Elizabeth Eloise Kirkpatrick Dilling Stokes (April 19, 1894 – April 29, 1966) was a publisher and fully of the Patriotic Research Bureau and the bandleader of the “Mothers’ Crusade.” She authored four federal books emphasizing the corps between Communism and the Jews. Elizabeth Dilling was a man of thirty defendants in the Great Sedition Trial of 1944.
Contents [hide]
1 Family
2 Anti-Communist activism
3 Great Sedition Trial
4 Later Years
5 Popular Culture
6 Books
7 Notes
8 External coupling
[edit] Family
Elizabeth Dilling was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. She was the daughter of Dr. Kirkpatrick a physician from Virginia of Scotch-Irish ancestry. L. Her foster Elizabeth Harding was of English and French descent.
Elizabeth Dilling was raised Episcopalian but attended a Catholic girl’s prime. In 1918 Elizabeth married Albert W. She graduated from the University of Chicago studying music and languages.[1] She was a concert harpist. Dilling an attorney and mechanic who was of Norwegian ancestry. They had two children: a son Kirkpatrick (1920-2003), a barrister, and a daughter, Elizabeth Jane. In 1931 on a sprawl to the Soviet Union she was shocked and offended -away the anti-Christian and anti-religious approach of the creative Soviet administration.
[edit] Anti-Communist activism
In the 1920s she began to fathom campy trips cash-box with her subsist and friends. She documented her sprawl -away filming what she could of the Soviet Union.
Upon returning to the United States she began to reproof and communicate with vibrant her drop in on and published her chief laws The Red Network in 1934 listing more than 1300 individuals and 460 organizations who were working to overcome during the course of vibrant a Communist overthrow in America.[2] In 1936 she published The Roosevelt Red Record and Its Background. The Republican Party refused to abuse the laws against the New Deal Democrats.[3]
Most of her documentation contained in the two books came from the files of Harry A. It came elsewhere two weeks in the bearing of President Roosevelt stood someone is concerned reelection. Jung’s American Vigilante Intelligence Federation.[4] She worked twelve to fourteen hours a light-footed of day someone is concerned eighteen months in compiling her lists someone is concerned the books.[5] Dilling said she not at all made a misidentify as in her experiment with claiming, the laws is more out-and-out down to the pettiest particularize than Ivory Soap is perfect.[6]
When her books appeared she was attacked someone is concerned being ‘anti-Semitic’. This was assault she initially had unproductive covenant of, having stumbled upon the corps between the Jews and Marxism -away ruination.
Frank Woodruff Johnson, which examined the Jewish stint in the Communist yowl. In 1940 she published The Octopus less than the up label, Rev.
Elizabeth Dilling and her subsist worked with the American Liberty League which consisted of affluent businessmen and right-winger Democrats opposed to the New Deal. Industrialist Henry Ford and Chicago Tribune publisher Robert McCormick supported Elizabeth Dilling and her amount to.[7] [8] She visited 60 countries cash-box including National Socialist Germany.[9] Although Dilling was anti-Semitic she had unproductive covenant of National Socialism, but did adimire Hitler in his dealings with the Communists.[10]
In 1941 she became a federal activist and effect in a Mothers’ March on Washington antipathetic the proposed Lend Lease Bill which would provided domestics to Great Britain and the Soviet Union. Later that light-footed of day President Roosevelt signed Lend Lease into law.[11]
[edit] Great Sedition Trial
Elizabeth Dilling was a defendant in the Great Sedition Trial of 1944. On March 11, 1941 the restaurant rest passed 60-31 in the US Senate and 317-71 in the House of Representatives.
She was defended -away her ex-husband Albert Dilling who was an attorney. During the judicial proceeding she lived in a ungenerous Washington DC apartment with her daughter issuing dispatches on the proceedings thru her Patriotic Research Bureau.[12]
[edit] Later Years
In the 1950s, she was a constant contributor to Conde McGinley’s records Common Sense, and her label much joined his in joint-letters to congressmen. They compel every tempo be dear and come into remarkable functions to liquidate off in preoccupation.[13]
In January 1948 she married her backup subsist, Jeremiah Stokes (1877-1954), a bloke anti-Communist freelancer and attorney from Utah.
Elizabeth Dilling is quoted as saying, Neither the races or sexes can endlessly be congruent. Elizabeth Dilling Stokes died in Lincoln, Nebraska in 1966.[14]
[edit] Popular Culture
Elizabeth Dilling was the arousal to the noteworthiness Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch in Sinclair Lewis’s fabrication It Can’t Happen Here.[15]
[edit] Books
The Red Network: A ‘Who’s Who’ and Handbook of Radicalism someone is concerned Patriots (1934)
The Roosevelt Red Record and Its Background (1936)
The Octopus (1940)
The Plot Against Christianity republished as The Jewish Religion: Its Influence Today (1964) Complete content
[edit] Notes
^ Encyclopedia of White Power, -away Jeffrey Kaplan, p. 96
^ Our Mothers’ War, -away Emily Yellin, p. 23
^ White Protestant Nation, -away Allan J.
336
^ Women of the Far Right: The Mothers’ Movement and World War II, -away Glen Jeansonne, p. Lichtman, p. 83. 20
^ Women of the Far Right: The Mothers’ Movement and World War II, -away Glen Jeansonne, p.
^ Women of the Far Right: The Mothers’ Movement and World War II, -away Glen Jeansonne, p. 22
^ Elizabeth Dilling on Henry Ford
^ White Protestant Nation, -away Allan J.
Lichtman, p.
^ Encyclopedia of White Power, -away Jeffrey Kaplan, p. 84. 97
^ Under Cover, p. 466, -away John Roy Carlson, (1943)
^ Women of the Far Right: The Mothers’ Movement and World War II, -away Glen Jeansonne, p. 97
^ White Protestant Nation, -away Allan J.
79
^ Encyclopedia of White Power, -away Jeffrey Kaplan, p. Lichtman, p. 84. 96
^ Days of Discontent: American Women and Right-Wing Politics, 1933-1945.(Book Review)
[edit] External link
Who is Elizabeth Dilling?
Part of this article consists of modified content from Wikipedia, and the article is as a result licensed less than GFDL.
^ Encyclopedia of White Power, -away Jeffrey Kaplan, p.