John Graeme Wood - Career

Career

Wood was a member of Sir Oswald Mosley's Union Movement and became a Branch Leader. As well as being a member of UM he was also recognised as a personal friend and confidant of Mosley and remained in the UM until 1964, when he joined the British National Party. Remaining with the BNP, Wood became a founding member of the British National Front when it was formed in 1967.

Wood left the British far right not long after this as work commitments took him to the Federal Republic of Germany. While there, he established links with the National Democratic Party.

After returning to Britain, Wood linked up with Eddy Morrison in Leeds and followed him into the New National Front. In April 1982 at the Charing Cross Hotel in London, Wood was present at the launch of the (third) British National Party. John Tyndall and a few others, including Charles Parker, Tyndall's father-in-Law, wanted the new party to be called the National Party but Wood, under pressure from a great majority of northern nationalists in Leeds and Manchester, persuaded Tyndall to adopt the name of the BNP.

Wood remained with the BNP until 1990, when he resigned from the party due to personality clashes with some moderate senior officers. He continued to appear as a guest speaker at party events, fulfilling a similar function for the NF and other groups, without formally participating in any group.

When the White Nationalist Party was formed in 2002, Wood was offered the position of propaganda and Training Officer, which he accepted. Later, in 2003, he led the party as National Organiser. He was still in that position when, on June 6, 2005, the WNP dissolved at a meeting of its National Council in Sheffield and the whole membership was merged into the Nationalist Alliance. Wood retained the position of National Organiser in the new merger and remained there until September 2005 when, due to irreparable differences with fellow members of the National Executive Council, he resigned along with other senior officers, Eddy Morrison, Kevin Watmough and Sid Williamson. Immediately following his resignation from the NA, the leading figures who had resigned with him created a new party, the British Peoples Party. Wood became Chairman of the BPP with Morrison as National Organiser.

After internal disagreements, Wood was expelled from the BPP and he decided to distance himself from fringe politics.

From then and until his death, Wood enjoyed a semi-retirement from nationalist politics.

In 2006 he applied to rejoin the BNP, but his application was turned down by the BNP's leadership. Despite this, Wood maintained good relations with his local BNP branch in Sheffield and provided the branch with both advice and financial support in the run up to the UK's 2007 local elections.

During the last two years of his life Wood wrote a blog, which he documented his family life and his times with his mistress, Iris. http://www.lingerawhile.blogspot.co.uk/search?updated-min=2005-01-01T00:00:00Z&updated-max=2006-01-01T00:00:00Z&max-results=1

Far right in the United Kingdom
Pre-1945 political parties
and groups
  • British Brothers League
  • British Fascists
  • British People's Party
  • British Union of Fascists
  • The Britons
  • Britons Publishing Society
  • English National Association
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Defunct post-1945 political
parties and groups
  • British Democratic Party
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Active political parties
and groups
  • Blood and Honour
  • British Freedom Party
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  • England First Party
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  • League of Saint George
  • National Front
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  • Racial Volunteer Force
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  • Stop Islamisation of Europe
Pre-1945 people
  • Mary Sophia Allen
  • John Amery
  • A.F.X. Baron
  • Henry Hamilton Beamish
  • John Beckett MP
  • Hastings Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford
  • Noel Pemberton Billing MP
  • Brigadier-General R.B.D. Blakeney
  • A. K. Chesterton MC
  • Dr John Henry Clarke
  • Thomas Haller Cooper
  • Roy Courlander
  • Admiral Sir Barry Domville
  • Josslyn Hay, 22nd Earl of Erroll
  • Major Sir William Evans-Gordon MP
  • Robert Forgan MP
  • Sir Harold Elsdale Goad
  • Sir Reginald Goodall
  • Captain Robert Gordon-Canning MC
  • Group Captain Sir Louis Leisler Greig
  • Neil Francis Hawkins
  • Major-General J.F.C. Fuller
  • William Joyce
  • Arnold Leese
  • Rotha Lintorn-Orman
  • Frank McLardy
  • The Hon. Diana Mitford, Lady Mosley
  • The Hon. Unity Mitford
  • Lady Cynthia Mosley
  • Sir Oswald Mosley
  • Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth
  • David Bertram Ogilvy Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale
  • Sir Alliott Verdon Roe
  • Alexander Raven Thomson
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Graham Seton Hutchison
  • Nesta H. Webster
  • Arthur Wellesley, 5th Duke of Wellington
  • Henry Williamson
  • Brigadier-General Sir Ormaonde de L'Epee Winter
Post-1945 people
  • Ian Anderson
  • Richard Barnbrook
  • Derek Beackon
  • John Bean
  • Jane, Lady Birdwood
  • Eddy Butler
  • Jonathan Bowden
  • Andrew Brons MEP
  • A.K. Chesterton
  • Mark Collett
  • David Copeland
  • Mark Cotterill
  • Nicky Crane
  • Simon Darby
  • Sharon Ebanks
  • Richard Edmonds
  • Lieutenant Commander Andrew Fountaine
  • Nick Griffin MEP
  • Jeffrey Hamm
  • Anthony Hancock
  • Patrick Harrington
  • Ray Hill
  • Derek Holland
  • Tom Holmes
  • Colin Jordan
  • Arthur Kemp
  • John Kingsley Read
  • Richard Lawson
  • Tony Lecomber
  • Michael McLaughlin
  • Eddy Morrison
  • John Morse
  • David Myatt
  • John O'Brien
  • Roy Painter
  • Denis Pirie
  • Kevin Quinn
  • Anthony Reed Herbert
  • Robert Relf
  • Simon Sheppard
  • Ian Stuart Donaldson
  • Keith Thompson
  • John Tyndall
  • Richard Verrall
  • Martin Webster
  • Martin Wingfield
  • John Graeme Wood
Related articles
  • Anglo-German Fellowship
  • Battle of Cable Street
  • Candour (magazine)
  • British National Party election results
  • Europe a Nation
  • List of British fascist parties
  • National Democrats election results
  • National Front election results
  • Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies
  • Political Soldier
  • Spearhead
  • History of British fascism since 1945
Persondata
Name Wood, John Graeme
Alternative names
Short description British politician
Date of birth 1933
Place of birth
Date of death 22 November 2007
Place of death

Read more about this topic:  John Graeme Wood

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