- William Guy Carr - Wikipedia
William James Guy Carr (R D [1] Commander R C N (R)) (2 June 1895 – 2 October 1959) was an English-born Canadian naval officer, author and conspiracy theorist
- Meet the Ontario man whose hate-filled conspiracies went . . . - TVO
Carr, born in 1895 in Lancashire, England, served as a navigating officer on a submarine during the First World War He claimed to have become acquainted with Bolshevik conspiracies at age 12, when “two revolutionary missionaries” unsuccessfully attempted to indoctrinate him into the cause
- Satan: Prince Of This World : William Guy Carr - Archive. org
A review of the world revolutionary movement Published posthumously in 1966 from William Guy Carr's preliminary manuscript
- Heritage History | Pawns in the Game by William Guy Carr
Commander Carr has had a distinguished naval career During World War One he served as Navigating Officer of H M Submarines In World War Two he was Naval Control Officer for the St Lawrence; then Staff Officer Operations at Shelbourne, N then Senior Naval Officer at Goose Bay, Labrador
- Commander William Guy Carr (1895-1959) - Find a Grave
In the 1950s, he was the leader of the anticommunist National Federation of Christian Laymen of Toronto, Ontario He was also one of the presidents of the Naval Club of Toronto Born in Formby (Lancashire, England), Carr was educated in Scotland and went to sea at the age of 14 Carr died in Ontario in circumstances that are still mysterious
- Pawns in the Game, FBI Edition: Carr, William Guy: 9781939438034 . . .
It is the story of how different groups or atheistic- materialistic men have played in an international chess tournament to decide which group would win ultimate control of the wealth, natural resources, and man- power of the entire world It is explained how the game has reached the final stage
- Biography of William Guy Carr
Read the full biography of William Guy Carr, including facts, birthday, life story, profession, family and more
- William Guy Carr (Author of أحجار على رقعة الشطرنج)
Though his accounts of wartime naval experiences found a general audience, he is best remembered today as a conspiracy theorist, "the most influential source in creating the American Illuminati demonology", according to the American folklorist Bill Ellis
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