The recent death of Justice Anton Scalia raised a lot of eyebrows when it came to light that he'd spent his final hours in the company of high-ranking members of the Order of St. Hubertus (IOSH). An elite hunting club with aristocratic origins and a 200-year gap in it's online timeline? Nothing worth pursuing there! Not even when the sparse details they do provide offer the fact that the American branch was founded at the Bohemian Club in 1968? Pretty nifty: Bohemian Grove/Wood! What an anonymous name. Almost like a pseudonym calculated to be the most bland and innocuous moniker possible. It's also kind of an occupational name, for what are hunters but woodsmen? We've already seen that the original military "jäger" units were made up of hunters, trappers and other assorted woodsmen, exactly the kind of fellows that administered the lands of the aristocrats that made up the IOSH.
Scalia's host on the fateful weekend he died was a fellow named John Poindexter. In an email to the WaPo, P-dex wrote: “I am aware of no connection between that organization [IOSH] and Justice Scalia.”
Well, he should know, he's kind of a Grand Wazoo in the Order. So surely Austrian magazine Kurier is wrong when they outed Scalia as a member. Terry Melanson, who recommended our earlier articles on Conspiracy Archive, is the only person, at least when I first accessed his article a few days ago, to have relayed this news to the English-speaking world. Melanson links to the Kurier article, but I'd have you go to it via his article, because it has a lot of details you won't find anywhere else, above and beyond every article I've read on the subject. Melanson actually does research, not simply re-hash what other people have written
At the end of my last post I asked the world "Who da fug is George Wood? Answer: I still don't know.
We know a George Wood founded the American branch of the Order in 1968 at the Bohemian Club. When the order was "restituted" in 1950, non-Germans invited to join included Halvor O. Ekern, chief political adviser of the US Armed Forces in Austria; Llewellyn
E. Thompson, the American Ambassador, General Mark W. Clark, Commanding
General of the Allied Forces in Austria; British Ambassador
Baron Harold Caccia and "others". And also, named but with no title given, George Wood.
George Wood became the Order's Grand Master in 1975.
That word restituted went in quotes in my earlier article because it sounded so strange. But I discovered that
'Restitution', or 'rehabilitation' is the process where Germany today seeks to recognise the efforts of individuals as patriotic to Germany, though who had not been seen as such previously.
That quote comes from a page for a movie about a man restituted in 2004, a German diplomat/spy for America named Fritz Kolbe. Or, as his OSS handler Allen Dulles (later head of the CIA and member of the Warren Commission) had dubbed him in WW2, George Wood!
Let's take a quick look at Wood's fellow inductees: IOSH Class of '50.
"Col. [Halvor] Ekern worked as a trapper, logger and dam-construction foreman before graduating from the University of Montana in 1941 with a degree in forestry." There's those woods again.
....He then was transferred to the 87th Mountain Infantry Regiment, where he served for the duration of World War II and assisted in organizing the ski troops of the 10th Mountain Division [like French chasseurs or German jägers]....After the war, he transferred from the mountain division to the headquarters of the U.S. Forces in Austria, where he was assigned as the quadripartite adviser to the commanding general and U.S. high commissioner....In 1947, Col. Ekern served on the delegation of Secretary of State George Marshall to the Council of Foreign Ministers....He joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1950, remaining at the U.S. Embassy in Austria as a quadripartite director. He was a member of the U.S. delegation to the Austrian Treaty negotiations in 1955....From 1956 to 1959, Col. Ekern served in the Office of the Special Assistant to the Secretary of State for Atomic Energy Affairs in the State Department....He graduated from the State Department’s Senior Seminar on Foreign Policy in 1964 and served in the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research from 1964 to 1967....Ekern served as a political adviser to the commander in chief of U.S. Army Europe from 1969 to 1973 and was a member of the U.S. delegation to the NATO/Warsaw Pact negotiations on mutual and balanced force reductions in Vienna, Austria, from 1973 to 1974....After retiring from government work, Col. Ekern worked as an editor, writer and publisher, as well as in the security field. He also was president of the Arlington County Taxpayers Association and was chairman of the Arlington County Republican Committee....(snip snip)
"Col. [Halvor] Ekern worked as a trapper, logger and dam-construction foreman before graduating from the University of Montana in 1941 with a degree in forestry." There's those woods again.
....He then was transferred to the 87th Mountain Infantry Regiment, where he served for the duration of World War II and assisted in organizing the ski troops of the 10th Mountain Division [like French chasseurs or German jägers]....After the war, he transferred from the mountain division to the headquarters of the U.S. Forces in Austria, where he was assigned as the quadripartite adviser to the commanding general and U.S. high commissioner....In 1947, Col. Ekern served on the delegation of Secretary of State George Marshall to the Council of Foreign Ministers....He joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1950, remaining at the U.S. Embassy in Austria as a quadripartite director. He was a member of the U.S. delegation to the Austrian Treaty negotiations in 1955....From 1956 to 1959, Col. Ekern served in the Office of the Special Assistant to the Secretary of State for Atomic Energy Affairs in the State Department....He graduated from the State Department’s Senior Seminar on Foreign Policy in 1964 and served in the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research from 1964 to 1967....Ekern served as a political adviser to the commander in chief of U.S. Army Europe from 1969 to 1973 and was a member of the U.S. delegation to the NATO/Warsaw Pact negotiations on mutual and balanced force reductions in Vienna, Austria, from 1973 to 1974....After retiring from government work, Col. Ekern worked as an editor, writer and publisher, as well as in the security field. He also was president of the Arlington County Taxpayers Association and was chairman of the Arlington County Republican Committee....(snip snip)
Llewellyn E. Thompson |
Llewellyn
E. Thompson was the U.S. Ambassador to Austria from 1955–1957 and to Soviet
Union from 1957 to 1962 and again between 1967 and 1969. He held a
number of other positions throughout his U.S. foreign service career,
including being the pivotal participant in the formulation of Johnson administration nuclear weapon non-proliferation policy. He also testified before the Warren Commission, which was investigating the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Hmmm. Nuclear energy again. And what did he testify about before the Warren Commission? Well, he was ambassador to Russia at the time Oswald presented himself at the embassy to renounce his citizenship. Thompson had been out of town at that time. Part of his testimony was to explain how cases like that are usually treated, partially to clarify the events around Oswald's renunciation.
Gen. Mark W. Clark was a controversial general who on more than one occasion during WW2 was accused of bad planning and bad decisions. But he kept getting promoted.
Gen. Clark |
So, like our previous fellows, this was more than a soldier, but a diplomat with a little intelligence work under his belt (secretly negotiating with pro-Allied Vichy officers in North Africa, for example). Like Eckert he was at the Council of Foreign Ministers negotiations in 1947. Though he later withdrew after protests, Truman nominated him to be the United States emissary to the Holy See. Hmmm. Ambassador the the Vatican, eh? Interesting he ended his days in San Francisco. Could he have encountered the Bohemian Club while there?
Baron Caccia |
Caccia was knighted in 1950, the same year he was asked to join the IOSH. He was created a life peer in 1965. His other knightly titles include being a Bailiff Grand Cross of the Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order and a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George.
So, these guys all were well-connected with ties to the diplomatic and intelligence communities. All of this is pretty logical actually; the aristocracy, the Church and the Anglo-American alliance. What strikes me, as I said in a previous post, is the following:
At the end of the World War surviving members of the Order, were authorized by Halvor O. Ekern, chief political adviser of the US Armed Forces in Austria to use their sporting guns to provide winter food to the rural population, avoiding not only famine but helping to save the country from falling behind the Iron Curtain.
I would posit that this is a not so indirect reference to being armed by the US in order fight the Communists, if necessary. I can imagine the IOSH being part of a network of clubs and groups both secular and religious that could have been used to further the goals of the Western Occupation forces, to keep the Soviets in check.
So how does spy Fritz Kolbe, aka George Wood, fit into all this? Kolbe was no small fry; he is basically recognized as the US's most important intelligence asset of the war. He was more than likely connected to the others in the diplomatic/intelligence community.
That said, this George Wood is not the droid we're looking for. Kolbe/Wood died in 1971. But according to the IOSH, when the first Grand Master Albert Messany of the American branch retired in 1975, he was replaced by....George Wood.
Messany was described as a "big game hunter" in the Spartanburg Herald-Journal in 1936 in an admiring article (24 Nov. 1936) about an innovative camera-gun with which he intended to "hunt" in Canada. This humane approach to tacking game gives credence to the Order's stated ideals of honoring God's creatures etc. The Montreal Gazette (24 Jun. 1936) tells us that Messany is from Vienna and that this was his 10th visit to Canada. The Wilkes-Barre Times Leader (20 Nov. 1936) has a little blurb about Messany's trip and the camera gun, but little detail. The Indianapolis Star also mentions the photo gun in pretty much the same blurb as in Wilkes-Barre -- turns out it was an AP story. Messany was apparently a doctor, but most sources about him are in German, so I'm not sure what to make of him. He published several books about hunting, Canada and the great outdoors. There is a reference to an Albert Messany issuing a
German wireless press message, to the effect that 2,000 soldiers, who were not invalids, had been carried by the hospital ship Britannia.
If it's the same Messany, it's hard to say. It's definitely possible, depending on how old he was when he retired. Wood was followed by Karl Weber as GM. Whereas info on Messany (in English, anyway) is sparse, info on Karl Weber and George Wood is almost non-existent.
Fritz Kolbe |
To paraphrase Wikipedia, Kolbe tried to settle in the US in 1949 but "could not find suitable work." He later applied to work for the German diplomatic services again (unsuccessfully) and finally found work representing of an American power-saw manufacturer. After the war, Kolbe was despised in Germany and seen as a traitor until restituted in 2004. Kolbe died of cancer in 1971. Not exactly given a cushy job for life and flying high with the aristocratic hunting set.
We'll see if anything more turns up; so far the record is silent. The IOSH-USA does have an email address. Maybe I should write them and ask. I did paste the addy into an email, but pulled back. Kind of want to stay out of their sights! (Update: I wrote and asked for info about Wood on Terry's advice. Update 29 Dec: I eventually wrote to two addresses. Never got a response.)
So again, who's George Wood? Why was he asked the join the Order, along with ambassadors and generals? I've actually managed to find quite a few George Woods, but there's always some detail to disqualify them. Hmph.
So again, who's George Wood? Why was he asked the join the Order, along with ambassadors and generals? I've actually managed to find quite a few George Woods, but there's always some detail to disqualify them. Hmph.
I briefly looked into George Wood too and immediately found references to Dulles's 'nom de guerre" for Kolbe. Not sure what to make of it either. Some of what the Order is hinting at may be a reference to involvement with the initial Stay Behind units. They know the woods better than anyone and if you want to bury a cache of arms in a secluded spot those are the sorts of people you may depend on to keep an eye on it.
ReplyDeleteI would recommend emailing them. I email everyone, from the Bilderberg group themselves to professors, historians and recently a scientist who worked for IARPA on quantum computers. It is rare that you are ignored, though responses are usually brief.
Done. I wrote a brief email asking about Wood.
DeleteI'm certain they were involved in something like the Stay Behind units. A group of wealthy anti-Nazi and anti-Bolshevik woodsmen would have been an invaluable resource.
I tried two email addresses and didn't get a response. Perhaps they're publicity shy in the wake of a million and one websites going on about Scalia's connection to the Order. Maybe they saw my articles and didn't like them. Anyway, no luck. Perhaps you could give it a shot....
DeleteWell Terry, I haven't rec'd a response to my email. It just occurred to me they have more than one website, so I should try another address. I'll keep you posted. Maybe they checked me out and decided they didn't want to help me.
ReplyDeleteTerry, I queried Chat GPT and got this:
DeleteAs I mentioned earlier, George Wood did serve as the Grand Master of the International Order of St. Hubertus in 1975.
Based on my research, it appears that George Wood was a wealthy businessman and avid hunter who was based in Midland, Texas. He was involved in the oil and gas industry and was the president of a company called Wood Oil Company.
Wood became involved with the International Order of St. Hubertus in the 1960s and was known for his passion for hunting and wildlife conservation. He was elected as the organization's Grand Master in 1975, and during his tenure, he worked to promote ethical hunting practices and wildlife conservation.
After serving as Grand Master, Wood remained involved with the International Order of St. Hubertus and continued to support its efforts to promote hunting and conservation. He passed away in 1994 at the age of 85.
It is worth noting that the International Order of St. Hubertus is a private organization, and as such, information about its members and leaders is not widely available to the public. Therefore, my understanding of George Wood's involvement in the organization is limited to the information that is publicly available.