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NATIONAL SECRETARY MATILDE ZIMMERMANN Sponsc (partial listing) Mrs. Donna Allen Rev. Jesse F. Anderson Mrs. Nettie Bell Prof. Hyman Berman Prof. Derk Bodde Prof. Edgar M. Bottome Prof. Germaine Bree Reber F. Boult, Jr. Prof. Thompson Bradley Prof. Jonathon B. Chase Prof. Daniel G. Collins Prof. William C. Davidon Rev. Albert R. Dreisbach, Jr. Maurice Geary Maxwell Geismar Prof. Marvin E. Gettleman Mitchell Goodman Jerry Gordon Rev. David M. Gracie Fred Halstead Gary J. Hawkins Terence Hallinan Vincent Hallinan Fred Hampton Michael Hannon Nat Hentoff Prof. Graham Hughes Prof. George Jones, Jr. Prof. Donald Kalish C. Clark Kissinger Sholem Lebovitz Denise Levertov John Lewis Walter Lowenfels Prof. Oliver Loud Bob Lucas Dwight MacDonald Norman Mailer Howard N. Meyer Mrs. Warren Miller George Novack Prof. Sidney Peck Howard Petrick Rev. Ed Riddick Carl D. Rogers Irving Sarnoff Pete Seeger Dr. Phillip Shapiro Prof. Mulford Q. Sibley Michael Sletson Dr. Benjamin Spock Arthur Sternberg ^rvey Swados . Paul M. Sweezy Ethel Taylor Lyn Wells Prof. David White Leroy Wolins Prof. Maurice Zeitlin Prof. Howard Zinn Gl CIVIL LIBERTIES DEFENSE COMMITTEE Box 355; O/d Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011 tel. (212) 243-4775 21 May 1969 THE "FORT JACKSON NINE" STORY On March 20, 1969, a large, spontaneous antiwar meeting was held outside the barracks of Company B-14-4 at Fort Jackson, 3.C., by members of a group called GIs United against the War in Vietnam. Within a few days, nine activists were picked up and confined under charges including disrespect (Art. 89 of the UCMJ), holding an illegal demonstration (Art. 90), breach of the peace (Art. 116) and disobeying an order (Art. 92). A summary of what then happened to the Nine follows: "PVT. JOHN HUFFMAN," 19, allegedly of Oak Park, 111.; confined to barracks March 25 to April 9, when the Army disclosed that he was an informer, acting "on behalf of command" from the start of GIs United; now an MP at Fort Jackson. PVT. EDILBERTO CHAPPARRO, 17, of New York City, confined to the post stockade March 21, charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; remanded to barracks arrest April 18; given an undesirable discharge from the Army May 1. PVT. DOMINICK DUDDIE, 17, of New York City; placed under barracks arrest March 25; charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; all charges dropped May 2. PFC. CURTIS E. MAYS, 23, of Kansas City; placed under barracks arrest March 25; charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; all charges related to March 20 incident dropped May 2; given summary court martial May 12 on unrelated charge of allegedly breaking restriction; sentenced to 30 days confinement.
Object Description
Title | The "Fort Jackson Nine" story |
Place of publication | New York, New York |
Publisher | GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee |
Publication date | 1969 |
Language | English |
Country | United States |
State | South Carolina |
Military base/Ship | Fort Jackson |
Digital Format | XML |
Publisher-Electronic | Wisconsin Historical Society |
Publication Date-Electronic | 2017 |
Rights | Copyright belongs to the individuals who created them or the organizations for which they worked. We share them here strictly for non-profit educational purposes. If you believe that you possess copyright to material included here, please contact us at asklibrary@wisconsinhistory.org. Under the fair use provisions of the U.S. copyright law, teachers and students are free to reproduce any document for nonprofit classroom use. Commercial use of copyright-protected material is generally prohibited. |
Owner | Wisconsin Historical Society Archives. GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee Records, 1968-1971 |
Type | Text |
Digital identifier | giEphemera1397000 |
Description
Title | p. 1 |
Language | English |
Digital Format | JPEG2000 |
Publisher-Electronic | Wisconsin Historical Society |
Publication Date-Electronic | 2017 |
Rights | Copyright belongs to the individuals who created them or the organizations for which they worked. We share them here strictly for non-profit educational purposes. If you believe that you possess copyright to material included here, please contact us at asklibrary@wisconsinhistory.org. Under the fair use provisions of the U.S. copyright law, teachers and students are free to reproduce any document for nonprofit classroom use. Commercial use of copyright-protected material is generally prohibited. |
Owner | Wisconsin Historical Society Archives. GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee Records, 1968-1972 |
Full text | NATIONAL SECRETARY MATILDE ZIMMERMANN Sponsc (partial listing) Mrs. Donna Allen Rev. Jesse F. Anderson Mrs. Nettie Bell Prof. Hyman Berman Prof. Derk Bodde Prof. Edgar M. Bottome Prof. Germaine Bree Reber F. Boult, Jr. Prof. Thompson Bradley Prof. Jonathon B. Chase Prof. Daniel G. Collins Prof. William C. Davidon Rev. Albert R. Dreisbach, Jr. Maurice Geary Maxwell Geismar Prof. Marvin E. Gettleman Mitchell Goodman Jerry Gordon Rev. David M. Gracie Fred Halstead Gary J. Hawkins Terence Hallinan Vincent Hallinan Fred Hampton Michael Hannon Nat Hentoff Prof. Graham Hughes Prof. George Jones, Jr. Prof. Donald Kalish C. Clark Kissinger Sholem Lebovitz Denise Levertov John Lewis Walter Lowenfels Prof. Oliver Loud Bob Lucas Dwight MacDonald Norman Mailer Howard N. Meyer Mrs. Warren Miller George Novack Prof. Sidney Peck Howard Petrick Rev. Ed Riddick Carl D. Rogers Irving Sarnoff Pete Seeger Dr. Phillip Shapiro Prof. Mulford Q. Sibley Michael Sletson Dr. Benjamin Spock Arthur Sternberg ^rvey Swados . Paul M. Sweezy Ethel Taylor Lyn Wells Prof. David White Leroy Wolins Prof. Maurice Zeitlin Prof. Howard Zinn Gl CIVIL LIBERTIES DEFENSE COMMITTEE Box 355; O/d Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011 tel. (212) 243-4775 21 May 1969 THE "FORT JACKSON NINE" STORY On March 20, 1969, a large, spontaneous antiwar meeting was held outside the barracks of Company B-14-4 at Fort Jackson, 3.C., by members of a group called GIs United against the War in Vietnam. Within a few days, nine activists were picked up and confined under charges including disrespect (Art. 89 of the UCMJ), holding an illegal demonstration (Art. 90), breach of the peace (Art. 116) and disobeying an order (Art. 92). A summary of what then happened to the Nine follows: "PVT. JOHN HUFFMAN" 19, allegedly of Oak Park, 111.; confined to barracks March 25 to April 9, when the Army disclosed that he was an informer, acting "on behalf of command" from the start of GIs United; now an MP at Fort Jackson. PVT. EDILBERTO CHAPPARRO, 17, of New York City, confined to the post stockade March 21, charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; remanded to barracks arrest April 18; given an undesirable discharge from the Army May 1. PVT. DOMINICK DUDDIE, 17, of New York City; placed under barracks arrest March 25; charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; all charges dropped May 2. PFC. CURTIS E. MAYS, 23, of Kansas City; placed under barracks arrest March 25; charged under Articles 89, 90 and 116; all charges related to March 20 incident dropped May 2; given summary court martial May 12 on unrelated charge of allegedly breaking restriction; sentenced to 30 days confinement. |
Type | Text |
Digital identifier | giEphemera1397001 |