Silver Legion of America
Silver Legion of America | |
---|---|
Chairman | William Dudley Pelley |
Founded | January 30, 1933 |
Dissolved | December 7, 1941 |
Headquarters | Asheville, North Carolina |
1936 Presidential Ticket | Christian Party |
Membership (1934) | 15,000 |
Ideology | American nationalism White nationalism White supremacy Clerical fascism Anti-semitism |
Political position | Far-right |
Religion | Protestantism |
International affiliation | None |
Colours | Silver |
Politics of United States Political parties Elections |
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Silver Legion of America, commonly known as the Silver Shirts, was an underground American fascist organization founded by William Dudley Pelley that was headquartered in Asheville, North Carolina[1] and announced publicly on January 30, 1933.
Contents
History
A white-supremacist, anti-Semitic group[2] modeled after Hitler's Brownshirts, the paramilitary Silver Legion wore a silver shirt with a tie along with a campaign hat and blue corduroy trousers with leggings. The uniform shirts bore a scarlet letter L over the heart: an emblem meant to symbolize Loyalty to the United States, Liberation from materialism, and the Silver Legion itself. The blocky slab serif L-emblem was in a typeface similar to the present-day Rockwell Extra Bold. The organizational flag was a plain silver field with such a red L in the canton at the upper left.
By 1934, the Silver Shirts had about 15,000 members.[3] Circa 1935 with Nazi German funding and Hollywood funding, the Silver Shirts had begun construction of the Murphy Ranch, situated on a secluded 55 acre site in the Los Angeles hills, which was meant to serve as a fortified world headquarters after the expected Fascist global conquest.[4]
Silver Shirt leader Pelley ran for President of the United States in the 1936 election on a third-party ticket. Pelley hoped to seize power in a "silver revolution" and set himself up as dictator of the United States; the presidency remained in the hands of incumbent Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt. By around 1938, the Silver Legion's membership was down to about 5,000.[3]
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Sunday, December 7, 1941, local police occupied the "world headquarters" bunker compound and detained members of the 50-man caretaker force.[4] The declaration of war on the United States by Nazi Germany and the Kingdom of Italy led to the rapid decline of the Silver Legion.
In fiction
- A fictionalized depiction of the Silver Shirts forms a large part of the plot in the thriller The Night Letter by Paul Spike.
- The Silver Shirts are also mentioned in Kurt Vonnegut's novel Mother Night.
- The character of Berzelius "Buzz" Windrip, loosely modeled after Silver Legion founder William Dudley Pelley, was elected U.S. President in 1936 and became the dictator of America in the cautionary 1935 novel by Sinclair Lewis, It Can't Happen Here. Some literary scholars contend instead that the Windrip character was modeled after Louisiana politician Huey Long, who was not formally associated with the Silver Shirts.[5]
- The Silver Shirts are also a British political movement in Harry Turtledove's American Empire and Settling Accounts series of alternate history novels. They are likely an analog of the real-world British Union of Fascists, because Oswald Mosley is a prominent leader.
- The Silver Shirts appear in James Lee Burke's novel Dixie City Jam, a novel in the Dave Robicheaux series.
- Silver Shirts are also mentioned in James Ellroy's novel Perfidia
See also
- German American Bund
- Ulrich Fleischhauer
- Authoritarianism
- Political uniform
- Murphy Ranch
- Christian Party (United States, 1930s)
Footnotes
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Further reading
- Joe Allen, "'It Can't Happen Here?': Confronting the Fascist Threat in the US in the Late 1930s," International Socialist Review, Part One: whole no. 85 (Sept.-Oct. 2012), pp. 26–35; Part Two: whole no. 87 (Jan.-Feb. 2013), pp. 19–28.
- Leo Paul Ribuffo, The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983.
- John L. Spivak, Secret Armies: The New Technique of Nazi Warfare. New York: Modern Age Books, 1939.
- John Werly, The Millenarian Right: William Dudley Pelley and the Silver Legion of America. PhD dissertation. Syracuse University, 1972.
- Glen Yeadon, The Nazi Hydra in America. Joshua Tree, CA: Progressive Press, 2008.
External links
- Photo of a Silver Legion of America meeting in the 1930s:[dead link]
- The Holocaust Chronicle: PROLOGUE: Roots of the Holocaust, page 89
- The American Jewish Committees' archive on the Silver Shirts:
- Atlas Obscura article on Rustic Canyon's Murphy Ranch
Archives
- Silver Shirt Legion of America Washington State Division Records. 1933-1940. 0.37 cubic feet (3 reels microfilm). At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
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- ↑ http://www.ajcarchives.org/AJC_DATA/Files/THR-SS1.PDF "The Silver Shirts: Their History, Founder, and Axtivities". August 24, 1933
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- ↑ It Can't Happen Here
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with dead external links from November 2015
- 1933 establishments in the United States
- Fascism in the United States
- Antisemitism in the United States
- Social history of the United States
- Far-right politics in the United States
- White supremacist groups in the United States
- United States private paramilitary groups
- Organizations established in 1933
- Political parties established in 1933
- American fascist movements