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TBR 1999

A JOURNAL OF NATIONALIST THOUGHT & HISTORY

Archives & Back Issues 1999

We are proud to offer our print magazine The Barnes Review online in our Archive. Most of the back issues can still be purchased as hard copies. Some of the older issues are sold out, but we are working on getting them online as free PDF downloads.

Prices vary from issue to issue. In case you buy more than two copies of one or several issues, we give a discount of 20% on the total. The discount will be calculated and listed during the checkout procedure.

All six 1999 issues are 8.5"×11", saddle stitched, ca. 80 pp., printed in 2 colors throughout.

In order to go to our The Barnes Review subscription page, please click here.

In additon, we also offer:

  • Bound volumes of The Barnes Review, available for most years. All issues published during one year are contained in a sturdy vinyl, library-style binder. Uncirculated, pristine issues are used, a great gift for family and friends as well as being a wonderful addition to your own historic library. Shipping cost for the U.S. is included in the price of $99 each. Shipping cost to Canada is $20, all other countries $30 per bound volume
  • Empty Binders are available for all years, starting with October 1994/1995. The price is $25, including shipping in the U.S. Shipping cost to Canada is $11, all other countries $22.
To order bound volumes or empty binders, please click here, call us at 877-773-9077, or contact us via our contact page.





Product Image Product Name↓ Price
The Barnes Review, January/February 1999: The Puzzling Origins of Ancient Sumer

The Barnes Review, January/February 1999: The Puzzling Origins of Ancient Sumer

The Puzzling Origins Of Ancient Sumer By Vera Stark Although they had vanished and been completely forgotten even by the time of the ancient Greeks and Romans, the Sumerians were a great civilization who must be credited with many “firsts.” Is There A Negro Race? By Thomas Athol Joyce A scholar from the past dispassionately helps to define racial terms, once commonplace, but now “taboo.” A Short History Of The Peoples Of Africa By Robert E. Kuttner Euphoric myths must...


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The Barnes Review, March/April 1999: Huey Long's Plan to 'Share Our Wealth'

The Barnes Review, March/April 1999: Huey Long's Plan to 'Share Our Wealth'

Huey Long’s Plan To ‘Share Our Wealth’ By Huey P. Long Before he was assassinated, the great populist known as “the Kingfish” laid out his drastic plan to put the multibillion-dollar bankrolls of the super-rich into the service of the American people… The Old World Tradition Of ‘Nobility’ By Anthony L. Hargis Our children may enjoy fanciful fairy tales about beautiful princesses and knights in shining armor, but the Founding Fathers of America...


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The Barnes Review, May/June 1999: Who Were the Original Native Americans?

The Barnes Review, May/June 1999: Who Were the Original Native Americans?

Who Were The Original Native Americans? By John Nugent Is America a “white man’s country” or a “red man’s country”? Who was here first? Surprisingly, the several oldest racially identifiable relics of human presence in the Americas, including the controversial “Kennewick Man,” strongly suggest a Caucasoid presence… Britain: World History’s No. 1 Aggressor Nation By John Michael Focusing on just two of England’s many...


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The Barnes Review, July/August 1999: Admiral Yamamato & The Battle of Midway

The Barnes Review, July/August 1999: Admiral Yamamato & The Battle of Midway

Admiral Yamamato And The Battle Of Midway By Vaughn Greene True, he was a hero, but the man known as “Japan’s Horatio Nelson” made many a blunder, contributing greatly to the failure of the Axis cause… Pre-Columbian Voyages To The Americas By Dr. Hugh D. Purcell Who discovered America before Christopher Columbus? Nearly every significant seafaring power on Earth, it would appear, from at least as long ago as the ancient Egyptians… Hittites, Minoans And...


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The Barnes Review, September/October 1999: John Tyler—America's First Accidental President

The Barnes Review, September/October 1999: John Tyler—America's First Accidental President

John Tyler: Our First Accidental President By Frank Jackson Nobody elected John Tyler president of the United States, but he turned out to be one of the best we ever had. In addition, he was one of the founding fathers of the Confederacy… How America’s Money Was Undermined By Gordon Leitch jr. Would we be better off if the government had stuck to silver? Or gold? Or U.S. notes as opposed to Federal Reserve pieces of paper? First of two installments… The Continuing...
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The Barnes Review, November/December 1999: A Mockery of Justice—The Great Sedition Trial of 1944

The Barnes Review, November/December 1999: A Mockery of Justice—The Great Sedition Trial of 1944

The Great Sedition Trial Of 1944 By Michael Collins Piper & Ken Hoop Was the secret purpose of the infamous sedition trial of 1944 to make FDR’s administration appear to be opposed to fascism while actually pursuing totalitarian policies? Fortunately for the cause of liberty, the victims targeted, although not powerful individuals, were able to put up such an effective defense that the U.S. government wound up with well-deserved egg on its face… The Pro-Peace Women Of America...
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