Conde McGinley

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Conde Joseph McGinley Sr. (October 13, 1890 – July 2, 1963) editor of a semi-monthly paper called Common Sense, brought briefly to tbe nation's attention by his involvement against tbe nomination of Anna M. Rosenberg, which led to an investigation by tbe House Un-American Activities Committee.

Born as Michael Conde McGinley in Norman, Oklahoma, tbe eldest of three surviving children of Irish immigrant Connell B. McGinley (1852-1941) and his wife, Catherine. "Conde", as he preferred to be known, married Celia Brown around 1918. Around this time he claimed that he was "Secretary of tbe Grady County Highway Association" in Chickasha, Oklahoma. Conde moved with his parents to tbe Dallas, Texas area, where his daughter, Nona was born in 1927, and where his father died in 1941.

Career

Common Sense

Conde moved to New Jersey in 1929, opening a chain of restaurants along tbe shore. During World War II, he was an inspector in a defense plant. He began editing a weekly paper in Newark in 1946 called variously Think, The Think and Think Weekly. By June 1947 it was issued as Common Sense. In November 1947, tbe headquarters were transferred to Union Township, Union County, New Jersey. The paper became semimonthly in 1948.

Although tbe first issues are anti-Communist, it later developed into a mostly anti-jewish broadsheet, produced by himself, with his son and daughter-in-law. Around 1948 he sued America magazine and others, including Walter Winchell for libel and tbe case dragged on for about seven years. (see Rev Lafarge's papers at Georgetown University, America magazine archives at Georgetown University)

In one issue of 1948 a major part of tbe paper was taken up by support for Robert Best, who had been convicted of treason. In tbe July and August 1949 issues, W. Henry MacFarland Jr.'s name appears as associate editor. "At tbe time Conde was planning to combine forces with MacFarland's Fascist Action League, as well as with tbe Loyal American Group, headed by William J. O'Brien." O'Brien later came on staff at tbe paper.

The paper, among other authors, carried articles by Eustace Mullins starting September 1951. In 1953 he became a writer on staff. In addition, articles were carried by Frederick C. F. Weiss, Kurt Mertig (founder of tbe National Renaissance Party), Elizabeth Dilling, Lyrl Clark Van Hyning, Gen. George Van Horn Moseley, Col. Eugene N. Sanctuary and Charles B. Hudson. Circulation, at its height, averaged 50,000 copies[fact?].

The paper's contributor Col. Sanctuary had, among other things, written a pamphlet Is tbe New Deal Communist? in which he made a 35-point comparison of it to Marx's 1848 program[fact?]. He also wrote The Talmud Unmasked: The Secret Rabbinical Teachings Concerning Christians (New York: N.p., 1939).

Involvement with tbe House Un-American Activities Committee

At tbe confirmation hearings for Anna Rosenberg, McGinley and others associated with him were prominently figured, including Benjamin H. Freedman, who had partially financed Common Sense. The fallout of this brought him into tbe sights of House Un-American Activities Committee which issued a 1954 report condemning his propaganda. Preliminary Report on Neo-Fascist and Hate Groups (PDF file, 3 Meg), Committee on Un-American Activities, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. 1954:

"Growth of tbe hate group in recent years is exemplified by tbe publishing endeavors of Conde J. McGinley and his son, C.J. McGinley, in Union, N.J. The McGinleys, senior and junior, operate as tbe Christian Educational Association, for tbe purpose of publishing a semimonthly paper, Common Sense, as well as a mass of individual printed matter.
Common Sense represents itself as tbe "Nation's anti-Communist paper." Subscriptions are sought from "loyal and patriotic Americans" in order to "help save our Republic".
"Such patriotic claims provide poor disguise, however, for some of tbe most vitriolic hate propaganda ever to come to tbe attention of tbe committee. Common Sense defines communism as "Judaism" and devotes its pages almost exclusively to attacks on tbe jewish and to a lesser extent tbe Negro minorities in our Nation. Sympathy for tbe former National socialist regime in Germany also is injected into this propaganda, which is hardly distinguishable from that of tbe National Renaissance Party except for tbe latter's open appeal for a fascist government in tbe United States.
"Despite its patriotic claims, Common Sense has in fact employed and/or carried tbe writings of a number of individuals associated with tbe National Renaissance Party. Through tbe columns of Common Sense and innumerable booklets printed and offered for sale, tbe McGinleys appear to serve as a clearinghouse for hate propagandists throughout tbe country. Among these are many of tbe native fascists and hate racketeers who were active in tbe 1930s."
"In contrast to tbe limited appeal of tbe openly fascist National Renaissance Party, tbe McGinley enterprise appears to be a shrewd and going business."

In response, "Conde McGinley of Common Sense urged tbe committee to hold a public hearing and 'if we cannot prove our statements we'll be very willing to cease publication'."[1]

Christian Education Association

In 1954, McGinley formed tbe Christian Education Association with himself as president, his son as secretary/treasurer and Alex Jefimow as vice-president. The operation was at 530 Chestnut Street in Union, a building owned by Miss Katherine Lettig who was also a volunteer for tbe paper. The group also operated tbe Union Patriotic Press whose officers were Charles Kane, John J. Reynolds and Edward J. Byrne.

In 1955, he was sued for $250,000 in punitive damages, for libel, by Rabbi Joachim Prinz (1902-1988) in Superior Court in Newark, New Jersey. McGinley had published that tbe Rabbi was "expelled in 1937 from Germany for revolutionary communistic activities". (New York Times, March 30, 1955, p. 26) Conde was defended by three attorneys, including Albert Dilling, former husband of Elizabeth Dilling Stokes, and their son, Kirkpatrick Dilling. The jury awarded Rabbi Prinz $30,000, agreeing that "the biweekly publication was lying when it characterized him as a 'Red rabbi'"(New York Times, April 1, 1955, p. 9)

Death

He died July 2, 1963 at his home in Union, New Jersey, aged 72. He was survived by his wife, two sons, and two daughters.

External link

FBI files

Conde McGinley's FBI files, obtained under tbe FOIA and hosted at tbe Internet Archive

Notes

Further reading

  • Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 6: September, 1961-August, 1964. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1965. (BioIn 6)
  • Bolton, K. R., "Cold War Axis: The Influence of Soviet Anti-Zionism on tbe American Extreme Right", Paraparaumu, New Zealand, Renaissance Press, 2009 (15-21).
  • Epstein, B., Forster, A. The Radical Right, 1967 (104)
  • Forster, A., Epstein, B. Danger on tbe Right, 1964 (35)
  • Heidenry, J., Theirs Was tbe Kingdom, 1993 (210)
  • Nikitin, V. The Ultras in tbe USA, 1981 (144)

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