National Mobilization Committee
to End the War in Vietnam
Records, 1966-1969
Document Group: DG 075
Provenance: Donated by Brad Lyttle through George Lakey,
December 22, 1972
Size: 1.5 m. (4 2/3 linear ft.)
Restrictions: None
Microfilm: None
Finding Aid: Checklist prepared by Martha P. Shane (March
1983)
These records were processed under NEH Grant No. 20111-81-1655.
This checklist is the property of the Swarthmore College Peace
Collection.
Historical Introduction
The National Mobilization Committee to End the War in
Vietnam was a non-exclusionary conference of groups opposed to the
United States' involvement in Vietnam in "its illegal and immoral
interference with the lives and fortunes of a people ten thousand
miles away from America". This groups began during the summer of 1966
when an intercollegiate faculty group known as the Inter-University
Committee for Debate on Foreign Policy who had organized the first
campus teach-ins on Vietnam in 1965 called a national conference on
the war's opponents on September 10 and 11 in Cleveland, Ohio. At
this conference, the November 8th Mobilization Committee was created.
The committee served as an ad hoc national group which planned to
focus attention on the increasingly violent and brutal war during the
pre-election period that fall. A.J. Muste, who died several months
later, was the founding chairmen with leadership support from Dave
Dellinger (editor of Liberation), Robert Greenblatt (Cornell
professor and member of the inter-University Committee for Debate on
Foreign Policy), Edward Keating (publisher of Ramparts), and
Sidney Peck (Western Reserve University professor and also a member
of the Inter-University Committee).
Following the November 1966 elections, at a meeting on November 26,
the November 8th Mobilization Committee formally organized into the
Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, commonly
known as "the Mobe". Its major undertaking at that time was to
organize a mass rally on April 15, 1967, both in New York City and in
San Francisco. Following that rally, the group changed its name to
the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. The
Mobe initially had two main offices: one at 857 Broadway in New York
City and the other in San Francisco, with a regional office in Los
Angeles. In 1968, the New York headquarters were moved to 5 Beekman
Street until March 1969 when the group was asked to vacate that
office. The Reverend James Bevel was its national director.
The Mobe's chief aim was to mobilize public opinion against the
Vietnamese War and against such other injustices of society as black
inequality. It sought to weld a coalition of existing peace groups
and to spark the formation of new action groups across the country.
It did this by organizing mass rallies of protest in major American
cities, sending a delegation directly to President Johnson,
distributing leaflets to Congress in a non-violent direct action
campaign, supporting draft resistance programs, and calling for black
liberation. A.J. Muste concluded one of his pleas for resistance
against the war with the question, "What are we waiting for?" This
became the Mobe's motto.
The Mobe was most active during the year 1967 when it organized two
major rallies. The first mass demonstrations were held on April 15,
both in New York City where 400,000 protesters gathered in Sheep
Meadow in Central Park and walked to the United Nations, and in San
Francisco where 75,000 supported the rally. Speakers in New York
included Dr. Benjamin Spock, Stokely Carmichael, and Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. On October 21, 150,000 gathered in Washington D.C.
to "Confront the Warmakers". The parade marched to the Pentagon
amidst 2,500 federal troops and marshals and 700 arrests, with
charges of police brutality by the peace groups. All of these events
received nationwide press coverage, heightening awareness of the
growing antiwar sentiment.
In 1968, the Mobe proposed to change "from dissent to resistance".
President Johnson's announcement in March to drastically reduce
bombing North Vietnam produced a temporary holding pattern in actions
of the Mobe and other peace groups. In April, the Mobe cooperated
with Students for a Democratic Society in "Ten Days of Protest". In
August, they took part in the Chicago demonstrations centering around
the Democratic National Convention which resulted in three days of
riots between the marchers and Mayor Daley's police. As a result,
Mobe leader Dave Dallinger was indicted early in 1969 and charged
with conspiring to cause the Chicago riots. The Mobe urged an
election strike campaign in November, arguing that none of the
presidential candidates (Nixon, Humphrey Wallace) was a true peace
candidate.
In January 1969, the weakened Mobe took part in Inaugural
Demonstrations as Nixon was sworn into the office of President. That
summer, remnants of the Mobe reconstituted themselves in the the New
Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, headquartered in
Washington D.C. This group divided during 1970 with some members
joining the National Peace Action Coalition (NPAC) and others the
People's Coalition for Peace and Justice (PCPJ).
Like many of its fellow peace organizations during that troubled period, the
Mobe was charged with harboring Communists and hippies. It tried to support
both war protest and black liberation without compromising either. Its emphasis
on non-violent protest was often undermined by press coverage that focused on
acts of violence which occurred during the mass protests. The Mobe succeeded,
nevertheless, in showing Americans the growing hostility against the war among
both civilians and GIs and in giving support to increasing the rights of African
Americans.
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