The National Guard rolled out their barbed wire cage Jeeps to block marcher on Michigan Avenue on Thursday. I was not there to see it. |
Note: This
is the eleventh and final installment in my series of memory posts about the
Democratic Convention in Chicago in 1968 and my small role in the streets
action surrounding it. I bail out before
the final confrontations, head home, discover the fate of someone I sent into
harm’s way, and get on with my life.
I
doubt I got any sleep after getting back from the Battle of Michigan Avenue. I ran across the street Thursday morning to
get copies of all of the papers from the boxes on the corner and started in
making breakfast.
More
than half of our charges were missing.
Some had enough of adventure and wisely gone home. Others left sleeping bags and personal stuff
leading us to suspect they were either in jail or in the hospital. In those long ago days before cell phones and
Twitter there was not good way to check their whereabouts. Hell, we didn’t even know the real names of
most of the kids.
By
mid morning a couple of them had staggered in. Plans were being made for the last big
event—one last stab at a big march down Michigan Avenue to the Amphitheater. Everyone knew it was doomed to failure and
would end badly. And frankly, I didn’t
have the stomach for it. I told the SDSers
that it looked like there were enough of them to wind things down at the Movement
Center. I was going home.
That afternoon Gene McCarthy, came over from the Conrad Hilton to address the crowd in Grant Park. Some of his Delegates and former Robert Kennedy Delegates tried to lead a march, but were no more successful that Yippies or Mobe organizers. Dick Gregory instead invited everyone over to his South Side home not far from the International Amphitheater for a barbecue. He told everyone to stay on the sidewalks and headed south on Michigan. As the crowd stirred someone bumped into the French writer Gene Genet who declared, “A Black has told me to march. I must follow him!”
They
got as far south as 18th Street where they were met by the National Guard which
had barbed wire cages mounted on the fronts of Jeeps and plenty of tear
gas. It was the last major confrontation
of the week. And I missed the whole damn
thing. Not at all sorry I missed it, but
felt like a deserter.
By
mid-afternoon I climbed on the L at Diversy, made connection to the Skokie
Swift at Howard and was home before dinner. I never saw Amy Kesseleman, my
companion for much of the events in Grant Park and in front of the Hilton
again.
My
mom in Skokie wouldn’t speak to me. I
had violated the admonition she gave me every time I left the house since I was
12—“Don’t disgrace the family.” When Dad
got home from work I handed him his World War II utility belt, canteen, and ammo
pouch/first aid kit. There were still a
couple of his purloined, now blood soaked, handkerchiefs inside. “It saw some action again,” I told him. The old combat medical officer just
nodded. We never spoke of it again.
Network cameras zeroed in on Mayor Richard A. Daley's enraged face as delegates denounced the ongoing police violence. |
That night we silently watched coverage from the Convention in the living room. There was chaos inside the arena, too. Vice President Humphrey, McCarthy, and George McGovern, the fall back choice of many of the Kennedy delegates, were placed in nominations to mixed cheers, jeers, and boos. Delegates and journalists were accosted and arrested on the floor. America became familiar with Mayor Richard Daley’s rage filled face. Humphrey, the grand old liberal icon won the hollow nomination and tried to make the best of it in his acceptance speech. But the Democratic Party was shattered. He could never shake the long shadow of LBJ’s war or Daley’s police goon rampages.
I
had already made reservation to fly to Ohio on Friday to spend some time with Jon
Gordon, my best high school buddy at Antioch College in Yellow Springs. I boarded the plane at O’Hare in pretty much
the same uniform as I had worn all week—plaid shirt, red neckerchief, denim
jacket, and soiled white Stetson, this time with the wadded up newspaper
padding removed.
Down
the aisle and a few seats ahead I recognized a familiar face—SDS honcho Carl Oglesby. One arm was encumbered in a very heavy
cast. Before takeoff, I ambled up the
aisle and asked him what had happened.
It took him a moment to connect me with the kid he met in the bar late
Sunday night. Then the light went
on. “Oh, yeah, remember how you told us
it was quiet back in Old Town? It
wasn’t,” he said.
That fall, I returned to Shimer College in Mount Carroll. I had stories to tell. Helped keep me in pot and cheap beer at Poffenberger’s
tavern. It turned out to be my last
semester there.
In December I
came home and went back to work in the air-conditioning plant for six weeks. I
raised enough money to get a very cheap apartment on Howe Street west of Old
Town. I started school at Columbia
College as a creative writing major. The
major domo of the writing department was John Schultz who was working on his
book about the convention, No One Was
Killed.
In
June I decided to join the IWW. I had
been thinking about it since encountering the old timers at headquarters. To my astonishment the first Chicago Branch
meeting I attended had almost a hundred members in attendance—most of them
young. I was in on the ground floor of a
mini-renaissance of the old radical union.
By August I was coordinating IWW participation in the People’s Park project
at Armitage and Halstead. I spent the
next ten or so years of my life with the IWW as an organizer, soap boxer,
agitator, local officer, editor, and even my own term as General Secretary
Treasurer sitting at Big Bill Haywood’s
desk.
This classic issue of the Seed was on the streets tor the opening of the Chicago 8--soon to be Chicago 7--trial in September 1969 and so, again, was I. |
When
the Feds put Hoffman, Rubin, Davis, Dellinger, Bobby Seale, and sacrificial lambs
John Froines, and Lee Weiner on trial charged conspiracy and inciting to riot,
I joined by old Shimer friends Bill Delaney and Sally MacMurraugh on a
march from Lincoln Park to the Federal Building that turned into a kind of running
battle with police. My experience
staying upwind of tear gas paid off.
I
also ended up joining the staff of the Seed in
1971, by then relocated to offices above Alice’s Revisited on Wrightwood. The guys who had eyed me suspiciously when I
wandered in on the at the LaSalle Street office were long gone by then. It was my turn to be paranoid when strangers
showed up at the office wanting to join the revolution.
I
never turned in my assigned account of the Yippies during the convention to
that Free University class. I guess this
is it. Professor Lynd, will I be marked
down?
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