House Un-American Activities Committee
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House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC or HCUA) (1938–1975) was an investigative committee of the United States House of Representatives. It is often referred to as the House Un-American Activities Committee. In 1969, the House changed the committee's name to the Committee on Internal Security. When the House abolished the committee in 1975, its functions were transferred to the House Judiciary Committee.
The committee's anti-communist investigations are often confused with those of Senator Joseph McCarthy. McCarthy, as a senator, had no direct involvement with this House committee.
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[edit] McCormack-Dickstein (1934)
This House committee, McCormack-Dickstein, was named after its chairman and vice chairman, John W. McCormack and Samuel Dickstein. It was called the Special Committee on Un-American Activities Authorized to Investigate Nazi Propaganda and Certain Other Propaganda Activities. In 1934, it held public and private hearings in six cities, questioned hundreds of witnesses and collected testimony filling 4,300 pages. Its mandate was to get "information on how foreign subversive propaganda entered the U.S. and the organizations that were spreading it."
The committee investigated and supported allegations of a fascist plot to seize the White House, known as the Business Plot. It was replaced with a similar committee that focused on pursuing communists. Its records are held by NARA (the National Archives and Records Administration) as related records to HUAC.
[edit] Dies Committee (1938–1944)
The House Committee on Un-American Activities grew from a special investigating committee established in May 1938, chaired by Martin Dies and co-chaired by Samuel Dickstein, himself named in Soviet NKVD documents as a Soviet agent. In pre-war years and during World War II it was known as the Dies Committee. Its work was supposed to be aimed mostly at German American involvement in Nazi and Ku Klux Klan activity. As to investigations into the activities of the "Klan," the Committee actually did little. When HUAC's chief counsel Ernest Adamson announced that "The committee has decided that it lacks sufficient data on which to base a probe," committee member John E. Rankin added: "After all, the KKK is an old American institution." Instead of the Klan, HUAC concentrated on investigating the possibility that the American Communist Party had infiltrated the Works Progress Administration, including the Federal Theatre Project.
The Dies Committee also carried out a brief investigation into the wartime internment of Japanese Americans living on the West Coast. The investigation primarily concerned security at the camps, youth gangs allegedly operating in the camps, food supply questions, and releases of internees. With the exception of Rep. Eberharter the members of the committee seemed to support internment.
In 1938, Hallie Flanagan, the head of the Federal Theatre Project, was subpoenaed to appear before the committee to answer the charge that the project was overrun with communists. Flanagan was called to testify for only a part of one day, while a clerk from the project was called in for two entire days. It was during this investigation that one of the committee members famously asked Flanagan whether the Elizabethan playwright Christopher Marlowe was a member of the Communist Party.
In 1939 the committee investigated leaders of the American Youth Congress, a Comintern affiliate organization.
[edit] Subversion
HUAC became a standing (permanent) committee in 1946. Under the mandate of Public Law 601, passed by the 79th Congress, the committee of nine representatives investigated suspected threats of subversion or propaganda that attacked "the form of government guaranteed by our Constitution."
The committee came into its own when it acted on suspicions that some people with Communist sympathies and affiliations worked within the United States government. Some Americans in the 1930s had often been attracted to Marxism, particularly to Spain's Popular Front government. Many US intellectuals worked to support the Republican government in Spain against the fascist uprising led by Francisco Franco. This work brought them into contact with the US Communist party, and in opposition to US government policy, which was not supportive of the elected government in Spain. Several of these people had reached positions of influence during World War II and the late 1940s.
In 1947, HUAC investigated wartime shipment of uranium to the Soviet Union. The Committee reported that in 1943, with high-level protection inside the government, the United States government issued export licenses for the delivery of millions of pounds of atomic bomb-making materials. Restrictive orders of the Manhattan Project were bypassed by an American firm called the Canadian Radium and Uranium Corporation. Security concerns for the National Laboratories also came under review.
There were also fears agents were still actively working to subvert American foreign policy and needed to be removed from positions of influence. In particular, the committee, with the leadership of representatives such as Richard Nixon, brought about the trial and conviction of State Department employee Alger Hiss.[1]
[edit] Hollywood blacklist
In 1947, the committee held nine days of hearings into alleged Communist propaganda in the Hollywood motion picture industry. After conviction on contempt of Congress charges for refusal to answer some questions posed by committee members, the "Hollywood Ten" were blacklisted by the industry. Eventually, more than 300 artists—including directors, radio commentators, actors and particularly screenwriters—were boycotted by the studios. Some, like Charlie Chaplin, left the US to find work. Others wrote under pseudonyms or the names of colleagues. Only about ten percent succeeded in rebuilding careers within the entertainment industry.
In 1947, studio executives told the Committee that wartime films like Mission to Moscow and Song of Russia could be considered pro-Soviet propaganda, but they suggested that the films were valuable in the context of the Allied war effort. In the 1950s the studios produced a number of anti-communist and anti-Soviet propaganda films like John Wayne's Big Jim McLain, The Red Menace, The Red Danube, I Married a Communist, I Was a Communist for the FBI and Red Planet Mars. Most were box-office failures, but placated Hollywood's critics and protected the industry against a threatened boycott campaign.[2]
[edit] Decline
HUAC lost considerable prestige after it subpoenaed Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman of the Yippies in 1967, and again in the aftermath of the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Unlike previous subjects of the committee's investigations, the Yippies neither respected nor feared the committee, and used media attention to make a mockery of the proceedings. Rubin came to one session dressed as an American Revolutionary War soldier, and passed out copies of the Declaration of Independence to people in attendance.[3] Then Rubin "blew giant gum bubbles while his co-witnesses taunted the committee with Nazi salutes."[4] Hoffman attended a session dressed as Santa Claus. On another occasion, police stopped Hoffmann at the building entrance and arrested him for wearing an American flag. Hoffman quipped for the press, "I regret that I have but one shirt to give for my country," which paraphrased the last words of revolutionary patriot Nathan Hale; meanwhile Rubin, who was wearing a matching Viet Cong flag, shouted that the police were communists for not arresting him also.[5]
According to the Harvard Crimson:
In the fifties, the most effective sanction was terror. Almost any publicity from HUAC meant the 'blacklist.' Without a chance to clear his name, a witness would suddenly find himself without friends and without a job. But it is not easy to see how in 1969 a HUAC blacklist could terrorize an SDS activist. Witnesses like Jerry Rubin have openly boasted of their contempt for American institutions. A subpoena from HUAC would be unlikely to scandalize Abbie Hoffman or his friends.[6] |
Embarrassed by the circus these men created, the committee changed its name, now known to its detractors as the "House Committing Un-American Activities", in early 1969 and lost most of its power.
[edit] Committee chairs and notable members
- Martin Dies Jr., chair 1938–1944
- John Parnell Thomas, chair 1947–1948
- John Stephens Wood, chair 1949–1953
- Harold Himmel Velde, chair 1953–1955
- Francis Walter, chair 1955–1965
- Edwin Edward Willis, chair 1965–1969
- Richard Howard Ichord Jr., chair 1969–1975
- Richard Nixon
- Gordon H. Scherer
- Karl Earl Mundt
- Felix Edward Hébert
- John Elliott Rankin
- Samuel Dickstein
[edit] See also
- California Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities
- Waldorf Statement
- Hollywood blacklist
- McCarthyism
- J. Edgar Hoover
- Zero Mostel (includes a segment of a HUAC hearing)
- Loyalty oath
- Philip Dunne
- Ayn Rand
- Hans Zeisel
- Walt Disney
[edit] Notes
- ^ [1] (accessed 17 September 2006)
- ^ Dan Georgakas, "Hollywood Blacklist" from Buhle, Buhle, and Georgakas, ed., Encyclopedia of the American Left (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1992). [2] (accessed 17 September 2006)
- ^ [3] Accessed 17 September 2006
- ^ [4] (accessed 17 September 2006)
- ^ Jerry Rubin, "A Yippie Manifesto" [5] (accessed 17 September 2006)
- ^ "By Any Other Name" by Thomas Geogheghan, 24 February 1969 [6] (accessed 17 September 2006)
[edit] Further reading
- US House of Representatives, 81st Congress, 2nd Session, Committee on Un-American Activities, Hearings Regarding Shipment of Atomic Material to the Soviet Union During World War II (DC, US Gov Printing Office [GPO], 1950)
[edit] External links
- The National Laboratories and the Atomic Energy Commission in the Early Cold War
- Political Counterintelligence Subversive Activities Control Board (SACB)