Foreword
There exists such an extensive body of literature on the Great Revolution,
including the memoirs of virtually every one of its leading figures who survived into the
New Era, that yet another book dealing with the events and circumstances of that time of
cataclysmic upheaval and rebirth may seem superfluous. The Turner Diaries, however,
provides an insight into the background of the Great Revolution which is uniquely valuable
for two reasons:
1) It is a fairly detailed and continuous record of a portion of the struggle
during the years immediately before the culmination of the Revolution, written as it
happened, on a day-to-day basis. Thus, it is free of the distortion which often afflicts
hindsight. Although the diaries of other participants in that mighty conflict are extant,
none which has yet been published provides as complete and detailed a record.
2) It is written from the viewpoint of a rank-and-file member of the
Organization, and, although it consequently suffers from myopia occasionally, it is a
totally frank document. Unlike the accounts recorded by some of the leaders of the
Revolution, its author did not have one eye on his place in history as he wrote. As we
read the pages which follow, we get a better understanding than from any other source,
probably, of the true thoughts and feelings of the men and women whose struggle and
sacrifice saved our race in its time of greatest peril and brought about the New Era.
Earl Turner, who wrote these diaries, was born in 43 BNE in Los Angeles, which
was the name of a vast metropolitan area on the west coast of the North American continent
in the Old Era, encompassing the present communities of Eckartsville and Wesselton as well
as a great deal of the surrounding countryside. He grew up in the Los Angeles area and was
trained as an electrical engineer.
After his education he settled near the city of Washington, which was then the
capital of the United States. He was employed there by an electronics research firm.
He first became active in the Organization in 12 BNE. When this record begins, in 8 BNE
(1991 according to the old chronology), Turner was 35 years old and had no mate.
These diaries span barely two years in Earl Turner's life, yet they give us an
intimate acquaintance with one of those whose name is inscribed in the Record of Martyrs.
For that reason alone his words should have a special significance for all of us, who in
our school days were given the task of memorizing the names of all the Martyrs in that
sacred Record handed down to us by our ancestors.
Turner's diaries consist, in their manuscript form, of five large, cloth-bound
ledgers, completely filled, and a few pages at the beginning of a sixth. There are many
loose inserts and notes between the ledger pages, apparently written by Turner on those
days when he was away from his base and later interpolated into his permanent record.
The ledgers were discovered last year along with a wealth of other
historically important material by the same team from the Historical Institute, led by
Professor Charles Anderson, which earlier uncovered the Eastern Command Center of the
Revolution in its excavations near the Washington ruins. It is fitting that they now be
made available to the general public during this, the 100th anniversary year of the Great
Revolution.
A.M.
New Baltimore
April 100