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Dayton Peace Action Committee Records

 Collection
Identifier: MS-300

Scope and Content

The collection consists of administrative records, correspondence, publications, newspaper clippings, programs, books, and Barrett's personal notes concerning DPAC activities.

Series I: Administrative

Box 1 file 1 contains handwritten and typed Minutes for the meetings (November 1994 - April 1997) of the Dayton Citizens for Global Security (DCGS) and the Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC). DCGS and DPAC meeting attendance and the Treasurer's report are noted is these Minutes. Meeting topics include: Hiroshima Photo Exhibit Committee (-an exhibit which was displayed at Wright State University); Atomic Materials Transport; Smithsonian Exhibit on the Enola Gay; Martin Luther King, Jr., parade; DCGS/DPAC annual picnics; voter registration and education campaigns; Environmental Exhibit at the Fairfield Commons Mall; placing DCGS/DPAC videos on the local MVC channel; Ret. Admiral Carroll's Peace Day visit in August 1996 (NOTE: box 1 file 12 includes the brochure for [U.S. Navy] Ret. Rear Admiral Eugene Carroll's visit); peace workshops and symposiums; election of DPAC officers report (e.g., Nov. 11, 1996); DPAC Peace Vigil; DCGS/DPAC newsletter additions and notes; announcements of DPAC members' trips to Bosnia, Haiti, and Cuba; the Miami Valley Peace Network; Pledge of Resistance Meeting; and Tax Day Action.

Box 1 file 2 contains the Agenda for the meetings found in file 1.

Box 1 file 3 is a general information folder containing a DCGS membership list, minutes from the Harvest for Peace Day Planning Committee, minutes from the Miami Valley Peace Network, and DCGS/DPAC newsletter additions.

Series II: Correspondence

This series contains correspondence written to and from Hal Barrett and other DCGS/DPAC members (box 1 file 5). Topics include: Annual Peace Award presentation; use of educational videos put out by America's Defense Monitor; U.S. military budget; a letter to Hal Barrett from Congressman Tony Hall; the School of the Americas; DCGS/DPAC newsletter additions; a typed campaign fund drive letter from President Bill Clinton to Hal Barrett; and radioactive waste dumping.

Also included in this series is correspondence from peace organizations located in the Dayton, Ohio, area (e.g., Dayton Council on World Affairs and the Miami Valley Peace Network) and from national (e.g., National Peace Action, the United States House of Representatives, Friends Committee on National Legislation, and the United States Senate) and international (e.g., Jacqueline Uwineza from Kenya) correspondents (box 1 files 6 & 7).

Series III: Publications

This third series (box 1 files 8, 9, 10) consists of DCGS, DPAC ("Peace Pipeline"), Ohio-based (e.g., "Linkages"), Nationally-based (e.g., "Peace Action"), and Internationally-based (e.g., "Bolivia Bulletin") newsletters.

This series also includes publicity flyers (box 1 file 11) which cover a variety of topics: labor; anti-nuclear weapons; 'women strike for peace;' income tax; pentagon spending ("Want My Vote? Cut Pentagon Bloat!" -- NOTE: box 2 file 2 of this series has this bumper sticker); radioactive waste disposal in Ohio; International Peace for Cuba Appeal; peace voter 1996 guidelines; campaign finance reform; and a list of 'organizations that support comprehensive sexuality for all children and youth by the year 2000.' DCGS and DPAC brochures can be found in box 1 file 12.

Brochures from Ohio-based organizations and conferences will be found in box 1 file 13. Topics include: Nuclear Madness: Is There A Cure?; Dollars and Democracy Project; Adopt a Rwandan Refugee Student Project; Eastern Europe: If No Walls, Then What?; The Friendship Force; and the Dayton Council on World Affairs.

Brochures from Nationally and Internationally-based organizations will be found in box 2 file 1. Topics include: war tax resistance; the Strategic Defense Initiative (aka, Star Wars); President George Bush (1988); U.S.-Soviet military balance; the Peace Tax Fund Bill; the Baha'i Faith; ghettos; and peace movements.

Box 2 file 2 contains Peace Literature. This includes: a program for Harvest of Peace Day - Peace Poll Dedication program; "Want My Vote? Cut Pentagon Bloat!" bumper sticker; an original (© words and music) Hal Barrett Christmas song titled "When Christmas Will Be Here to Stay;" an Oct. 6, 1996 bulletin for the First Unitarian Church; a handout from the Foreign Policy Association concerning the National Opinion Ballot Report 1996; and information concerning nuclear waste and the environment.

Series IV: Newspaper Clippings

This series includes articles and book reviews (box 2 file 4) from such newspapers as the Journal Herald, Dayton Daily News Parade, In These Times - The Independent Socialist Newspaper, New York Times, Washington Post, and Voice. Topics include: Billy Graham; protest against U.S. policy in Central America; the Strategic Defense Initiative (aka, Star Wars); prime time television; the Enola Gay exhibit at the Smithsonian; nuclear arms race; the Gulf War; Riverside, Ohio, peace poll; child protection; Bosnia; Rwanda; nuclear disarmament; raise in minimum wage for Dayton, Ohio, city employees; Anti-Gunrunning Bill; chemical weapons; and the School of the Americas.

Also included in this series are some comic strips (box 2 file 5). Topics include: Richard Nixon; union support; U.S.-Soviet relations; pro-life/pro-creation; U.S.-China relations.

Series V: Events

Box 2 file 6 contains programs from the August 1990 - 1995 Hiroshima/Nagasaki Remembrance Vigils held at the First Baptist Church, 111 West Monument Avenue, Dayton Ohio.

Box 2 file 7 contains an Information Packet relating to Jehane Dyllan's one-woman production of "Silkwood." Included are directions on how to organize a production of "Silkwood;" letters of praise for Jehane Dyllan; and newspaper articles and reviews pertaining to Jehane Dyllan and her one-woman production of "Silkwood." According to Hal Barrett, the local Dayton peace group in which he was involved [originally named the Dayton Area Citizens for Arms Race Education (DACARE), then Dayton Citizens for Global Security (DCGS), and now known as the Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC)] was, at one time, interested in working with other Dayton organizations to bring Jehane Dyllan and her production of "Silkwood" to Dayton, Ohio.

Series VI: Media

Box 2 file 8 contains two copies of The Hundredth Monkey by Ken Keyes, Jr. This book is about preventing nuclear war.

Box 2 file 9 contains two copies of the sequel to The Hundredth Monkey. The sequel is titled Planethood: The Key to Your Survival and Prosperity by Benjamin B. Ferencz and Ken Keyes, Jr. The authors provide eight steps "to create peace and prosperity in the world."

Series VII: Hal Barrett's Notes

This series consists of handwritten notes by Hal Barrett concerning topics and events discussed by and which included the involvement of the Dayton Citizens for Global Security (DCGS) and the Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC) ca. 1996.

Series VIII: Reed Smith / W.S.U. Peace Studies Box 2 file 13 contains some typed class notes from the Political Science 380/680 class at W.S.U. ca. 1972 - 1974.

Box 2 file 14 contains magazine and book articles with topics titles including: "Eastern Europe - Not Our Enemy Unless We Make It So;" "When Does An Economic Plus Become A Human Minus?;" Expanding Our Vision: New Perspective on Peace Research;" "Protracted Nuclear War Fighting and Rural America;" Chapter One "Perpetual War" from the book From War to Peace; and a book review of Three Faces of Power by Kenneth E. Boulding.

Box 2 file 15 contains Conference Papers: "Peace, Justice, Freedom, and Competence in a Changing World" by Kenneth E. Boulding (University of Colorado at Boulder); "General War and Peace in Civilization Perspective" by Matthew Melko (Wright State University, Ohio); and "Hypothesis Concerning War and Peace" by Matthew Melko (Wright State University, Ohio).

Peace-related literature will be found in box 3 file 1. Topics include: the Sandinistas; anti-nuclear weapons protest against General Electric; a possessions calendar; USA/USSR arms control talks; "Stop the Lies About Central America;" military vs. civilian trade-offs; and the Dayton Peace Project. Brochures for the W.S.U. Peace Studies Program and the W.S.U. Peace Studies Association Annual Peace Lectures (first annual lecture - fourth annual lecture) will be found in box 3 file 2. Box 3 file 3 contains programs for peace Events such as the Vigil for Peace in Central America and the Interfaith Prayer Service for Peace.

The "Peace Chronicle" - the Newsletter for the Consortium on Peace Research, Education, and Development (C.O.P.R.E.D.) - and a 1989 Membership List for C.O.P.R.E.D. will be found in box 3 file 4 of this series. Newsletter issues available are Oct. 1986, Feb. 1987, Apr./June 1987, Aug. 1988, June 1989, Aug. 1989, June 1990, Aug. 1990, Feb. 1991, and June/Aug. 1991.

Box 3 file 5 contains various Newsletters such as: the "Bulletin of International Interchanges;" "The Washington Spectator and Between the Lines;" "Voter" [from the League of Women Voters]; "The Defense Monitor;" "Breaking the Siege - The Newsletter of the Middle East Justice Network;" "Peace Magazine;" and the "United States Institute of Peace Journal."

Dates

  • Creation: 1969-1997

Creator

Restrictions on Access

There are no restrictions on accessing materials in this collection.

Restrictions on Use

Copyright restrictions may apply. Unpublished manuscripts are protected by copyright. Permission to publish, quote or reproduce must be secured from the repository and the copyright holder.

History of Dayton Peace Action Committee and Hal Barrett

The Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC) is a faith-based peace-oriented and anti-nuclear organization which began as the Dayton Area Citizens for Arms Race Education (DACARE) in Dayton, Ohio, in 1979. During the late 1980s - early 1990s, DACARE members decided to rename their organization the Dayton Citizens for Global Security (DCGS). DCGS protested the proliferation of nuclear weapons in the U.S. and the dumping of radioactive (nuclear) waste in Ohio. On July 8, 1996, the members of DCGS voted to change the name of their organization. They decided upon Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC). DPAC works to cut spending for unnecessary military and nuclear weapons programs, arguing that the funds - gained through a cut in governmental spending in these two areas - should be invested in American education, housing, health, and environmental protection. There also exists a national Peace Action organization; and through its local chapters (e.g., the Dayton Peace Action Committee), it works to promote global peace through local efforts to stop weapons trafficking and promote nuclear disarmament.

Even though this collection contains memorabilia and papers from DACARE and DCGS, as well as from DPAC, this collection, "The Dayton Peace Action Committee - The Hal Barrett Collection," is so named because it was donated (July 1999) to the Wright State University's Special Collections and Archives by Harold (Hal) Barrett while he was a member of DPAC.

A brief biographical sketch of Harold (Hal) Barrett based on information provided by Mr. Barrett: Hal Barrett was born at Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio, on December 13, 1919. He attended grade schools in Dayton, Ohio; Salina, Kansas; and Galva, Kansas. Hal graduated from Fairview High School in Dayton, Ohio, in 1937. He attended Occidental College in Los Angeles, California, from 1944 - 1946, and then received his Associate of Arts degree from Pasadena City College, California, in 1950. He has also taken courses at American University in Washington, D.C., and Sinclair Community College, Dayton, Ohio.

Hal Barrett has six original musical works published and distributed by the Unitarian-Universalist Association in Boston, Philadelphia and New York. He also has over 70 copyrights of record at the Copyright Office in the Library of Congress.

Hal has held jobs as a general worker, machinist and toolmaker. He has also been a candidate for the Presbyterian ministry. Between 1955 and 1983, Hal worked for the I.A.M. (Machinists Union), the U.S. Department of Labor, and Sinclair Community College. His union work entailed publishing a 17,000 circulation national monthly newspaper, carrying out a national stewards and officers education program, and preparing technical data for presentations to the U.S. House and Senate Committees. In the U.S. Department of Labor, Hal Barrett worked as a Foreign Nationals Training Officer. In this job, he arranged and coordinated programs of education for foreign nationals from third world countries. These programs put the foreign nationals in contact with American equivalents to these trainees' own position in their home country and provided apprenticeship-type training through American corporate workshops. At Sinclair Community College, Hal was part of a local project to establish a Labor Studies degree program (AA); and, after the paperwork was approved, he was asked to become the first chairman of this new degree program at Sinclair Community College. Hal worked in this degree program from 1977 to 1983.

Along with being an active member in DACARE, DCGS, and DPAC, Hal Barrett was also actively involved in such other community organizations as the Dayton Music Club, the Dayton Art Institute, the American Friends' Service Committee (AFSC), the Unitarian-Universalist United Nations Office in New York City, and the Unitarian-Universalist Musicians Network.

When asked: "What do you hope others may get out of the 'Dayton Peace Action Committee - The Hal Barrett Collection', or how are the papers still relevant? Hal replied: "Well, it is first-hand information about the 'hidden' peace movement in the United States between 1979 [when DACARE was created] to 1997 [the last date within this collection]. True, it's a local activity, but it's also part of a national 'movement' during that same period, which had to have had some influence on national policy, and possibly had its effects -- particularly when added to similar, even more vociferous, voices in Europe, and inside the Soviet Union - on halting the nearly catastrophic nuclear arms race, which had the potentials of drawing the whole world into its ravenous whirlpool! And it shows how extensive the local efforts were in this direction, a refutation of any claims that the pacifists sat on their hands and only mouthed their complaints, doing nothing tangible to make their concern known and felt!"

Harold (Hal) Barrett lives in Kailua, Hawaii.

Extent

1.05 linear feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Established in Dayton, Ohio, in 1979, the Dayton Peace Action Committee (DPAC) is a faith-based and peace oriented anti-nuclear organization. DPAC works to cut spending for unnecessary military and nuclear weapons programs, arguing that funds should be invested in American education, housing, health, and environmental protection. The collection consists of administrative records, correspondence, publications, newspaper clippings, programs, books, and Barrett's personal notes concerning DPAC activities.

Statement of Arrangement

The collection is arranged into 8 series:

  1. Series I: Administrative
  2. Series II: Correspondence
  3. Series III: Publications
  4. Series IV: Newspaper Clippings
  5. Series V: Events
  6. Series VI: Media
  7. Series VII: Hal Barrett's Notes
  8. Series VIII: Reed Smith/W.S.U. Peace Studies

Acquisition Information

The collection was donated in July, 1999 to the Wright State University's Special Collections and Archives by Harold (Hal) Barrett while he was a member of DPAC.

Related Material

MS-246 Harold F. Barrett Papers; UA-1 Reed Smith Wright State University Peace Studies Collection

Title
Guide to the Dayton Peace Action Committee Records (MS-300)
Status
Completed
Author
Finding aid prepared by Sarah Stasiakm, May 2001
Date
2015
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Wright State University Libraries
Special Collections and Archives
3640 Colonel Glenn Hwy
Dayton OH 45435-0001 USA
937-775-2092