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Robert W. Welch Jr.

Robert Henry Winborne Welch Jr. (December 1, 1899 – January 6, 1985) was an American businessman, political organizer, and conspiracy theorist.[1] He was wealthy following his retirement from the candy business and used his wealth to sponsor anti-communist causes. He co-founded the John Birch Society (JBS), an American right-wing political advocacy group,[2] in 1958 and tightly controlled it until his death. He was highly controversial and criticized by liberals, as well as some conservatives, including William F. Buckley Jr. only after being an early donor to Buckley’s National Review in the 1950s.

Bob Welch
Born
Robert Henry Winborne Welch Jr.

(1899-12-01)December 1, 1899
DiedJanuary 6, 1985(1985-01-06) (aged 85)
EducationUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (BA)
United States Naval Academy
Harvard University
Political partyRepublican
SpouseMarian Probert
Children2

Early life edit

Welch was born in Chowan County, North Carolina, the son of Lina Verona (née James) and Robert Henry Winborne Welch Sr.[3]

As a child, he was considered gifted and received his early education at home from his mother, a school teacher. His boyhood home was in Stockton, North Carolina.[4] Welch enrolled in high school at the age of ten and was admitted to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill at the age of twelve, the youngest student ever to enroll there.[5] He was a fundamentalist Baptist and, by his own admission, was "insufferable" in his attempts to convert his fellow students.[6]

Welch attended the United States Naval Academy and Harvard Law School but did not graduate from either institution.[7]

Business career edit

Welch founded the Oxford Candy Company in Brooklyn, New York, a one-man operation until he hired his brother James to assist him. James Welch left to found his own candy company in 1925. The Oxford Candy Company went out of business during the Great Depression, but his brother's company, the James O. Welch Company, survived, and Welch was hired by his brother.[8] Welch became director of sales and advertising for the company.[9] The company began making caramel lollipops, renamed Sugar Daddies, and Welch developed other candies such as Sugar Babies, Junior Mints, and Pom Poms. Welch retired a wealthy man in 1956.[8]

Early political activism edit

From his teenage years, Welch was an anti-communist. He was a strong adherent of conspiracy theories believing many individuals and organizations were part of an international communist plot. In his own words, the American people consisted of four groups: "Communists, communist dupes or sympathizers, the uninformed who have yet to be awakened to the communist danger, and the ignorant."[citation needed] Welch supported the America First Committee, supported Robert Taft’s 1940 presidential candidacy, and supported classical liberal ideals.[10]

Prosperous from the candy business, Welch became a director of the Chambers of Commerce in Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, and also a national councilor of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. He also became a director of a local bank and joined the school board of Belmont, Massachusetts, where he lived. He became a Republican Party official in Massachusetts and ran and lost a primary election in 1950 for Lieutenant Governor of the state. He joined the National Association of Manufacturers' board of directors, and also served as a regional vice president and chairman of its education committee.[9] In 1952, he supported Robert A. Taft's unsuccessful bid for the Republican presidential nomination and was a prominent campaign contributor to Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy's re-election campaign.[citation needed]

In 1956, he began the magazine One Man's Opinion (later renamed American Opinion).[9]

John Birch Society edit

Welch founded the John Birch Society (JBS) in December 1958.[11]

Starting with eleven men, Welch greatly expanded the membership, exerted very tight control over revenues and set up a number of publications. At its height, the organization claimed it had 100,000 members. Welch distrusted outsiders and did not want alliances with other groups (even other anti-Communists). He developed an elaborate organizational infrastructure in 1958 that enabled him to keep a very tight rein on the chapters.[12]

Its main activity in the 1960s, says Rick Perlstein, "comprised monthly meetings to watch a film by Welch, followed by writing postcards or letters to government officials linking specific policies to the Communist menace".[13]

In 1962, William F. Buckley Jr., in his magazine, National Review, denounced Welch as promoting conspiracy theories far removed from common sense. While not attacking the members of the Society directly, Buckley concentrated his fire upon Welch in order to prevent his controversial views from tarnishing the entire conservative movement. Divergent foreign policy views between Buckley and Welch also played a role in the break.[citation needed]

Being in the tradition of an older, Taftian conservatism, Welch favored a foreign policy of "Fortress America" rather than "entangling alliances" through NATO and the United Nations. For this reason, Welch combined a strong anti-Communism with opposition to the bipartisan Cold War consensus of armed internationalism. Beginning in 1965, he opposed the escalating U.S. role in the Vietnam War. In the view of the more hawkish Buckley, Welch lacked sufficient support for U.S. political and military leadership of the world.[citation needed]

Welch was the editor and publisher of the Society's monthly magazine American Opinion and the weekly The Review of the News, which in 1971 incorporated the writings of another conservative activist, Dan Smoot. He also wrote The Road to Salesmanship (1941), May God Forgive Us (1951), The Politician (about Eisenhower) and The Life of John Birch (1954). A collection of his essays was edited into a book. The New Americanism, which later became the inspiration for The New American.[citation needed]

In the 1960s, Welch began to believe that even the Communists were not the top level of his perceived conspiracy and began saying that communism was just a front for a Master Conspiracy, which had roots in the Illuminati; the essay "The Truth in Time" is an example.[14]

He referred to the Conspirators as "The Insiders", seeing them mainly in internationalist financial and business families such as the Rothschilds and Rockefellers, and organizations such as the Bilderbergers, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Trilateral Commission. As a result of his conspiracy theories, the John Birch Society became synonymous with the "radical right."[15]

In 1983, Welch stepped down as president of the John Birch Society. He was succeeded as president by Congressman Larry McDonald, who died a few months later when the airliner he was on was shot down by the Soviet Union.[16]

Welch's The Politician edit

Republican criticism of the John Birch Society intensified after Welch circulated a letter in 1954 calling President Dwight D. Eisenhower a possible "conscious, dedicated agent of the Communist Conspiracy". Welch went further in a book titled The Politician, written in 1956 and privately printed, rather than by the JBS, for Welch in 1963.

It was his personal "fact-finding" mission and was not part of the materials or the formal beliefs of the JBS. Welch claimed President Franklin D. Roosevelt had known about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in advance but said nothing because he wanted to get the U.S. into the war. The book spawned much debate in the 1960s over whether the author really intended to call Eisenhower a Communist. G. Edward Griffin, a friend of Welch, claims that he meant collectivist, not Communist. The charge's sensationalism led many conservatives and Republicans to shy away from the group.[citation needed]

Political views edit

Welch accused Presidents Truman and Eisenhower of being communist sympathizers and possibly Soviet agents of influence. He alleged that Eisenhower was a "conscious, dedicated agent of the communist conspiracy",[17] and that Eisenhower's brother Milton was the President's superior in the communist apparatus. President Eisenhower never responded publicly to Welch's claims.

According to Princeton University historian Sean Wilentz, "Wherever he looked, Welch saw Communist forces manipulating American economic and foreign policy on behalf of totalitarianism. But within the United States, he believed, the subversion had actually begun years before the Bolshevik Revolution. Conflating modern liberalism and totalitarianism, Welch described government as 'always and inevitably an enemy of individual freedom.' Consequently, he charged, the Progressive era, which expanded the federal government's role in curbing social and economic ills, was a dire period in our history, and Woodrow Wilson 'more than any other one man started this nation on its present road to totalitarianism' ... In the 1960s, Welch became convinced that even the Communist movement was but 'a tool of the total conspiracy.' This master conspiracy, he said, had forerunners in ancient Sparta, and sprang fully to life in the 18th century, in the 'uniformly Satanic creed and program' of the Bavarian Illuminati. Run by those he called 'the Insiders', the conspiracy resided chiefly in international families of financiers, such as the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers, government agencies like the Federal Reserve System and the Internal Revenue Service, and nongovernmental organizations like the Bilderberg Group, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Trilateral Commission."[18]

Personal life edit

Welch was married to Marian Probert Welch and had two sons. He died on January 6, 1985.

Works edit

  • May God Forgive Us: A Famous Letter Giving the Historical Background of the Dismissal of General MacArthur (1952). Henry Regnery Company.
  • Again, May God Forgive Us! (1952). Belmont, Mass.: Belmont Publishing Company.
  • The Blue Book of The John Birch Society (1959). Belmont, Mass.: Western Islands. ISBN 0882791052. Full text.
  • The Life of John Birch: In the Story of One American Boy, the Ordeal of His Age (1960). Belmont, Mass.: Western Islands. ISBN 0882791168.
  • The Politician: A Look at the Political Forces that Propelled Dwight David Eisenhower into the Presidency. Appleton, Wis.: Robert Welch University Press (1963).
  • The New Americanism: And Other Speeches and Essays (1966). Belmont, Mass.: Western Islands. ISBN 978-0882792118. OCLC 7351053.
  • The Romance of Education (1973). Boston: Western Islands. OCLC 667776.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Miller 2021, p. 7-8.
  2. ^ Webster's guide to American history: a chronological, geographical, and biographical survey and compendium. Springfield, Mass., U.S.A.: G. & C. Merriam Co. 1971. p. 576. ISBN 9780877790815. The society is semisecret, has been organized by Robert H.W. Welch, Jr. in 1958, and is a right-wing organization dedicated to fighting communism, which it claims is more of a danger to the U.S. from within than from without the country.
  3. ^ "Welch, Robert Henry Winborne, Jr". ncpedia.org. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  4. ^ Miller, 27-28.
  5. ^ Miller, 32, 34.
  6. ^ Seiler, Michael (January 8, 1985). "Robert Welch, Founder of Birch Society, Dies at 85". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  7. ^ Terry Lautz (2016). John Birch: A Life. Oxford UP. pp. 219–20. ISBN 9780190262891.
  8. ^ a b Lautz (2016). John Birch: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 219. ISBN 9780190262891.
  9. ^ a b c Mulloy, D. J. (2014). The World of the John Birch Society: Conspiracy, Conservatism, and the Cold War. Vanderbilt University Press. ISBN 9780826502896.
  10. ^ Miller, 64-65.
  11. ^ Stern, Eric. "Thank-you". jbs.org. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  12. ^ Jonathan M. Schoenwald, "A New Kind of Conservatism: The John Birch Society" in Schoenwald, A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism (Oxford University Press, 2002), Chapter 3
  13. ^ Rick Perlstein (2001). Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus. Hill and Wang. p. 117. ISBN 0786744154.
  14. ^ Welch, Robert (August 17, 1987). . The New American. Archived from the original on June 28, 2006. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
  15. ^ Mary C. Brennan (2000). Turning Right in the Sixties: The Conservative Capture of the GOP. Univ of North Carolina Press. pp. 62–64. ISBN 9780807860564.
  16. ^ Doug Rossinow (2015). The Reagan Era: A History of the 1980s. Columbia University Press. p. 112. ISBN 9780231538657.
  17. ^ Buckley, William F. Jr. (March 2008). . Commentary. Archived from the original on May 18, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2008.
  18. ^ Wilentz, Sean (October 11, 2010). "Cofounding Fathers: The Tea Party's Cold War roots". The New Yorker.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • The John Birch Society
  • The New American

robert, welch, robert, henry, winborne, welch, december, 1899, january, 1985, american, businessman, political, organizer, conspiracy, theorist, wealthy, following, retirement, from, candy, business, used, wealth, sponsor, anti, communist, causes, founded, joh. Robert Henry Winborne Welch Jr December 1 1899 January 6 1985 was an American businessman political organizer and conspiracy theorist 1 He was wealthy following his retirement from the candy business and used his wealth to sponsor anti communist causes He co founded the John Birch Society JBS an American right wing political advocacy group 2 in 1958 and tightly controlled it until his death He was highly controversial and criticized by liberals as well as some conservatives including William F Buckley Jr only after being an early donor to Buckley s National Review in the 1950s Bob WelchBornRobert Henry Winborne Welch Jr 1899 12 01 December 1 1899Chowan County North Carolina U S DiedJanuary 6 1985 1985 01 06 aged 85 Winchester Massachusetts U S EducationUniversity of North Carolina Chapel Hill BA United States Naval AcademyHarvard UniversityPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseMarian ProbertChildren2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Business career 3 Early political activism 4 John Birch Society 5 Welch s The Politician 6 Political views 7 Personal life 8 Works 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editWelch was born in Chowan County North Carolina the son of Lina Verona nee James and Robert Henry Winborne Welch Sr 3 As a child he was considered gifted and received his early education at home from his mother a school teacher His boyhood home was in Stockton North Carolina 4 Welch enrolled in high school at the age of ten and was admitted to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill at the age of twelve the youngest student ever to enroll there 5 He was a fundamentalist Baptist and by his own admission was insufferable in his attempts to convert his fellow students 6 Welch attended the United States Naval Academy and Harvard Law School but did not graduate from either institution 7 Business career editWelch founded the Oxford Candy Company in Brooklyn New York a one man operation until he hired his brother James to assist him James Welch left to found his own candy company in 1925 The Oxford Candy Company went out of business during the Great Depression but his brother s company the James O Welch Company survived and Welch was hired by his brother 8 Welch became director of sales and advertising for the company 9 The company began making caramel lollipops renamed Sugar Daddies and Welch developed other candies such as Sugar Babies Junior Mints and Pom Poms Welch retired a wealthy man in 1956 8 Early political activism editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert W Welch Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message From his teenage years Welch was an anti communist He was a strong adherent of conspiracy theories believing many individuals and organizations were part of an international communist plot In his own words the American people consisted of four groups Communists communist dupes or sympathizers the uninformed who have yet to be awakened to the communist danger and the ignorant citation needed Welch supported the America First Committee supported Robert Taft s 1940 presidential candidacy and supported classical liberal ideals 10 Prosperous from the candy business Welch became a director of the Chambers of Commerce in Boston and Cambridge Massachusetts and also a national councilor of the U S Chamber of Commerce He also became a director of a local bank and joined the school board of Belmont Massachusetts where he lived He became a Republican Party official in Massachusetts and ran and lost a primary election in 1950 for Lieutenant Governor of the state He joined the National Association of Manufacturers board of directors and also served as a regional vice president and chairman of its education committee 9 In 1952 he supported Robert A Taft s unsuccessful bid for the Republican presidential nomination and was a prominent campaign contributor to Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy s re election campaign citation needed In 1956 he began the magazine One Man s Opinion later renamed American Opinion 9 John Birch Society editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert W Welch Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Welch founded the John Birch Society JBS in December 1958 11 Starting with eleven men Welch greatly expanded the membership exerted very tight control over revenues and set up a number of publications At its height the organization claimed it had 100 000 members Welch distrusted outsiders and did not want alliances with other groups even other anti Communists He developed an elaborate organizational infrastructure in 1958 that enabled him to keep a very tight rein on the chapters 12 Its main activity in the 1960s says Rick Perlstein comprised monthly meetings to watch a film by Welch followed by writing postcards or letters to government officials linking specific policies to the Communist menace 13 In 1962 William F Buckley Jr in his magazine National Review denounced Welch as promoting conspiracy theories far removed from common sense While not attacking the members of the Society directly Buckley concentrated his fire upon Welch in order to prevent his controversial views from tarnishing the entire conservative movement Divergent foreign policy views between Buckley and Welch also played a role in the break citation needed Being in the tradition of an older Taftian conservatism Welch favored a foreign policy of Fortress America rather than entangling alliances through NATO and the United Nations For this reason Welch combined a strong anti Communism with opposition to the bipartisan Cold War consensus of armed internationalism Beginning in 1965 he opposed the escalating U S role in the Vietnam War In the view of the more hawkish Buckley Welch lacked sufficient support for U S political and military leadership of the world citation needed Welch was the editor and publisher of the Society s monthly magazine American Opinion and the weekly The Review of the News which in 1971 incorporated the writings of another conservative activist Dan Smoot He also wrote The Road to Salesmanship 1941 May God Forgive Us 1951 The Politician about Eisenhower and The Life of John Birch 1954 A collection of his essays was edited into a book The New Americanism which later became the inspiration for The New American citation needed In the 1960s Welch began to believe that even the Communists were not the top level of his perceived conspiracy and began saying that communism was just a front for a Master Conspiracy which had roots in the Illuminati the essay The Truth in Time is an example 14 He referred to the Conspirators as The Insiders seeing them mainly in internationalist financial and business families such as the Rothschilds and Rockefellers and organizations such as the Bilderbergers the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission As a result of his conspiracy theories the John Birch Society became synonymous with the radical right 15 In 1983 Welch stepped down as president of the John Birch Society He was succeeded as president by Congressman Larry McDonald who died a few months later when the airliner he was on was shot down by the Soviet Union 16 Welch s The Politician editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert W Welch Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Republican criticism of the John Birch Society intensified after Welch circulated a letter in 1954 calling President Dwight D Eisenhower a possible conscious dedicated agent of the Communist Conspiracy Welch went further in a book titled The Politician written in 1956 and privately printed rather than by the JBS for Welch in 1963 It was his personal fact finding mission and was not part of the materials or the formal beliefs of the JBS Welch claimed President Franklin D Roosevelt had known about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in advance but said nothing because he wanted to get the U S into the war The book spawned much debate in the 1960s over whether the author really intended to call Eisenhower a Communist G Edward Griffin a friend of Welch claims that he meant collectivist not Communist The charge s sensationalism led many conservatives and Republicans to shy away from the group citation needed Political views editWelch accused Presidents Truman and Eisenhower of being communist sympathizers and possibly Soviet agents of influence He alleged that Eisenhower was a conscious dedicated agent of the communist conspiracy 17 and that Eisenhower s brother Milton was the President s superior in the communist apparatus President Eisenhower never responded publicly to Welch s claims According to Princeton University historian Sean Wilentz Wherever he looked Welch saw Communist forces manipulating American economic and foreign policy on behalf of totalitarianism But within the United States he believed the subversion had actually begun years before the Bolshevik Revolution Conflating modern liberalism and totalitarianism Welch described government as always and inevitably an enemy of individual freedom Consequently he charged the Progressive era which expanded the federal government s role in curbing social and economic ills was a dire period in our history and Woodrow Wilson more than any other one man started this nation on its present road to totalitarianism In the 1960s Welch became convinced that even the Communist movement was but a tool of the total conspiracy This master conspiracy he said had forerunners in ancient Sparta and sprang fully to life in the 18th century in the uniformly Satanic creed and program of the Bavarian Illuminati Run by those he called the Insiders the conspiracy resided chiefly in international families of financiers such as the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers government agencies like the Federal Reserve System and the Internal Revenue Service and nongovernmental organizations like the Bilderberg Group the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission 18 Personal life editWelch was married to Marian Probert Welch and had two sons He died on January 6 1985 Works editMay God Forgive Us A Famous Letter Giving the Historical Background of the Dismissal of General MacArthur 1952 Henry Regnery Company Again May God Forgive Us 1952 Belmont Mass Belmont Publishing Company The Blue Book of The John Birch Society 1959 Belmont Mass Western Islands ISBN 0882791052 Full text The Life of John Birch In the Story of One American Boy the Ordeal of His Age 1960 Belmont Mass Western Islands ISBN 0882791168 The Politician A Look at the Political Forces that Propelled Dwight David Eisenhower into the Presidency Appleton Wis Robert Welch University Press 1963 The New Americanism And Other Speeches and Essays 1966 Belmont Mass Western Islands ISBN 978 0882792118 OCLC 7351053 The Romance of Education 1973 Boston Western Islands OCLC 667776 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Books portal nbsp Conservatism portal The New American Robert Welch UniversityReferences edit Miller 2021 p 7 8 Webster s guide to American history a chronological geographical and biographical survey and compendium Springfield Mass U S A G amp C Merriam Co 1971 p 576 ISBN 9780877790815 The society is semisecret has been organized by Robert H W Welch Jr in 1958 and is a right wing organization dedicated to fighting communism which it claims is more of a danger to the U S from within than from without the country Welch Robert Henry Winborne Jr ncpedia org Retrieved September 3 2017 Miller 27 28 Miller 32 34 Seiler Michael January 8 1985 Robert Welch Founder of Birch Society Dies at 85 Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 18 2020 Terry Lautz 2016 John Birch A Life Oxford UP pp 219 20 ISBN 9780190262891 a b Lautz 2016 John Birch A Life Oxford University Press p 219 ISBN 9780190262891 a b c Mulloy D J 2014 The World of the John Birch Society Conspiracy Conservatism and the Cold War Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 9780826502896 Miller 64 65 Stern Eric Thank you jbs org Retrieved August 24 2017 Jonathan M Schoenwald A New Kind of Conservatism The John Birch Society in Schoenwald A Time for Choosing The Rise of Modern American Conservatism Oxford University Press 2002 Chapter 3 Rick Perlstein 2001 Before the Storm Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus Hill and Wang p 117 ISBN 0786744154 Welch Robert August 17 1987 The Truth in Time The New American Archived from the original on June 28 2006 Retrieved January 21 2020 Mary C Brennan 2000 Turning Right in the Sixties The Conservative Capture of the GOP Univ of North Carolina Press pp 62 64 ISBN 9780807860564 Doug Rossinow 2015 The Reagan Era A History of the 1980s Columbia University Press p 112 ISBN 9780231538657 Buckley William F Jr March 2008 Goldwater the John Birch Society and Me Commentary Archived from the original on May 18 2008 Retrieved October 7 2008 Wilentz Sean October 11 2010 Cofounding Fathers The Tea Party s Cold War roots The New Yorker Further reading editMiller Edward 2021 A Conspiratorial Life Robert Welch the John Birch Society and the Revolution of American Conservatism Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226448862 OCLC 1241244784 Schoenwald Jonathan 2002 A Time for Choosing The Rise of Modern American Conservatism Oxford University Press pp 62 99 OCLC 133167165 External links editThe John Birch Society The New American Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert W Welch Jr amp oldid 1208961509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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