Carl Oglesby
Carl Preston Oglesby Jr. (July 30, 1935 – September 13, 2011) was an American political activist, author, academic, and playwright. From 1965 to 1966, he served as president of the leftist student organization Students for a Democratic Society (SDS).[1] After leaving SDS, Oglesby researched and wrote about post-World War II American history, in particular the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and was credited with helping to bring about the U.S. House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1976.[2] Early lifeCarl Oglesby's father was from South Carolina, and his mother from Alabama. They both migrated north for job opportunities. They met in 1934 in Akron, Ohio, where Carl's father had found work at a Firestone tire plant.[1] Carl graduated from Revere High School in suburban Akron, winning a prize in his final year for a speech in favor of America's Cold War stance.[3] He then enrolled at Kent State University. While there, he met and married Beth Rimanoczy, a graduate student in the English department. They would eventually have three children (Aron, Shay, and Caleb). After three years at Kent State, Oglesby dropped out and moved to the Bohemian neighborhood of Greenwich Village to pursue a New York stage career as an actor and playwright. Following an unsuccessful year in New York, he returned to Akron to become a copy editor for Goodyear. He meanwhile continued his creative endeavors. Influenced by Britain's "angry young men" literary movement, he wrote three plays, including "a well-received work on the Hatfield-McCoy feud",[1] as well as an unfinished novel. In 1958, Oglesby and his young family moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan after he obtained a technical writing position at Bendix Corporation, a defense contractor. He ascended to the directorship of the company's technical writing division while also completing his undergraduate degree as a part-time student at the University of Michigan (where he cultivated friends such as Donald Hall and Frithjof Bergmann) in 1962.[4][5] In that same year, his play The Peacemaker was produced in Ann Arbor and Boston.[6] In his 2008 autobiography Ravens in the Storm, Oglesby chronicles a fateful day in late 1963 when he was working at his desk at Bendix Corporation, and a co-worker told him the news from Dallas that President Kennedy had been shot.[7] The JFK assassination would later occupy more than two decades of Oglesby's life. Involvement with SDSOglesby first came into contact with SDS in Ann Arbor in 1964. He had recently written an article, printed in the University of Michigan campus magazine, which was critical of American foreign policy in the Far East. SDS members read the article, and went to meet Oglesby at his home to see if he might want to join their organization. As Oglebsy put it:
He left Bendix in 1965 to become director of a newly formed SDS unit called "Research, Information, and Publications".[9] He was so impressed by the spirit and intellectual vigor of SDS that he was soon extremely active in the organization. One of his early projects was to form a "grass-roots theatre", but that effort was superseded by SDS opposition to the growing U.S. combat involvement in the Vietnam War. Despite the notable age gap between the 30-year-old Oglesby and the college-aged undergraduates who comprised most of the membership, he was elected national SDS president within a year. He helped organize a University of Michigan "teach-in", the first of its kind, in which faculty engaged in a work stoppage to protest the "moral, political, and military consequences" of the Vietnam War.[10][11] On April 17, 1965, he and Beth attended the first SDS-sponsored March on Washington against the war, with approximately 25,000 demonstrators in attendance.[12] He then initiated plans for a second SDS peace march to be held later in the year in Washington, D.C. ![]() On November 27, 1965. Oglesby delivered a speech entitled "Let Us Shape the Future" before another large audience of anti-war protesters in the nation's capital.[13] It was the high point of his SDS presidency. He compared the Vietnam revolution to the American revolution. He said, "Our dead revolutionaries would soon wonder why their country was fighting against what appeared to be a revolution."[14] He condemned what he called "corporate liberalism" and accused anti-Communists in the U.S. of self-righteously denouncing Communist tyranny, while ignoring the "right-wing tyrannies that our businessmen traffic with and our nation profits from every day."[14][15] In a memorable passage, he challenged those who called him anti-American: "I say, don’t blame me for that! Blame those who mouthed my liberal values and broke my American heart."[16] The speech became an important early articulation of the anti-war movement. According to Kirkpatrick Sale,
Oglesby's political outlook was more eclectic than that of many SDS members. He was heavily influenced by libertarian economist Murray Rothbard, and dismissed socialism as "a way to bury social problems under a federal bureaucracy."[1] In 1967, he co-authored with Richard Shaull the book Containment and Change, which argued for an alliance between the New Left and the libertarian, non-interventionist Old Right in opposing an imperialist U.S. foreign policy.[18] He once unsuccessfully proposed cooperation between SDS and the conservative group Young Americans for Freedom on some projects.[19] His contributions to Containment and Change were later praised in The American Conservative magazine. One writer said that Oglesby "was on to something when he suggested that the Old Right and New Left have (some) common ground."[20] Another wrote:
Steve Mariotti, a teenage SDS colleague of Oglesby's in 1965, credits Oglesby with inspiring what became known as the two-axis Nolan Chart. It occurred during a rehearsal of the "Let Us Shape the Future" speech when Oglesby "used the word 'coordinates' to describe issues on which he believed the Left and the Right shared common ground. This led us into a discussion of the limitations of the Left/Right line chart, which was often used at the time to illustrate a person's political views."[21]
In 1968, Oglesby signed the "Writers and Editors War Tax Protest" pledge, vowing along with several hundred others that they "would not pay a proposed 10 percent income tax surcharge or any other [Vietnam] war-designated tax increase."[22] Also in 1968, he was asked by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver to serve as his running mate on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket in that year's presidential election (Oglesby declined the offer).[1] In 1969, he edited The New Left Reader, an anthology of speeches and writings by radical thinkers such as Frantz Fanon, Herbert Marcuse and C. Wright Mills who had influenced the New Left movement, of which SDS was a part. Later in that year, Oglesby was forced out of SDS when the organization's left-wing members accused him of "being 'trapped in our early, bourgeois stage' and for not progressing into 'a Marxist–Leninist perspective.'"[1] Post-SDSAfter his departure from SDS, Oglesby became a musician, writer, and academic. His self-titled folk-rock album was released in 1969 by Vanguard Records. It was later reviewed unfavorably by Village Voice rock critic Robert Christgau who wrote: "In which the first president of SDS takes after Leonard Cohen, offering a clue as to why the framers of the Port Huron Statement didn't change the world in quite the way they envisioned. Overwritten, undermusicked, not much fun, not much enlightenment—in short, the work of someone who needs a weatherman (small 'w' please) to know which way the wind blows."[23] Oglesby released one more album, "Going to Damascus", in 1971.[24] In 1970, he was a featured speaker at the "Left/Right Festival of Liberation" organized by the California Libertarian Alliance. This attempt at bridge-building was characteristic of Oglesby, who had written in 1967: "In a strong sense, the Old Right and the New Left are morally and politically coordinate."[25] To earn his livelihood, Oglesby turned to college teaching. He taught political science at Dartmouth College and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[6] JFK assassinationIn the Introduction to his 1992 book The JFK Assassination: The Facts and the Theories, Oglesby noted that "once I wandered into the [JFK assassination] case in 1973, I have never found my way back out."[26] By 1973, he was living in Cambridge, Massachusetts and had helped found the Assassination Information Bureau (AIB), which he also co-directed.[5] The AIB would be credited with applying pressure on the U.S. Congress to re-investigate the JFK and Martin Luther King Jr. assassinations.[27] Eventually, the buildup of popular demand resulted in the establishment of the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations in September 1976.[2]
The Yankee and Cowboy WarOglesby wrote several books on the assassination of John F. Kennedy and the various competing theories that sought to explain it. In the first of these books, The Yankee and Cowboy War (1976), he proposed a new analytic framework for understanding recent U.S. history.[28] He said the JFK assassination, Watergate scandal, and downfall of President Nixon represented "the violent eruptions of a deeper struggle of rival power elites identified here as Yankees and Cowboys."[29] According to his argument, a post-World War II schism arose in the U.S. ruling class between (a) traditional Eastern conservative "Yankees" (bankers mostly)—exemplified by Nelson Rockefeller, Henry Cabot Lodge, John Kennedy, Clark Clifford, and Averill Harriman—and (b) hard-right Sun Belt "Cowboys" (oil and aerospace magnates)—exemplified by H. L. Hunt, Clint Murchison, Howard Hughes, Lyndon Johnson, Barry Goldwater, and Richard Nixon.[30] Using this framework, JFK's murder was an assertion of power by the Cowboys who wanted rapid escalation of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. In summarizing the book, Kirkus Reviews depicted Oglesby as believing that JFK was killed by "a rightist conspiracy formed out of anti-Castro Cuban exiles, the Syndicate, and a Cowboy oligarchy, supported by renegade CIA and FBI agents."[31] During the 1970s and '80s, Oglesby befriended New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison and contributed the Afterword, "Is the Mafia Theory a Valid Alternative?", to Garrison's 1988 book On the Trail of the Assassins.[32] As a journalist, Oglesby covered the filming of Oliver Stone's JFK and commented on the extraordinary mainstream media scrutiny the film received while in production.[33] Later yearsIn April 2006, Oglesby spoke at the Northeast Regional Conference of the "new SDS" where he said that activism is about "teaching yourself how to do what you don't know how to do."[34] On September 13, 2011, Carl Oglesby died of lung cancer at his home in Montclair, New Jersey. He was 76.[16][15] In popular cultureOglesby has been credited with coining the term "Global South", which he first used in a 1969 article.[35] On November 19, 1991, he appeared on The Ron Reagan Show with other JFK assassination researchers including David Lifton, Robert J. Groden, and Robert Sam Anson. In the 2020 feature film The Trial of the Chicago 7, Oglesby (who testified in the Chicago 7 trial as a defense witness) was portrayed by Michael A. Dean. WorksBooks
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