Thomas Guillaume St. Barbe Baker

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Thomas Guillaume St. Barbe Baker was a pre-War British fascist who had been an officer in World War I as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery and later as a Captain in the Royal Air Force. He was affiliated with many fascist movements, was an independent Nazi speaker, known for his eccentricity and walrus moustache.

He resided at Cat's Corner Tasburgh, Norfolk, and came to the attention of the authorities for his pro-German or anti-semitic speeches that he made from the church pulpit there. (PRO) Agents who attended meetings that were held at the Wigmore Hall the Quaker Hall in Lambs Conduit Street Central London and a private house, 109 Shirland Road W9 [London] revealed Baker to be a potential fifth columnist, extreme in his views. Among others he was an associate of the influential Captain Peter Elwyn Wright (whose portrait hung in the Bier Keller in Munich), Commandant Charles Cole, Arnold Leese, John Beckett MP, Lord Redesdale, George Henry Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, Nora Elam, Commandant Mary Allen, Fay Taylour, and Barry Domvile, a core of ardent Nazis, almost all from affluent backgrounds with strong Establishment connections, whose names all appear in the infamous red book of membership of the Right Club ledger that was seized from the ownership of Archibald Maule Ramsay.

Baker was the brother of Richard St. Barbe Baker, famous for his tree-planting programmes, Men of the Trees. During the DORA fascist round-ups, Thomas went briefly on the run, shaving his distinctive facial hair, but was soon caught and jailed for the duration of the War, being an unrepentant Nazi. During reviews by the internment committee, where internees had a chance to prove their loyalty and secure their release, and which many took advantage of, Baker always gave answers in the positive as to his ideology, which only convinced the panel to keep him locked up.

Among other things he remarked that "I did not like the (Great) War, Sir, not one bit." (PRO papers) He had been buried alive during shelling. Unusually Baker was kept interned until the end of the War until even Japan had been defeated, whereas most internees, including Oswald Mosley, had been released by 1943. Many of the internees had gone on to serve, some with valour, in the armed forces against Nazi Germany.

An officer at the Isle of Man internment camp noted that Baker did not have the light of ideology burning in his eyes and that everything he did was calculated. There was an idea that Baker feigned madness to secure early release. A German psychologist who was interned with Baker remarked, "the man was a fool, with neither brain nor idea. Every morning he would come into my room with tea and toast on a tray, Sieg Heil me and say 'Good News. Doodlebugs over London!' The preference of the internment committee was to try and keep Captain Baker from other internees, as he was perceived as a bad influence.

While interned, Captain Baker befriended one James Larratt Battersby who after the War, penned The Holy Book of Adolf Hitler, a muddled tome which heralded Hitler as a new Christ.[1] Battersby was a tragic young man, wealthy from his family's hat making empire and a regional organiser in the North West in the pre War British Union of Fascists. He had according to fellow internees been mentally tortured in the notorious Ham detention centre.

It could be argued that Baker had his eye on some of Battersby's money to line his own pockets. Baker pleaded for Battersby's release mostly in vain. (PRO documents) The pair joined up briefly after the War and formed a short lived group that espoused the conversion of Jews to Christianity, the Militant Christian Patriots. This small group published a newsletter from the North West which was strongly anti-Semitic and had very little impact on the mainstream right wing. In a high-profile incident Battersby disrupted the Cenotaph memorial at Whitehall in 1950, eventually throwing himself into the wheels of a paddle steamer in Southport in 1951. A note in his pocket ended with "Heil Hitler".

Baker's wife Olive gave birth to a son while he was interned with whom she visited-Baker interpreted a mark on the baby's head as a swastika that signalled the boy was the heir to Hitler. His wife soon became fed up with his deranged behaviour and filed for divorce. After the War, Captain Baker settled in Guernsey and was visited by prominent fascists in the 1950s but took no real active part again in the politics that had robbed him of five years of his life.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Simpson, A.W.B. In the Highest Degree Odious: Detention Without Trial in Wartime Britain. Page 250. Oxford University Press, 1992.