1967-1968 Columbia SDS Vice-Chair Ted Gold |
The planned attack on “a non-commissioned officers’ dance” at Fort Dix, which Weatherman Terry Robbins apparently pushed for prior to his own death on March 6, 1970, did not happen. But less than 3 weeks before 1967-1968 Columbia SDS Vice-Chairman Ted Gold’s death on that same day 50 years ago, there was an actual violent attack on the U.S. antiwar movement’s Fort Dix GI Coffeehouse in Wrightstown, New Jersey on Saturday, Feb. 14, 1970. As an article distributed by the then-Upper West Side-based Liberation News Service in February 1970, titled “Fort Dix Coffeehouse Fire-Bombed,” noted:
“An incendiary bomb was thrown through the door of the Fort Dix GI-movement Coffee House at 8:45 Saturday evening, Feb. 14 [1970]. Some of the 30 GIs and civilians inside rushed toward the device and tried to kick it out the door. The bomb ignited and three GIs and one woman staff member were injured---sustaining burns and cuts. The most serious injury was to a GI who was cut around the eyes. He is presently in the Fort Dix hospital: his condition is described as satisfactory. Some of the GIs who ran out after the bomb throwers were shot at.
“When N.J. State Police Detectives Bureau agents came to investigate the bombing, they kicked all GIs and staff out of the building and proceeded to rip down posters, tear up GI papers, pull down boards that had been nailed up to fill cracks in the wall, and tamper with the heater (causing it to malfunction)…
“According to GI staff members, the bomb is of a military type. They suspect either members of the military or local right-wingers of carrying out the bombing.
“GI organizers explain that the bombing is only one in a long series of harassments by the military, local and state police, and right-wing groups in the area. The coffee house is already facing eviction this month as a result of pressure put on their landlord by the military and local businessmen. The bombing may have been intended, in part, as a warning to other Wrightstown property-owners not to rent to the anti-war GIs.
“Just a week before the bombing, an army captain and three sergeants came into the coffee house and started to push people around. They shoved one GI away from the telephone, where he was trying to make a call. Radical GIs eventually threw them out, but they threatened to come back with friends and equipment.
“The Fort Dix Coffee House has been the headquarters for dissident GI organizing against the war and against racism. The Fort Dix Soldiers Liberation Front and the Black Liberation Party both make their headquarters at the coffee house. The coffee house played a central role in the organizing of the Oct. 12 [1969] `invasion’ by 10,000 civilians who were demonstrating their support for the Fort Dix 38—participants in the Fort Dix stockade rebellion of June 1969.
“`We will defend ourselves against repression and use all our power to increase our struggle. Power to the people,’ said a spokesman for Fort Dix’s radical GIs.”
According to a Feb. 15, 1970 telephone call (the text of which can be found in a document from the G.I. Press Collection of the Wisconsin Historical Society that’s posted on the internet), a member of the Ford Dix Coffeehouse Collective also stated:
“The police came in and kicked everybody out and investigated the place. The next morning we came back and we found the place more ripped up and torn down than it was the previous night before we left. The police damaged the coffeehouse beyond what the bombing did. They tore Panther posters off the wall and ripped them up…We think it was a pretty well planned thing…This was a professional type bomb, it was not a homemade pipe type bomb…We feel that this is part of a plan to come down on all the [antiwar G.I.] coffeehouses of the country.”
Prior to the Fort Dix Coffehouse being firebombed in February 1970, according to a former New York City SDS regional office organizer involved in initiating the antiwar coffeehouse GI organizing project near Fort Dix, there were many instances of police and army harassment, as he and other antiwar organizers set up the coffeehouse and farm house where they lived outside of Wrightstown, New Jersey. For example, when he and another Movement organizer were pulled over by a New Jersey trooper and asked for an ID, the state trooper demanded that he show him his ID a second time; and when he said to the trooper, “I just gave it to you,” he was then handcuffed, busted for “not having ID,” and forced to spend a couple of nights in BCI-Burlington County Jail on charges that were thrown out subsequently. In addition, according to the same coffeehouse project organizer, in the months prior to the Feb. 14, 1970 attack that finally shut down the Fort Dix GI Coffeehouse, the army also tried to use some troubled GI’s “and lackeys” to plant heroin at the coffeehouse so they could have a pretext to close the antiwar coffeehouse down; but that never worked because they were all recognizable to the antiwar GI’s and Airmen there, and were tossed out before they could cause any problems.
Recalling the Feb. 16, 1970 NYPD Attack on Chicago 8 and Panther 21 Defendants’ Supporters
Two days after the antiwar movement’s Fort Dix GI Coffeehouse was firebombed, however (on Monday afternoon, Feb. 16, 1970), “more than 3,500 supporters” of the Chicago 8 Conspiracy Trial defendants and Panther 21 Trial defendants still “marched on the Criminal Courts Building at 100 Centre St” in Downtown Manhattan “to protest the contempt citations handed down” the previous week by “Judge Julius Hoffman at the Chicago conspiracy trial” (of Black Panther Party leader Bobby Seale, Dave Dellinger and other U.S. antiwar movement organizers), according to a Feb. 17, 1970 Columbia Daily Spectator article by Cyndi Reinhart. But when the demonstrators reached the court house, “about twenty policemen, waving clubs, pushed back the chanting protesters” and “protesters remaining at the court house were herded off the street;” and the police “then charged into the radicals when they refused to leave the area” and “clubbed several protesters.” (end of part 2)