Description
The Barnes Review, March/April 2009: Corrupt Secret Associates Of Benedict Arnold
VOLUME XV, NUMBER 2
Table of Contents
CORRUPT ASSOCIATES OF BENEDICT ARNOLD
By Henry Ford. Even before Benedict Arnold turned his coat and joined forces with British spies, other forces were working to corrupt the great general. Henry Ford, the celebrated industrialist, first told this story in his newspaper, The Dearborn Independent, but it fell into the memory hole…
ARNOLD’S LETTER TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
Benedict Arnold. Few are aware of the fact that the most famous traitor in early American history wrote an open letter to the inhabitants of America in which he explains why he betrayed them and seeks to justify his behavior. We constantly hear that he was simply no good. It is interesting, for once, to see things from “the other side,” even if we still feel he should have been hanged like his confederate, Maj. John Andre…
BENEDICT ARNOLD: HIS RECORD CLARIFIED
The Barnes Review Staff. To give the devil his due: As a daring military leader, Arnold made vast contributions to the founding of the United States. He distinguished himself again and again, as when it became necessary to invade Canada, and “Admiral” Arnold built a whole fleet from scratch to defend Lake Champlain against the British armada…
REVISITING THE WAXHAW MASSACRE
By John Tiffany. Accounts differ as to what triggered the incident, but British-led troops (mostly American Tories) at Waxhaw, Carolina proceeded to murder U.S. POWs—mostly unarmed Virginians—in this little-remembered massacre of 1780. They say 113 were killed in cold blood that day, but perhaps another 150 were wounded, most of whom died in the next few days…
BANASTRE TARLETON: WAR CRIMINAL?
By Paul T. Angel. He was the most hated officer in the British army during the American War to Secede from the British Empire. His cruel treatment of prisoners and wounded colonials is legendary. But did he deserve his reputation?…
YES, WASHINGTON WAS AN AMERICAN
By Dr. Henry Van Dyke. His was a life well worth living, the honest life, the useful life, the unselfish life, cleansed by devotion to his ideals. George Washington battled for justice, real liberty and equality. But was he really British, or American?…
HEROS VON BORCKE: PRUSSIAN REBEL
By Willis A. Carto. His first name was Heros, and he really was a hero. He came from Germany, eager to help the Southern States in their struggle for freedom…
NEW BOOK SAYS USSR IN ON PATTON PLOT
Paul T. Angel. It has long been rumored, but now a new book confirms that the mysterious death of Gen. George Patton was no fluke, and William Donovan, director of the OSS, precursor of the CIA, set up the killing. And that the Soviet Union may have finished what Donovan could not…
DEMONIZING AN HONEST HISTORIAN
By Daniel W. Michaels. World War II was unnecessary. David Hoggan, a Revisionist historian, explained why in his works. Result: The powers-that-be resolved to destroy his life…
MY 50 DAYS IN THE GAOL
By Dr. Fredrick Töben. First he had 40 days in Teheran at the international holocaust conference, and that was all right, but then he had 50 days in a British jail, and that was none too enjoyable for this famous Revisionist historian…
AN INTERVIEW WITH SYLVIA STOLZ
Gerard Menuhin. The author, an anti-Zionist Jew (and son of the famous musician), seeks to bring the world the truth about Sylvia Stolz, an attorney whose only crime was that she forcefully defended her client in today’s Germany…
HITLER’S SECRET HEADQUARTERS: PART I
By Carolyn Yeager & Wilhelm Mann. This issue we bring TBR readers the inside scoop on Hitler’s activities within his secret headquarters, as first told exclusively in the German language by a close associate of the Fuehrer, Hermann Giesler…
VENGEANCE AS A COUNSELOR
By joaquin Bochaca Esq.Winston Churchill said, “Nothing is more costly, nothing is more sterile than vengeance.” He and the Allies in general should have taken his advice, or should have listened to the Chinese proverb: “He who seeks vengeance must dig two graves: one for his enemy and one for himself.”…
8.5″×11″, saddle stitched, 72 pp., b/w illustrations