After the war, he wrote and edited British fascist publications and remained a believer in Mosley until his death.
In 1998, he recalled a succession of low-paid jobs and an environment of boarded-up shops in his local high street during his youth: "The times were desperate and after more of the same I joined the Blackshirts in 1934" (the BUF).
[3] In Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, Row saw policies that would put Britain first and "banish the slump".
[3] He became highly active in the movement, but with the outbreak of the Second World War, he was detained by the British government under the newly introduced Defence Regulation 18B.
[7] All six were arrested and later fined (one aged 16 was bound over) at the Old Bailey after pleading guilty to assault and causing damage to property.
Row remained a committed fascist until his death and continued to contribute to publications of the offshoots of the BUF until the end, such as Comrade, newsletter of the Friends of Oswald Mosley.