Ellison, Richard Dellinger, David T
Description
David Dellinger was a pacifist, anti-war activist, and a member of the Chicago 7 who was considered a stalwart in the non-violence activist movement during Vietnam. Born into a prominent Republican family in Massachusetts and educated at Yale, Dellinger recounts how he developed his political beliefs and the effect it had on those surrounding him. Dellinger also illustrates the power of the grassroots movement by using the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that it was in fact, the movement at the grassroots level that changed the policy at the top. He talks about the reasons why he believes the United States got involved in Vietnam and why he marched on the Pentagon in 1967, as well as his feelings on why the march was successful. Dellinger also goes into detail about the disruption he helped create at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, the effect it had on the anti-war movement and the problems he saw with American Democracy.
Video
Motion Pictures
No materials may be re-used without references to appearance releases and WGBH/UMass Boston contract. 2) It is the liability of a production to investigate and re-clear all rights before re-use in any project. Rights Holder: WGBH Educational FoundationContact host institution for more information.
Record Contributed By
WGBHRecord Harvested From
Digital CommonwealthKeywords
- Civil Rights
- Civil Rights Movements
- Decolonization
- Democracy
- Demonstrations
- Government
- Government, Resistance To
- History
- Peace Movements
- Personal Narratives, American
- Political Conventions
- Politics And Government
- Protest Movements
- United States
- Vietnam
- Vietnam (Democratic Republic)
- Vietnam (Republic)
- Vietnam Moratorium, 1969
- Vietnam War, 1961 1975