Coolidge student march against the war flyer: 1969
A flyer advertises a demonstration held during the Vietnam Moratorium by black students at Coolidge High School in Washington, D.C. October 15, 1969.
Over 100 students from Coolidge High School sought to enter the White House grounds with a black pinewood coffin containing letters from students asking President Nixon to end the war.
Refused entry by White House guards, the students pressed forward anyway. Park and metropolitan police bolstered the guards and arrested three students and one passerby.
500 bystanders gathered around the confrontation angrily shouting at police to let the arrested students go.
The moratorium was a soft approach to a nationwide strike against the war in Vietnam and involved upwards of two million people across the U.S.
Events were held at campuses and churches across the greater Washington, D.C. area during the day capped by a march from the Washington Monument to the White House in the evening led by Coretta Scott King.
A second moratorium was held the following month where upwards of 500,000 staged a massive march on Washington demanding an end to the war in Vietnam.
For a pdf of this flyer, see washingtonspark.files.wordpress.com/2019/04/1969-10-15-co...
For more information and related images to the October 1969 Moratorium, see flic.kr/s/aHskaFJjgQ
For more information and related images to the November 1969 Moratorium, see flic.kr/s/aHsk9riRMa
Donated by Robert “Bob” Simpson
Coolidge student march against the war flyer: 1969
A flyer advertises a demonstration held during the Vietnam Moratorium by black students at Coolidge High School in Washington, D.C. October 15, 1969.
Over 100 students from Coolidge High School sought to enter the White House grounds with a black pinewood coffin containing letters from students asking President Nixon to end the war.
Refused entry by White House guards, the students pressed forward anyway. Park and metropolitan police bolstered the guards and arrested three students and one passerby.
500 bystanders gathered around the confrontation angrily shouting at police to let the arrested students go.
The moratorium was a soft approach to a nationwide strike against the war in Vietnam and involved upwards of two million people across the U.S.
Events were held at campuses and churches across the greater Washington, D.C. area during the day capped by a march from the Washington Monument to the White House in the evening led by Coretta Scott King.
A second moratorium was held the following month where upwards of 500,000 staged a massive march on Washington demanding an end to the war in Vietnam.
For a pdf of this flyer, see washingtonspark.files.wordpress.com/2019/04/1969-10-15-co...
For more information and related images to the October 1969 Moratorium, see flic.kr/s/aHskaFJjgQ
For more information and related images to the November 1969 Moratorium, see flic.kr/s/aHsk9riRMa
Donated by Robert “Bob” Simpson