16. ^ Weingarten, Gene. "It's Just Nazi Same Place" The Washington Post (February 10, 2008)
  17. ^ Cooper, Rebecca A. "Java Shack glimpses its past as Nazi headquarters" August 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine TDB.com (March 8, 2011)
  18. ^ a b c d e f Kaplan 2000, pp. 1–3.
  19. ^ a b Goodrick-Clarke 2003, p. 14.
  20. ^ Haley, Alex (1966). "Playboy Interview: George Lincoln Rockwell". Playboy Magazine. Retrieved May 12, 2016 – via Internet archive.
  21. ^ "1967: 'American Hitler' shot dead". BBC News. August 25, 1967. Retrieved August 7, 2009.
  22. ^ E. Miller, Michael (August 21, 2017). "The Shadow of an Assassinated American Nazi Commander Hangs Over Charlottesville". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 10, 2019.[dead link](subscription required)
  23. ^ "Agent Tells of '79 Threats by Klan and Nazis". The New York Times. May 12, 1985. section 1, page 26, column 1. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  24. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 156.
  25. ^ "Nazi Party to Relocate". The New York Times. December 27, 1982. Retrieved July 26, 2022.
  26. ^ "Death of an Arlington Nazi". www.northernvirginiamag.com. December 30, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  27. ^ "Swastikas on Wilson - Arlington Magazine". Arlington Magazine. August 12, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  28. ^ "A look at Wisconsin's 'hate' groups | WisconsinWatch.org". www.wisconsinwatch.org. November 12, 2017. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
  29. ^ "Across Wisconsin, recent rises in hate, bias incidents spark concern". Retrieved April 28, 2018.
  30. ^ "Neo-Nazi". Southern Poverty Law Center. Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
  31. ^ Beigie, Terry (May 9, 2021). "Neo-Nazi flyers are scattered". The Daily Progress. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
  32. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 1–3, 558–62.
  33. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 3, 33.
  34. ^ Anti-Defamation League. Danger: Extremism New York; Anti-Defamation League 1996 p.177
  35. ^ "Special Collections Manuscript Collections | Special Collections | Bishop (John Robert) papers, 1951-1977 and undated". augustana.libraryhost.com. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  36. ^ Marks 1996, p. 58.

Bibliography

  • Green, Michael S.; Stabler, Scott L. (2015). Ideas and Movements that Shaped America: From the Bill of Rights to "Occupy Wall Street" (3 vols.). Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 390. ISBN 978-1610692519. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  • Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2003). Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 9780814731550.
  • Kaplan, Jeffrey, ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of White Power: A Sourcebook on the Radical Racist Right. Walnut Creek, California: AltaMira Press. ISBN 9780742503403.
  • Marks, Kathy (1996). Faces of Right Wing Extremism. Boston: Branden Books. ISBN 9780828320160.
  • Obermayer, Herman J. (2012). American Nazi Party in Arlington, Virginia 1958-1984. CreateSpace Publishing. ISBN 9781494366865.
  • Schmaltz, William H. (2013). For Race And Nation: George Lincoln Rockwell and the American Nazi Party (1st ed.). River's Bend Press. ASIN B00CNFX7BE.
  • Wolter, Erik V.; Masters, Robert J. (2004). Loyalty On Trial: One American's Battle With The FBI. New York: iUniverse. p. 65. ISBN 9780595327034.

Further reading

External links

  • Federal Bureau of Investigation - American Nazi Party monograph, June 1965 – Detailed report on George Lincoln Rockwell and the original American Nazi Party

american, nazi, party, this, article, about, party, formed, 1959, later, renamed, national, socialist, white, people, party, 1990s, national, socialist, white, people, party, harold, covington, from, 1930s, german, american, bund, american, right, nazi, politi. This article is about the party formed in 1959 later renamed the National Socialist White People s Party For the 1990s National Socialist White People s Party see Harold Covington For the American Nazi Party from the 1930s see German American Bund The American Nazi Party ANP is an American far right and neo Nazi political party founded by George Lincoln Rockwell and headquartered in Arlington Virginia The organization was originally named the World Union of Free Enterprise National Socialists WUFENS a name to denote opposition to state ownership of property the same year it was renamed the American Nazi Party in order to attract maximum media attention 1 Since the late 1960s a number of small groups have used the name American Nazi Party with most being independent of each other and disbanding before the 21st century The party is based largely upon the ideals and policies of Adolf Hitler s Nazi Party in Germany during the Nazi era and embraced its uniforms and iconography 7 A American Nazi PartyAbbreviationWUFENS 1959 ANP 1959 1966 1967 1 NSWPP 1966 1967 1983 FounderGeorge Lincoln RockwellFoundedMarch 1959Succeeded byAmerican Nazi Party Matthias Koehl 1967 1983 Rocky Suhayda 2014 present 2 New Order Matthias Koehl 1983 2014 Martin Kerr 2014 present 3 4 Headquarters Rockwell s headquarters 928 North Randolph Street Arlington Virginia U S NewspaperThe Stormtrooper 5 Youth wingNSLF 1969 1974 Membership500 6 c 1967 IdeologyNazismPolitical positionFar rightInternational affiliationWorld Union of National SocialistsAnthem Horst Wessel Lied source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track Party flagWebsitehttps www americannaziparty comPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElectionsShortly after Rockwell s murder in 1967 the organization appointed Rockwell s second in command Deputy Commander Matt Koehl as the new leader The American Nazi Party now under Koehl s command was subject to ideological disagreements between members in the 1970s and 1980s In 1982 Martin Kerr a leader at the Franklin Road headquarters announced that the organization was changing its name to the New Order and moving to the Midwest effective January 1 1983 10 Due to recruitment issues along with financial and legal trouble Koehl was forced to relocate the group s headquarters from the DC area eventually finding his way to scattered locations in Wisconsin and Michigan After Koehl s death in 2014 a long time member and officer of the New Order Martin Kerr assumed leadership and maintains the New Order website and organization 11 A former member of the original American Nazi Party Rocky Suhayda founded his own organization using the American Nazi Party name and has been active since at least 2008 12 Suhayda claims Rockwell as its founder despite no direct legal or financial link between it and Rockwell s legacy organization 13 The one connection between the original American Nazi Party and Rocky Suhayda s group besides ideology is that they sell reprints of Rockwell s 1960s era magazine The Stormtrooper on their website Contents 1 Headquarters 2 History 2 1 Name change and party reform 2 2 Murder of Rockwell 2 3 Koehl s succession and ideological divisions 2 4 New Order 3 Namesake organizations 4 Notable former members 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHeadquarters EditThe WUFENS headquarters was located in a residence on Williamsburg Boulevard in Arlington but was moved as the ANP headquarters to a house at 928 North Randolph Street now a hotel and office building site Rockwell and some party members also established a Stormtrooper Barracks in an old mansion owned by the widow of Willis Kern 14 in the Dominion Hills section of Arlington at what is now the Upton Hill Regional Park After Rockwell s murder the headquarters was moved again to one side of a duplex brick and concrete storefront at 2507 North Franklin Road which featured a swastika prominently mounted above the front door This site was visible from busy Wilson Boulevard Today the Franklin Road address is often misidentified as Rockwell s headquarters when in fact it was the successor organization s last physical address in Arlington now a coffeehouse 15 16 17 History EditName change and party reform Edit Under Rockwell the party embraced Nazi uniforms and iconography B After several years of living in impoverished conditions Rockwell began to experience some financial success with paid speaking engagements at universities where he was invited to express his controversial views as exercises in free speech This prompted him to end the rancorous Phase One party tactics and begin Phase Two a plan to recast the group as a legitimate political party by toning down the verbal and written attacks against non whites replacing the party rallying cry of Sieg Heil with White Power limiting public display of the swastika and entering candidates in local elections 18 19 6 The years 1965 and 1967 were possibly the height of Rockwell s profile 18 He was interviewed by Playboy magazine an event that stirred controversy within the ranks 18 20 At the time Rockwell had about 500 followers 6 In 1966 or 1967 C Rockwell renamed the ANP the National Socialist White People s Party NSWPP a move that alienated some hard line members The new name was a conscious imitation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Rockwell wanted a more ecumenical approach and felt that the swastika banner was impeding organizational growth Rockwell was killed on August 25 1967 before he could implement party reforms 6 Matt Koehl a purist Neo Nazi succeeded Rockwell as the new leader and this ended the American Nazi Party Thereafter the members engaged in internecine disputes and they were either expelled by Koehl or they resigned After the murder of Rockwell the party dissipated and ad hoc organizations usurped the American Nazi Party logo Those included James Burford in Chicago and John Bishop in Iowa 18 Murder of Rockwell Edit An assassination attempt was made on Rockwell on June 28 1967 As Rockwell returned from shopping he drove into the long driveway of the Stormtrooper Barracks located in Arlington s Dominion Hills subdivision and found it blocked by a felled tree and brush Rockwell assumed that it was another prank by local teens As a party member cleared the obstruction two shots were fired at Rockwell from behind one of the swastika embossed brick driveway pillars One of the shots ricocheted off the car right next to his head Leaping from the car Rockwell pursued the gunman On June 30 Rockwell petitioned the Arlington County Circuit Court for a gun permit no action was ever taken on his request citation needed On August 25 1967 as Rockwell left the Econowash laundromat at the Dominion Hills Shopping Center a former follower named John Patler shot Rockwell from the roof of the building Patler fired two bullets into Rockwell s car through the windshield One missed the other hit his chest and ruptured his heart His car rolled backward to a stop and Rockwell staggered out of the front passenger side door of the car stood briefly while pointing upward at the strip mall s rooftop where the shots had come from and then collapsed on the pavement He was pronounced dead at the scene 14 21 22 Koehl s succession and ideological divisions Edit Rockwell s second in command Deputy Commander Matt Koehl a staunch Hitlerist assumed the leadership role after a council agreed that he should retain command Koehl continued some of Rockwell s restructuring of the group by dropping the use of negative verbal and written attacks against racial minorities Koehl also began emphasizing the positive aspects of Nazism and the glories of a future all white society Koehl retained the swastika festooned party literature and the pseudo Nazi uniforms of the party s Storm Troopers which were modeled on those worn by the Nazi Party s Sturmabteilung In 1968 Koehl moved the party to a new headquarters on 2507 North Franklin Road clearly visible from Arlington s main thoroughfare Wilson Boulevard He also established a printing press a George Lincoln Rockwell Memorial Book Store and member living quarters on property nearby citation needed The party began to experience ideological divisions among its followers as it entered the 1970s In 1970 member Frank Collin who was himself secretly the son of a Jewish father broke away from the group and founded the National Socialist Party of America in Chicago which became famous for its attempt to march through Skokie Illinois which was home to many Holocaust survivors This led to the United States Supreme Court case National Socialist Party of America v Village of Skokie Other dissatisfied members of the NSWPP chose to support William Luther Pierce and formed the National Alliance in 1974 citation needed Further membership erosion occurred as Koehl drawing heavily upon the teachings of Hitlerian mystic Savitri Devi began to suggest that Nazism was more akin to a religious movement than a political one He espoused the belief that Adolf Hitler was the gift of an inscrutable divine providence who had been sent to rescue the white race from decadence and gradual extinction which had been caused by a declining birth rate and miscegenation Hitler s death in 1945 was viewed as a type of martyrdom a voluntary Christ like self sacrifice that looked forward to a spiritual resurrection of Nazism at a later date when the Aryan race would need it the most These esoteric beliefs led to disputes with the World Union of National Socialists which Rockwell had founded and whose leader Danish neo Nazi Povl Riis Knudsen had been appointed by Koehl Undaunted Koehl continued to recast the party as a new religion in formation Public rallies were gradually phased out in favor of low key gatherings which were held in private venues On Labor Day 1979 in a highly unpopular move for some members Koehl disbanded the party s paramilitary Storm Troopers citation needed On November 3 1979 some members of the NSWPP and a Ku Klux Klan group attacked a Communist Workers Party protest march in Greensboro North Carolina The group of neo Nazis and Klansmen shot and killed five marchers Forty Klansmen and neo Nazis were involved in the shootings with sixteen Klansmen and neo Nazis being arrested The six strongest cases were brought to trial first but the two criminal trials resulted in the acquittal of the defendants by all white juries However in a 1985 civil lawsuit the survivors won a 350 000 judgment against the city the Klansmen and the neo Nazis after they were all found guilty of violating the civil rights of the demonstrators The shootings became known as the Greensboro Massacre 23 In 1982 the Internal Revenue Service took action to foreclose on the group s headquarters in Arlington Virginia 24 Koehl ceased printing the organization s White Power newspaper sold its Arlington Virginia real estate holdings and dispersed the group s various operations to scattered locations in Wisconsin and Michigan A secluded 88 acre 360 000 m2 rural property called Nordland was purchased in New Berlin Wisconsin to serve as living quarters and to host annual meetings and ceremonial events New Order Edit The Koehl organization changed its name to New Order on January 1 1983 on the grounds that the people in the area are not people looking to join revolutionary organizations saying that it was moving to an area in the Midwest which it would not reveal for security reasons 25 The name change reflected the group s Nazi mysticism and it was still known by that name in 2010 26 The organization briefly attracted the media s attention in October 1983 when it held a private meeting at Yorktown High School in Arlington Virginia 27 A non uniformed gathering of members was held indoors while the police kept a crowd of counter protesters at bay outside This event marked the last publicized appearance of Koehl and the New Order in Arlington From that point forward the only outward sign that the group was still operational was the annual appearance of the swastika and Betsy Ross American Revolutionary War flags flying from the party s nondescript headquarters building on North Franklin Road every April 20 Hitler s birthday Today the New Order operates quietly far from the public spotlight eschewing the confrontational public rallies that were once a hallmark of its previous incarnations It maintains a web page and a Milwaukee Wisconsin post office box providing information and template material promoting Nazism It has no members but rather registered supporters who pledge to mail in donations on a monthly basis Financing is also obtained through sales of books and other merchandise under an affiliate business NS Publications of Wyandotte Michigan The NS Bulletin a newsletter is sent to supporters on a quarterly basis The group holds occasional ceremonial gatherings at undisclosed private locations such as an annual observance of Hitler s birthday each April 20 New Order s Chief of Staff Martin Kerr claims that the group is no longer a white supremacist group and focuses on advocating in favor of white people not against other races or ethnicities we consider the white people of the world to be a gigantic family of racial brothers and sisters united by ties of common ancestry and common heritage Being for our own family does not mean that we hate other families The SPLC still classifies them as neo Nazis and as a hate group 28 29 30 In May 2021 two versions of leaflets promoting the white race were scattered in plastic bags containing business cards in a number of Greene County Virginia neighborhoods 31 Namesake organizations EditSince the late 1960s there have been a number of small groups that have used the name American Nazi Party Perhaps the first was led by James Warner and Allen Vincent and it consisted of members of the California branch of the NSWPP 32 This group announced its existence on January 1 1968 In 1982 James Burford formed another American Nazi Party from disaffected branches of the National Socialist Party of America 33 This Chicago based group remained in existence until at least 1994 34 A small American Nazi Party operated from Davenport Iowa led by John Robert Bishop until 1985 35 18 36 The name American Nazi Party has also been adopted by a group run by Rocky J Suhayda a member of Rockwell s original ANP in 1967 Although Suhayda s ANP states that Rockwell was its founder there is no direct legal or financial link between it and Rockwell s legacy organization now called the New Order citation needed Headquartered in Westland Michigan Suhayda s ANP website sells nostalgic reprints of Rockwell s 1960s era magazine The Stormtrooper 2008 Neo Nazi presidential candidate John Taylor Bowles was a member Suhayda holds semi private yearly meetings at his home and a national convention in California His followers do not wear uniforms except for the SA or Security Arm and they eschew public demonstrations frequently criticizing the rival organization the National Socialist Movement for outing its members with excessive media exposure citation needed Notable former members EditDavid Duke was a member before he went on to establish the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan organization 6 Frank Collin founder of the National Socialist Party of America James Mason former convict author associate of Charles Manson Joseph Tommasi founder of the National Socialist Liberation Front Kurt Saxon author of The Poor Man s James Bond William Luther Pierce founder of the National Alliance Arthur J Jones Republican candidate for Illinois s 3rd congressional district in the November 2018 midterm electionsSee also EditGerman American Bund Nazism in the Americas Neo Nazi groups of the United StatesReferences EditInformational notes Despite sharing ideological roots the phrase American Nazi Party should not be confabulated with the German American Bund or German American Federation German Amerikadeutscher Bund Amerikadeutscher Volksbund AV which was an American Nazi organization established in 1936 to succeed Friends of New Germany FONG the new name being chosen to emphasize the group s American credentials after press criticism that the organization was unpatriotic 6 8 The Bund was to consist only of American citizens of German descent 9 Reportedly it had about 20 000 adherents 6 The line between the American Nazi Party the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacists has always been blurry 6 The actual date of the change in name is unclear Kaplan reports it as being in 1966 while Goodrick Clarke and Green and Stabler report it as occurring on January 1 1967 18 19 6 Citations a b Rockwell George Lincoln From Ivory Tower to Privy Wall On The Art of Propaganda Archived August 3 2014 at the Wayback Machine c 1966 Holley Peter August 6 2016 Top Nazi leader Trump will be a real opportunity for white nationalists The Washington Post Michigan NSM 2016 A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMERICAN NATIONAL SOCIALISM PDF National Socialist Movement Archived from the original PDF on December 26 2016 Retrieved March 27 2018 WETA Nazis in Arlington George Rockwell and the ANP Boundary Stones WETA s Washington DC History Blog Retrieved March 26 2018 The Stormtrooper Magazine American Nazi Party publication Social Welfare History Image Portal accessed June 17 2020 https images socialwelfare library vcu edu items show 266 a b c d e f g h i Green amp Stabler 2015 p 390 Potok Mark August 29 2001 The Nazi International Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved May 13 2016 Wolter amp Masters 2004 p 65 Van Ells Mark D August 2007 Americans for Hitler The Bund America in WWII Vol 3 pp 44 49 Retrieved May 13 2016 Death of an Arlington Nazi www northernvirginiamag com December 30 2010 Retrieved March 26 2018 LONGTIME NEO NAZI MATTHIAS MATT KOEHL DIES Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved April 24 2022 A Guide to the American Nazi Party Recruiting Materials c 1966 American Nazi Party Recruiting Materials Ms2015 060 August 12 2016 Archived from the original on August 12 2016 Retrieved March 26 2018 Loeser Consulting American Nazi Party USA Historical Flags of Our Ancestors Flags of Extremism Part 1 a m www loeser us Retrieved March 26 2018 a b Schmaltz 2013 Fenston Jacob September 6 2013 Arlington s Uneasy Relationship With Nazi Party Founder WAMU Retrieved May 13 2016 Weingarten Gene It s Just Nazi Same Place The Washington Post February 10 2008 Cooper Rebecca A Java Shack glimpses its past as Nazi headquarters Archived August 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine TDB com March 8 2011 a b c d e f Kaplan 2000 pp 1 3 a b Goodrick Clarke 2003 p 14 Haley Alex 1966 Playboy Interview George Lincoln Rockwell Playboy Magazine Retrieved May 12 2016 via Internet archive 1967 American Hitler shot dead BBC News August 25 1967 Retrieved August 7 2009 E Miller Michael August 21 2017 The Shadow of an Assassinated American Nazi Commander Hangs Over Charlottesville The Washington Post Retrieved August 10 2019 dead link subscription required Agent Tells of 79 Threats by Klan and Nazis The New York Times May 12 1985 section 1 page 26 column 1 Retrieved September 27 2007 Kaplan 2000 p 156 Nazi Party to Relocate The New York Times December 27 1982 Retrieved July 26 2022 Death of an Arlington Nazi www northernvirginiamag com December 30 2010 Retrieved March 27 2018 Swastikas on Wilson Arlington Magazine Arlington Magazine August 12 2013 Retrieved March 27 2018 A look at Wisconsin s hate groups WisconsinWatch org www wisconsinwatch org November 12 2017 Retrieved April 28 2018 Across Wisconsin recent rises in hate bias incidents spark concern Retrieved April 28 2018 Neo Nazi Southern Poverty Law Center Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved July 28 2022 Beigie Terry May 9 2021 Neo Nazi flyers are scattered The Daily Progress Retrieved July 28 2022 Kaplan 2000 pp 1 3 558 62 Kaplan 2000 pp 3 33 Anti Defamation League Danger Extremism New York Anti Defamation League 1996 p 177 Special Collections Manuscript Collections Special Collections Bishop John Robert papers 1951 1977 and undated augustana libraryhost com Retrieved March 26 2018 Marks 1996 p 58 Bibliography Green Michael S Stabler Scott L 2015 Ideas and Movements that Shaped America From the Bill of Rights to Occupy Wall Street 3 vols Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 390 ISBN 978 1610692519 Retrieved May 12 2016 Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 2003 Black Sun Aryan Cults Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity New York New York University Press ISBN 9780814731550 Kaplan Jeffrey ed 2000 Encyclopedia of White Power A Sourcebook on the Radical Racist Right Walnut Creek California AltaMira Press ISBN 9780742503403 Marks Kathy 1996 Faces of Right Wing Extremism Boston Branden Books ISBN 9780828320160 Obermayer Herman J 2012 American Nazi Party in Arlington Virginia 1958 1984 CreateSpace Publishing ISBN 9781494366865 Schmaltz William H 2013 For Race And Nation George Lincoln Rockwell and the American Nazi Party 1st ed River s Bend Press ASIN B00CNFX7BE Wolter Erik V Masters Robert J 2004 Loyalty On Trial One American s Battle With The FBI New York iUniverse p 65 ISBN 9780595327034 Further reading Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 1998 Hitler s Priestess Savitri Devi the Hindu Aryan Myth and Neo Nazism New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 3111 2 Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 2001 Black Sun Aryan Cults Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 3155 4 Schmaltz William H 2000 Hate George Lincoln Rockwell and the American Nazi Party Paperback Washington D C Brassey s Inc ISBN 1574882627 Simonelli Frederick J 1999 American Fuehrer George Lincoln Rockwell and the American Nazi Party Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 02285 8 and ISBN 0 252 06768 1External links EditFederal Bureau of Investigation American Nazi Party monograph June 1965 Detailed report on George Lincoln Rockwell and the original American Nazi Party Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Nazi Party amp oldid 1135518443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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