Difference between revisions of "John Stanford"
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==May Day Greetings== | ==May Day Greetings== | ||
− | In May 1992 The [[Communist Party USA]] newspaper [[Peoples Weekly World]] published a May Day supplement. ''May Day Greetings'' were sent from [[John Stanford]] | + | In May 1992 The [[Communist Party USA]] newspaper [[Peoples Weekly World]] published a May Day supplement. ''May Day Greetings'' were sent from [[John Stanford]]<ref>PPW May Day Supplement May 2 1992</ref>. |
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− | <ref>PPW May Day Supplement May 2 1992</ref>. | ||
==Communist Party Labor Day call== | ==Communist Party Labor Day call== |
Revision as of 22:07, 14 February 2010
John W Stanford...
John Stanford is a longtime Texas Communist Party USA member.
Stanford joined the Party[1]on the day after his discharge from the US Navy in 1946. He became an activist within weeks, soon after re-enrolling at the University of Texas at Austin.
The "Sweatt" affair
Late in 1946, the Houston Informer reported that Stanford gave a speech in the basement of a Baptist church, under the sponsorship of the youth wing of the NAACP.
- White students are learning that it is time for them to fight for the rights of the Negro people...If we increase our unity, we can make of the South a place where everyone can have a decent living, health, and education facilities.
Stanford, delivered his Houston speech to support a lawsuit by Heman Sweatt, a Black postal worker, to gain admission to the University of Texas law school.
After a tough campaign Sweatt was victorious. He posthumously become a Texas hero-his portrait displayed at the Institute of Texan Cultures, a scholarship and college campus named in his honor.
- Members of the Communist Party customarily don’t reveal the names of members or former members who are still alive. But Sweatt’s death has freed Stanford to declare that at the time of the suit, Sweatt, too, was a Communist Party member.
Activism, going underground
Stanford moved to the Bayou City following his graduation from UT, and on September 16, 1948 – El Diez y Seis de Septiembre, Mexican Independence Day – the bilingual agitator was arrested for distributing Party leaflets decrying “the ruthless economic, political, and social oppression of the Mexican-American people.”
In 1950, Stanford circulated the Stockholm Peace Petition, which called for banning nuclear weapons and was a project of the CPUSA.
In 1951, Texas passed a Communist Control Act that required Party members to register with authorities, and prescribed a two- to 10-year prison term for failure to comply with the law. The Party decided to challenge the law’s constitutionality and Stanford, who was by then living in San Antonio, volunteered to be the test case, mailing an open letter to officials in 1952, declaring his membership. According to the plan, he was to refuse to register when the authorities responded.
After Stanford mailed his statement, the Party’s leadership found that it didn’t have the resources to pursue the Texas challenge, and ordered him to go underground.
To avoid arrest, he fled to Alabama, finding a job as a waiter at a diner and tried to lay low. After a few weeks in Birmingham, Stanford began attending meetings of a committee that was opposing fare hikes on city buses. Alabama bus fare activists, however, were wary of the Texan who showed up as if from nowhere-they thought that he was an FBI agent.
Stanford’s arrangement with the Party–was that he was to stay out of view for six months, then place a classified ad in the leading daily newspaper, saying that he had lost a meerschaum pipe. The person who called to report the discovery of the meerschaum, the plan went, would become his contact with the Party. Stanford placed the ad and a young woman called. He asked her to meet him at the diner on a Sunday morning, when business was slow.
Joanna Tylee walked in, she recalls, and upon seeing the Texan whom she remembered from the bus fare meetings, thought that she had walked into a trap. Joanna Tylee became Mrs Joanna Stanford.
Following their marriage, the stanford's returned to San Antonio to reorganized the city’s Communist Party club.
Government raid and Supreme Court case
In 1961 Stanford began selling communist literature through a mail-order bookstore in his home called All Points of View.
The business was raided in 1963 and Stanford was hauled into court-represented by his attorney, the late Maury Maverick, Jr.
The case went to the Supreme Court, where it failed and all of Stanford's material and literature was returned.
May Day Greetings
In May 1992 The Communist Party USA newspaper Peoples Weekly World published a May Day supplement. May Day Greetings were sent from John Stanford[2].
Communist Party Labor Day call
The Communist Party USA paper People's Weekly World issued a statement to mark Labor Day 1995, entitled "We honor the dead and fight like hell for the living."
Of the more than 100 endorsers listed, almost all were identified members of the Communist Party USA.
John Stanford, CWA San Antonio Texas, was on the list.[3]
Later activism
In later years Stanford was involved in dozens of other causes-the unionization of Valley farm workers, the campaign to free Angela Davis, protests over US involvement in Central America and since 2001, Thursday peace vigils at the San Fernando Cathedral.
References
- ↑ http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/5069/
- ↑ PPW May Day Supplement May 2 1992
- ↑ People's Weekly World Sep 2 1995 p 14