1917-1919:
Standing up for Freedom of Speech During War
By
the end of 1916 with her participation in the NAACP anti-lynching
campaign and the Hughes Women’s Special, Elisabeth
Freeman had established herself as national player. She
was a contender for the position of national organizer for
the NAACP. Yet, somehow she ended up working to oppose the
war, or at least stand for civil liberties during war time.
She was a part of the Emergency Peace Federation, a coalition
of groups brought together to discuss peace. This group
became the People’s Council of America with regional
chapters representing many thousands of activists. The People’s
Council remained a coalition of diverse groups, some of
which did not always agree.
•
The First
Waco Horror: The Lynching of Jesse Washington by Patricia
Bernstein
•
Letter
to Louis Lochner about organizing difficulties June 17,
1917, page
2, page 3,
page 4 and
page 5
•
Flyer
People’s Council
Initially
Elisabeth was the legislative secretary, or lobbyist, of
the Council and did some effective political work, getting
hearings on conscription and civil rights at war time. She
articulated to Congressional members the principles of the
movement including the rationale for a negotiated peace,an
open debate about an exit strategy for the war, against
suspension of basic civil rights, and “no forcible
annexations of nations” as a condition of peace. But
the push to war was very strong and the situation changed
daily, and friends like Rep. Jeanette Rankin and Sen. LaFollette
(he was a supporter of striking garment workers and his
daughter Fola was a suffragist) were quickly out numbered.
•
Lochner
to Lola Maverick Lloyd on the lobbying activities of the
peace movement
•
Letter
from Lochner “drafting” Elisabeth for the Chicago
job, page
2
•
EFinvite
Letter inviting people to Chicago conference
In
a very flattering letter from Louis Lochner on 6-27-17,
Elisabeth was “conscripted” to organize the
September 1st conference in the Midwest, as no one else
could pull together such an event in such a short amount
of time. In Chicago, she worked hard to create order and
to smooth relations between personalities and groups. She
tried to strike a balance between the socialists “who
did all the work” and the more moderate elements like
Jane Addams of the Woman’s Peace Party.
•
Account
from Loose Leaves from a Busy Life by Morris Hillquit
•
Account
of Gov. Lowden’s first attempt to disband conference
(noplace)
•
Photo
of pacifist leaders and clipping of Chicago meeting. note:
bannedpeace is just the phot
An
sentiment against any who opposed the war. or who were not
sufficiently patriotic, increased in the two months that
it took to organize the conference. The result for Conference
organizers was state and local politicians played against
each other: The Minneapolis Mayor, a socialist welcomed
them, but their contract for a convention hall was canceled
at the last minute. The Minnesota governor prevented an
outdoor meeting. The Governor of North Dakota was welcoming,
as was the Wisconsin governor, but in Hudson WI a mob of
angry “patriots” escorted a planning committee
out of town. Many delegates from the East Coast were on
a specially chartered train heading to some unknown destination
“West”. At the last minute, Mayor Thompson of
Chicago gave them shelter,
Their
welcome was short-lived, as Gov. Lowden of Illinois moved
to break up their meeting first by ordering the police to
break up the meeting, while Mayor Thompson was out of town.
After his return, the group reconvened knowing that the
Governor would order the National Guard unit, fully armed
for battle to break up the meeting. But, the only troops
were a unit of Negro soldiers in Springfield, several hours
away, so the delegates hurriedly met and adopted a national
constitution for the People’s Council, which was adopted,
“without debate”, most unusual for a group of
radicals. The troops arrived in time to surround a wedding
which had been scheduled for the hall.
•
Photo
of armed troops being mustered to rout pacifists
•
Full
page spread on woes of peace delegates, page
2 and page 3
•
Burgermeister
scorn, article focuses on Mayor of Chicago
•
Another
account of rout of peace meeting, page
2
The
media has a field day with these events, and the editorial
views of the newspaper were evident in the coverage. One
headline read, “all dressed up, with no place to go”;
another called the Mayor “Burgermeister” in
an attempt to label him pro-German. There were articles
in nearly every edition stirring up war “hysteria”
and encouraging anti-pacifist sentiment. Freedom of speech
was an early victim of the Great War.
Article
about loss of civil liberties:
•
Article
showing how troops would handle a domestic riot
•
Alternate version of above articles
•
Clipping
and cartoon give flavor of anti-pacitist sentiment
Elisabeth
also did extensive organizing and speaking in the Northwest
in August of 1917, just prior to the Chicago meeting, with
sometimes exciting adventures. The Lusk Report, an investigation
of radical activities, quotes a letter from Elisabeth Freeman:
“...I leaped on the table and started to speak--most
of the crowd remaining....Just then eight policemen came
up...and declared they would arrest me. A great shout of
indignation went up but they seemed very determined.....I
jumped from the table and a policeman caught my arm...People
surged between us, the hand suddenly loosened and slipped
into the crowd easily and back to the hall, in time to do
my usual job of asking for the collection...The screws are
getting tighter. ‘These are great times for democracy.’”
Another
account shows a different approach: “...One has to
soft pedal very much...They feared the least radical remark
would upset the apple cart. I made my speech in the form
of questions; and so got by with many statements... I am
leaving here tonight...Will see you in Minneapolis.”
•
An excerpt
from The Lusk Report, 1920 focusing on Elisabeth Freeman’s
organizing activities (bookex1 and 2)
•
Brief
article on final statement of Chicago pacifist meeting
Although
the work of the People’s Council continued for the
duration of the war (19 months) they were always constrained
by public sentiment against criticism of U.S. policy. On
a personal note, Elisabeth came to be acquainted with an
illustrious crowd of radicals, including people still remembered
today: Max and Crystal Eastman, Roger Baldwin, founder of
ACLU, Scott Nearing, widely read by hippies for his and
his wife’s back to the land lore, and others like
Fola LaFollette, Morris Hillquit, Judah Magnus--illustrious
at the time but largely lost to us now.
Just
as notorious as her allies were her enemies. The Palmer
Raids rounded up radicals and jailed them and the Lusk Report
labeled any antiwar dissenters as guilty of treason. These
embodied the general climate of intolerance and abuse toward
even reasonable dissent and may be seen as a precursor to
the House Un-American Committee (HUAC) of the 50’s,
J. Edgar Hoover’s use of the FBI as a domestic spy
operation, and our modern day Patriot Act.
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