George W. Armstrong

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George Washington Armstrong also known as Judge Armstrong (January 26, 1866October 1, 1954) of Fort Worth, Texas, and Natchez, Mississippi was a southern millionaire who founded the Judge Armstrong Foundation in 1945. Armstrong was the son of an Methodist minister and was of Scots-Irish background.

He wrote several books and pamphlets on Zionism and Jewish financial manipulators on Wall Street some of which he disseminated thru his foundation.

In 1949 Armstrong grew into national prominence when he offered a gift of oil rights worth up to fifty million dollars to the Jefferson Military College in Natchez, Mississippi with the stipulation they reject the admission of Negros and Jews and teach the tenants of White supremacy. Due to national publicity and outrage the college had to reject the offer.[1]

George Armstrong had been an organizer for the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s. In 1932 he unsuccessfully ran for Governor of Texas.

In the late 1940s Armstrong hired General George Van Horn Moseley to help in his publishing efforts.

In the 1950s Judge Armstrong was a financial backer of Conde McGinley and his paper Common Sense.[2]

Works

  • Truth
  • The Crime of '20: The Unpardonable Sin of "Frenzied Finance" (1922) 267 pages Text
  • The Story of the Dynasty of the Money Trust in America (1923)
  • A State Currency System: To Hell with Wall Street (1932) 84 pages
  • Reign of the Elders (1938)
  • Rothschild Money Trust (1940) 229 pages
  • The March of Bolshevism (1945) 100 pages
  • World Empire (1947) 131 pages
  • Supplement to Communist World Empire (1948)
  • Traitors (1948) 18 pages
  • Money and The Tariff (1949)
  • Zionist Wall Street (1949) 93 pages
  • Our Constitution (1950)
  • The Truth About My Alleged $50,000,000 Donation (1950)
  • The Zionists (1950) 134 pages
  • Third Zionist War (1951) 70 pages, Singerman 828
  • Memoirs (1958) 414 pages

Notes

  1. Fight Against Fear: Southern Jews and Black Civil Rights, By Clive Webb, page 51
  2. FBI files]

See also

External link