Other Exhibits

Women Strike for Peace, 1961-1975

Anti-Nuclear Proliferation

Women's Liberation and Peace

Lesbian and Gay Rights



Click for full Marder Button Collection

Vietnam War Protest-Groups other than Women Strike for Peace

(photos below)
            The Vietnam conflict originated between the formally French-backed Indochina Bao Dai government in the south of Vietnam and the communist Viet Minh of the northern Democratic Republic of Vietnam, led by Ho Chi Minh.  The French withdrew from their former colonies in IndoChina by the mid 1950s.  As part of Cold War strategy to control the spread of communism and Chinese influence in Asia, the United States began sending aid to South Vietnam in 1955, in support of their opposition to the North Vietnamese.  In 1960, President Kennedy sent some of the first U.S. troops to South Vietnam, as advisors to the government in Saigon.  U.S. economic and military aid to South Vietnam increased throughout the War.
            Although never officially declared a war by Congress, in reality, U.S. involvement in Vietnam was recognized internationally as war.  Opposition to U.S. involvement in IndoChina coalesced into a broad anti-war movement by the mid 1960s. It grew out of a coalition of groups previously opposed to atmospheric nuclear testing and the growth of militarism during the Cold War, the Civil Rights movement, and student-led social justice organizations.  As U.S. military commitments increased in Vietnam and spread to Cambodia and Laos, so too did the anti-war movement gain support across a broader spectrum of the American public. Objections to the war included moral opposition, concern for the fate of thousands of young American men killed or wounded, horror at the killing and maiming of millions of Vietnamese civilians and ecological destruction of that nation, practical concerns about the feasibility of defeating the North Vietnamese, and concerns over increasing international political instability.
            Protests against the war included political lobbying,public demonstrations, destruction of draft and FBI records, and  bombings.  These protests ranged in scale from huge national demonstrations with tens of thousands attending, to a few people gathered on a corner block.  Thousands of protests across the United States occurred during the decade of 1964 to 1974.
            Dorothy Marder’s photography during the period of the early 1960s to mid 1970s documented the “real” anti-war movement, particularly in New York City.  Marder believed that the large news corporations covered only national demonstrations, distorted the reality of the anti-war movement, and neglected the small or local protests.  Her photographs in the Vietnam War section document this more local face of anti-war activism.  In addition, there are images of more Vietnam war era demonstrations on display in the Women Strike for Peace section.  

Literature Cited
DeBenedetti, Charles and Charles Chatfield.  An American Ordeal. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1990.


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DDT
Event: Delegation visiting Congressman Peter Peyer
Daily Death Toll Project
Washington, D.C.
November 11, 1971
Prints D 190-191
7.5” x 9.5”

 

DDT
Event: Daily Death Toll Project
Washington, D.C.
November 11, 1971
Prints D 190-191
6.5” x 9.5

 


Event: Daily Death Toll Project
Washington, D.C.
November 11, 1971
Prints D 190-191
7.5” x 9.5”

 


Event: Daily Death Toll Project
Washington, D.C.
December 17, 1971
Prints D 190-191
7.5” x 9.5”




Event: No War Toys Press Conference
New York, New York
February 26, 1973
Prints D 337 - 338
7.5” x 9.5”

 


Event: Protesting Tiger Cages, Anti-Thieu Demonstration
Washington DC
April 5, 1973
Prints D 340 - 342
6.5” x 9.5”




Close up
Event: Protesting Tiger Cages, Anti-Thieu Demonstration
Washington DC
April 5, 1973
Prints D 340 - 342
6.5” x 9.5”




Ralph DiGia with child
Event: War Resisters League, Pot-Luck Supper
New York City, New York
March 15, 1973
Prints D 401 - 406
7.5" x 6"




Mildred Scott Olmsted (far right)
Event: Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Disarmament Conference
United Nations, New York, New York
May 9, 1975
Prints D 473
6.5” x 9.5”


Pete Seeger
Event: End of War Rally, Central Park
New York, New York
May 11, 1975
Prints D 477 - 482
7.5” x 9.5”

 


Gloria Emerson
Event: End of War Rally, Central Park
New York, New York
May 11, 1975
Prints D 477 - 482
7.5” x 9.5”

 


Event: End of War Rally, Central Park
New York , New York
May 11, 1975
Prints D 477 - 482
7.5” x 9.5”

Created 2010-2011 by Elizabeth Matlock and Wendy Chmielewski
This file was last updated on February 20, 2015


This file was last updated on December 19, 2011.