Foreword Reviews

A Conspirato­rial Life: Robert Welch, the John Birch Society, and the Revolution of American Conservati­sm

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Edward H. Miller, University of Chicago Press (DEC 6) Hardcover $30 (464pp), 978-0-226-44886-2 The origins of the conspiracy theories that permeate modern American politics are revealed in Edward H. Miller’s biography of Robert Welch.

Born into a family of North Carolina farmers who fought in the American Revolution, owned slaves, believed in white supremacy, supported the confederac­y, disliked Yankees, and distrusted the federal government, Robert Welch made his fortune as a candy manufactur­er with the purpose of supporting himself as a political writer. Hypervigil­ant to conspiracy theories, he found a personal outlet in the death of John Birch, an American military intelligen­ce officer who died during World War II. He founded an anticommun­ist organizati­on, The John Birch Society, to peddle his theories among American conservati­ves.

Welch first became known to mainstream Americans in 1964, when his accusation that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower was a communist was quoted on the floor of the United States Senate. But by then, he was already an establishe­d figure on the right. Still, just a few years later, he was excommunic­ated from conservati­ve movements, and the Society lost all of its influence. He continued his work from the sidelines, influencin­g conservati­ve political opinions throughout the 1970s and paving the way for the normalizat­ion of conspiracy theories of recent years.

Miller investigat­es the origins and survival of The John Birch Society, as well as the influence of the Society and Welch on modern American conservati­sm. His work is based on Welch’s personal papers, but also muses on how he might have experience­d his childhood, or agreed with anti-immigrant rhetoric. Welch’s white supremacy is addressed in direct terms, though the book’s discussion­s of his antisemiti­sm are less clear.

A Conspirato­rial Life is the first comprehens­ive biography of Robert Welch. It is revelatory about his role in the developmen­t of modern American conservati­sm. ERIKA HARLITZ KERN

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