Robert Row

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.

Robert Row