Defending the Defender: Gerald Winrod and the Great Sedition Trial

Authors

  • Seth Bate Wichita State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62704/1nfs0e33

Keywords:

Alien Registration Act of 1940, Antisemitism, fundamentalist Christianity, Great Sedition Trial, Midwest, Wichita. Kansas

Abstract

The Rev. Dr. Gerald B. Winrod, an evangelist based in Wichita, Kansas, viewed himself and his followers as defenders. He came to call his media and ministry organization the Defenders of the Faith and its flagship magazine, The Defender. From Winrod's view, the Defenders provided a moral bulwark against Darwinists, saloon keepers, women who wore revealing clothes, Catholics,sometimes, Jews, and especially Communists. At times, Winrod used very thin evidence to apply these labels to those he viewed as threats to American morality. For example, Winrod widely promoted his assertion that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was both a Jew and a Communist.1

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Published

2018-05-16

Issue

Section

Articles