Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Author helped boost conservati­ve movement

JOHN A. STORMER | Died July 10, 2018

- By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK — John A. Stormer was a religious leader and right-wing activist whose self-published Cold War tract “None Dare Call It Treason” became a grass-roots sensation in 1964 and a rallying point for the emerging conservati­ve movement.

Mr. Stormer died July 10 at age 90 after an unspecifie­d yearlong illness, according to an obituary on the website of McCoy-Blossom Funeral Home in Troy, Mo.

A native of Pennsylvan­ia who moved to Missouri in his 20s, Mr. Stormer was chair of the state’s Federation of Young Republican­s when through his own Liberty Bell Press he released “None Dare Call It Treason.” He warned that the U.S. was losing to the Soviet Union and was menaced by a “communist-socialist conspiracy to enslave America.”

“Recognize that those who refuse to work politicall­y to protect their freedom may someday face a choice between fighting with guns or becoming slaves,” he wrote.

Initially ignored by the mainstream press, “None Dare Call It Treason” was a word of mouth success believed to have sold at least 1 million copies in its first year, some of those sales generated by millionair­es who purchased copies in bulk and distribute­d them. Along with Phyllis Schlafly’s “A Choice Not An Echo,” it was among a handful of best-sellers that coincided with conservati­ve Republican Barry Goldwater’s campaign for the 1964 presidenti­al election, for which Mr. Stormer served as a party convention delegate. Mr. Goldwater was easily defeated by the Democratic incumbent, Lyndon Johnson, but the success of Mr. Stormer’s and other books signaled a thriving political network that became increasing­ly powerful over the following decades.

“At rallies they were handed out like party favors,” Rick Perlstein wrote of the conservati­ve books in his -history “Before the Storm,” published in 2001. “In some areas copies disappeare­d from bookstore shelves as fast as murder mysteries.”

“None Dare Call It Treason” alarmed some readers enough to contact the FBI and ask whether a communist takeover was indeed imminent. The bureau’s standard reply was to decline comment, while an internal review noted that Mr. Stormer was a member of the far-right John Birch Society and that “None Dare Call It Treason” was “extreme” in some ways.

“He has interprete­d many of the facets of the American scene both domestical­ly and externally along the lines of a sincere conservati­ve,” according to the report.

In 1965, Mr. Stormer had a religious reawakenin­g. He eventually became pastor of the Heritage Baptist Church in Florissant, Mo., and president of the Missouri Associatio­n of Christian Schools. He wrote updates to “None Dare Call It Treason” and completed other works that alleged the country was threatened by its own institutio­ns, including “None Dare Call It Education” and “Betrayed By the Bench,” about the judicial system. For years, he ran weekly Bible study sessions for Missouri state legislator­s.

He was born in Altoona, Pa., attended Penn State and San Jose State University and served as an editor and historian in the Air Force during the Korean War. He would recall growing increasing­ly frustrated with mainstream politician­s and by the early 1960s leaving his job as an electronic­s magazine editor to “to begin an intensive study of communism.”

“A program for victory over communism cannot be achieved until Americans elect a President and a Congress with the will to win and the courage to ‘cleanse’ the policy-making agencies of communist influence,” he advised readers in 1964. “To accomplish this, conservati­ve Americans must make their voices heard in the political parties.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States