Coquitlam Public Library

Women for Peace

Label
Women for Peace
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Main title
Women for Peace
Oclc number
945763040
resource.otherEventInformation
Originally produced by Estuary Press in 1962
Runtime
23
Summary
Women for Peace covers the founding of the organization and many of the first peace demonstrations that it sponsored. With narration by Frances Herring, a founder of Women for Peace, the film covers 1961 and 1962 anti-nuclear demonstrations in California and Nevada, and many other activities undertaken by the group. In San Francisco, on August 6, 1962, Harvey Richards photographed the Women for Peace march to commemorate the anniversary of the U.S. dropping of the atom bomb on Hiroshima. Marching in a time of complacency and ubiquitous anti-communist media bias, these demonstrators received little or no publicity from the established media. Calling for No More War, protesters marched around an area in San Francisco equal in size to the area destroyed in Hiroshima by the bomb. Eva Helen Pauling spoke at the rally at Civic Center in San Francisco where the march ended. Alice Richards, one of the founders of Women for Peace, and also spoke at the rally. Out of these demonstrations came the peace organization Women for Peace. Harvey Richards documented the west coast activities and formation of this group in his film Women for Peace, with the script written by his wife, Alice Richards and narrated by her friend Francis Herring, both co founders of the group. One of the first actions of Women for Peace was the protest against nuclear testing outside the testing zone in Mercury, Nevada where women picketed openly with helicopter surveillance flying over them
Technique
live action
resource.filmmaker
Mapped to

Incoming Resources

  • Has instance
    1