[Above: Anastase Andreivitch Vonsiatsky.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky addressing his German Bund comrades.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky and his friend Theodore Alexandrovich Romanov (nephew of the murdered Tsar Nicholas II).]

[Above: Anastase Vonsiatsky (middle), Donat "Coontz" Kunle, the secretary of the VNRP (left), and Reverend Alexander Tzuglevich (right), from the St. George's Church of Bayside, Long Island and Principal of the Russian Fascist Bible School in Harlem. This was taken on the 4th of July weekend (American Independence Day), 1937. Click to enlarge.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky (fourth from right) with Party members.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky (left) at the Harbin Railroad Station. In the middle stands Donat "Coontz" Kunle. Click to enlarge.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky speaking before a reception in his honor at Harbin's Russian Club, April 26, 1934. From left to right: Donat "Coontz" Kunle, Mikhail Matkovsky (VFP Central Committe member), Alexander "Sasha" Bolotov (chief of the VFP Special Detachment). Click to enlarge.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky with his close friend and classmate Prince Theodore Alexandrovich Romanov, nephew of the murdered Tsar Nicholas II. The two were on a 1932 road trip around the American Southwest. Click to enlarge.]

[Above: The love of Vonsiatsky's life, his dear wife Marion Ream Stephens, American heiress, who he met in Paris in 1921. The two quickly fell in love, moved to New York and got married. His wife's wealth would later fund many of his efforts for the next forty some odd years. He would never know another woman. Click to enlarge.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky with his wife, Marion Ream, 1934.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky and Marion many years later, sipping champagne in 1962 at Marion's winter home in Tucson, Arizona.]

[Above: Vonsiatsky graphic.]

[Above: 'Our Way', April 26, 1934. See below for English translation.]

[Above: English translation.]

[Above: The Hartford Times, June 10, 1942, the day after Vonsiatsky was indicted for espionage by a federal grand jury in Hartford Connecticut. He ended up being sentenced to five years in prison and a fine of $5,000, but was released early in 1946. Click to enlarge.]

[Above: The Vonsiatsky crypt in the West Thompson Cemetery, Connecticut. Built in 1940, it was made to fit six deceased. Interestingly, the remains of Donat "Coontz" Kunle, the secretary of the VNRP, laid there from 1941 to 1964, when they were removed at Vonsiatsky's instructions, to an adjacent site. As of 1975, the crypt contained the bodies of Vonsiatsky, his wife Marion, and his significant other of later years, Priscilla. In 1973 vandals destroyed the stained glass window of Virgin Mary and Chist. Click to enlarge.]