◆ SpookStack

Declassified Document Archive & Reader
Log In Register
Reader Ad Slot
Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.

American Friends Service Committee — Part 4

108 pages · May 08, 2026 · Document date: Mar 15, 1957 · Broad topic: Politics & Activism · Topic: American Friends Service Committee · 98 pages OCR'd
← Back to feed
UY with the demonstra- ead the group police command may appear to side tore asking them to sing a few songs or park bv g a ww alee, ‘pe Vs in prayer (this happened on the part of the Maryland State Guard in Cambridge in May, 1964), before asking them politely to disperse. This can be coupled with veiled threats to have leading demonstrators com- mitted for observation to mental] institutions, which also happened in Cambridge -- this threat seems to be o more ecavere than cimnloe nriaon But the chiective is GF Sait BELEEES delete! siete peewee FU Bh wary ot oF & ® rm) fo if S a isperse demonstrators at all costs. Given the basic objective of the civil rights move- ment ina demonstration, namely to publicize a wrong, confront the community with the facts, and sometimes create dislocation in order to secure action, police tactics are a ee Lord only half of the picture. The leadership abil- ity, perspectives, and organization of the civil rights The best possible combination is to have a well-organized, well-educated demonstrators are also important. movement, combined with generally accepted and legal police tactics. The worst is to have neither. Most dem- onstrations fall somewhere in between. But even under t kind of police renression, if the movement is fae we pwr eee ee 8 pe was y the wors well-disciplined the basic objective need not be lost. Basic objectives can be lost in a host of charges and counter-charges if the movement is disorganized, no matter how enlightened the police may be. 82 Discipline which maximizes the basic objectives of a demonstration involves a well-organized demonstration with clear lines of command and communication, and with a clear understanding by the participants of what they are to do in a variety of circumstances. Communicating, or at least try- ing to communicate, the objectives of the demonstration not only to the general public but also to the police command in advance is considered an important part of organization. A dignified bearing at all times is also important, par~ ticularly when making physical contact with police units. — Calling a demonstration off at a particular point, or re- treating in the face of police or mob violence is perfectly okay; but it should be done by pre-arranged plan, and in aan) a rly &@ manner as is possible under the circum- an nea as orde stances. This points up the "image" of the movement, and makes it more difficult to charge the civil rights group with being nothing but a "rabble" commanded by "irresponsible agitators."" Dignity also has a very defi- nite effect upon police and onlookers, and tends to break down their prejudiced notions about the movement. Non- c essential part of a dignified demon- stration, and even of an orderly retreat. Police Tactics Here are some comments on "Counter-~Demonstra- tion Operations" in terms of specific tactics used by police, go that you will have some idea of the kinds of things you may expect. 83
OCR quality for this page
Community corrections
First editor: none yet Last editor: none yet
No user corrections yet.
Comments
Document-wide discussion. Follow the Community Standards.
No comments on this document yet.
Bottom Reader Ad Slot
Bottom Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.

Continue Exploring

Use the strongest next step for this document: continue reading, jump to the topic hub, or move into the matching agency collection.
Continue Reading at Page 66
Jump straight to page 66 of 108.
Reader
American Friends Service Committee — Part 21
Stay inside American Friends Service Committee with another closely related document.
Topic
FBI Documents & FOIA Archive
Open the FBI agency landing page for stronger archive context.
FBI
American Friends Service Committee Topic Hub
See the topic overview, related documents, and linked subtopics.
Hub

Agency Collection

This document also belongs in the FBI Documents & FOIA Archive landing page, which is the stronger starting point for agency-level browsing and for searches focused on FBI records.
FBI Documents & FOIA Archive
Open the agency landing page for introduction text, topic links, and more FBI documents.
FBI

Explore This Archive Cluster

This document belongs to the Politics & Activism archive hub and the more specific American Friends Service Committee topic page. Use these hub pages when you want the broader collection context, linked subtopics, and more documents around the same archive thread.
federal bureau letter
Related subtopics
J Edgar Hoover Appointment and Phone Logs
42 documents · 3899 known pages
Subtopic
Senator Edward Kennedy
33 documents · 3523 known pages
Subtopic
ACLU
26 documents · 191 known pages
Subtopic
J Edgar Hoover
24 documents · 1926 known pages
Subtopic
Billy Carter
20 documents · 688 known pages
Subtopic
ABSCAM
10 documents · 636 known pages
Subtopic