Who Was Eustace Mullins?
Eustace Mullins (March 9, 1923 – February 2, 2010) was an American political writer,
author and biographer. From 2005, he was a member of the Southeast Bureau editorial
staff of Willis Carto's American Free Press and a contributing editor to the Barnes
Review.
He died at noon on February 2, 2010 at the home of Jesse Lee, Eustace's manager, in
Texas.
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The Fine Legacy of Eustace Mullins
In business, the author Eustace Mullins was an economist, and he worked in public relations.
He’s listed in Wikipedia. Senator McCarthy asked him to look into who was financing the
Communist party. He was a veteran of the United States Air Force, and was in active duty
during WWII. He was educated at Washington Lee University, New York University, The
Escuela Arts, Washington, DC. He’s written quite a few books. He was a member of the staff
of the Library of Congress.
He has appeared on radio and TV interviews, and they have been recorded on the Internet’s
YOU TUBE.
Prominent people said he was the greatest political historian of the 20th century. His
meticulous research revealed more political secrets of government corruption than anyone
else.
Mullins’s rise to notoriety began with his discovery of the political railroading and
imprisonment without conviction in 1946 of America’s most famous poet of the age, Ezra
Pound. Pound had become an outspoken anti-war critic, made several broadcasts from Italy,
which FDR deemed “treasonous,” and spent 12 years as “the sanest person” incarcerated at
St. Elizabeth’s Hospital for the mentally ill in Washington, D.C. He had been held without trial.
Following his release in 1958, Pound said that the pamphlets and books written by
Mullins during those years on Pound’s plight were the most influential in gaining his
freedom. This meant a great deal coming from Pound who, after first educating his
young protoge on the subject, actually commissioned Mullins to write the first
critical work on the Federal Reserve.