Arthur Kitson Explained

Arthur Kitson (6 April 1859, London – 2 October 1937) was a British monetary theorist and inventor.

Early life

He married Fannie Ernestina Aschenbach in Spring Garden, Philadelphia on 25 March 1886.[1] They had seven children but eventually divorced.[2]

Arthur Kitson knew William Jennings Bryan personally and in Pennsylvania worked for Bryan's U.S. Presidential campaign in 1896.[3]

Career

He was the managing director of the Kitson Empire Lighting Company of Stamford, Lincolnshire and held many patents.

In 1901, he invented the vaporised oil burner. The fuel was vaporised at high pressure and burned to heat the mantle, giving an output of over six times the luminosity of traditional oil lights. This device was later improved by David Hood at Trinity House.

Banking research

Kitson was invited to contribute critical testimony to the Cunliffe Currency Committee in January 1919. In place of oral testimony, he published his criticism at his own expense and furnished copies to every member of the committee.[4] He later formed the Economic Freedom League with Frederick Soddy and was active in this venture through the 1920s.[5]

Later life

He was declared bankrupt in 1925.[6]

Kitson's antisemitism and fascism

Kitson became convinced Jewish bankers were the cause of his bankruptcy and most of the world's miseries. He sent Ezra Pound a copy of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion even before Pound changed from a money radical to a notorious anti-Semite.

Works

Published under pseudonym "A Fellow Pilgrim".

Pamphlets

Articles

Further reading

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wales . Wendy . Arthur Kitson, Cook's Biographer . Captain Cook Society . English.
    Arthur Octavius Kitson (1848–1915?), the biographer of Captain James Cook, married Linda Elizabeth Douglas Leroy in August 1881 in Australia. Web site: Arthur Octavius Kitson - KangaWeb. fretwell.kangaweb.com.au.
  2. Web site: Arthur Kitson-Fannie Ernestina Aschenbach. www.british-genealogy.com.
  3. Book: I Cease Not to Yowl: Ezra Pound's Letters to Olivia Rossetti Agresti. University of Illinois Press. 1998. 13.
  4. A. F. “Concerning the Author and his Work.” In: The Bankers' Conspiracy! Which Started the World Order, by Arthur Kitson. London: Elliot Stock (1933), pp. 7–. Audiobook available.
  5. Scott, John, and Ray Bromley. Envisioning Sociology: Victor Branford, Patrick Geddes, and the Quest for Social Reconstruction. New York: State University of New York Press (January 2, 2014), p. 204. .
  6. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/33409/pages/5296 London Gazette Issue 33409 published on 3 July 1928, page 94
  7. Dietrick, Hellen Battelle. "A Standard of Value" The American Magazine of Civics, Vol. VII, 1895.