AMERICANISM
"Americanism is an unfailing love of
country: loyalty to its institutions and
ideals; eagerness to defend it against all
enemies; undivided allegiance to the flag;
and a desire to secure the blessings of
liberty to ourselves and posterity."
This was the definition adopted during the
late 1920's or early 1930's by the
Commanders-in-Chief of the VFW and national
commanders of four other veteran's
organizations. But long before these leaders
agreed on this definition, the VFW had
founded its own Americanism program based on
the principles of its constitution.
The program got its start under Captain
Walter I. Joyce on March 1, 1921. As
Chairman of the Committee on
Americanization, Joyce embarked on an
aggressive campaign to stir up patriotism
across the United States. His early efforts
were aimed at furthering the goals of the
VFW Creed he had developed himself. This
creed, adopted by the National Council of
Administration in January 1921, declared
that the VFW would:
-
Do everything within its power to
eliminate the hyphen in organizations
composed of residents or citizens of the
United States." [That is, that there
should be no Irish-Americans,
German-Americans, Italian-Americans,
etc., only Americans.]
-
That this organization endeavor to bring
about the speaking of the language of
our country at all times and in all
places within the boundaries of the
United States.
-
That this organization emphatically
favor publication of the newspapers of
our country in the language of our
country and positively discourage as an
act of disloyalty the publication of our
newspapers in the language of any other
country or race.
-
That we use our utmost efforts through
legislation and other means to insist
that the alien population of this
country prepare to become citizens or
prepare to leave the country until they
change their minds, and furthermore that
all aliens who for cause have been
refused citizenship be deported at once.
-
Resolved, that the above declared
principles be spread broadcast by the
VFW in carrying out its principles of
Americanism."
This creed was distributed to members
throughout the country, as well as to other
military, fraternal, and veteran's
organizations. Eventually, 150,000
signatures were obtained on a petition
urging the adoption of this program to
"Americanize America."
During the early 1920's, a second Joyce
campaign, to "Buy American," and a third, to
take "Un-American Textbooks out of the
schools," followed closely behind the first.
Close to a million copies of Joyce's
booklet, "Etiquette of the Stars and
Stripes," were also distributed to schools,
posts, and other organizations during this
period.
Joyce's crowning achievement was to lead the
VFW in the campaign to have the
"Star-Spangled Banner" proclaimed our
national anthem. For years, the
"Star-Spangled Banner" had been our
unofficial anthem, and in 1916 President
Woodrow Wilson had declared that it was,
indeed, our national anthem. But the song
could not be our official anthem until
Congress approved a bill declaring it so.
At Joyce's request, New York Congressman
Hamilton Fish introduced a bill into the
69th Congress to make the "Star-Spangled
Banner" our national anthem, but to no
avail. Fish reintroduced the same bill into
the 70th Congress. Again no action was
taken. On January 30, 1930, representatives
of the VFW and more than sixty veteran and
patriotic groups met in a conference in
Washington. They urged passage of the
Star-Spangled Banner Bill, then pending in
Congress. Hearings on this bill, which had
been introduced by Congressman Charles
Linthicum of Maryland, were to begin the
next day. At this hearing, VFW petitions
bearing more than 5 million signatures were
presented to the House Judiciary Committee.
In addition, the VFW presented favorable
endorsements from organizations totaling
over 15 million in membership. Still, there
were objections to the bill. Pacifists
complained that the words were too military.
Others said the tune was too hard to sing.
To help overcome these objections, Joyce
arranged for the U.S. Navy Band and soprano
Elsie Reilly, a member of the
Auxiliary to Post 824 of Washington, D.C.,
to perform the song for the committee. Her
rendition must have been particularly
stirring because the bill made it out of
committee and was approved by the House on
April 21, 1930.
In the Senate, the bill was held up in the
Library Committee until February of the
following year. Joyce and other members of
the VFW Legislative Committee called on the
senators opposed to the bill and secured
their agreement not to block passage.
Finally, the Star-Spangled Banner Bill made
it to the floor of the Senate on March 3,
1931. This time it fared well. Just hours
before Congress adjourned it was passed
unanimously and signed into law by President
Hoover.
In the mid 1930's, Victor Devereaux followed
Joyce as Director of the Americanism
program. As Devereaux instilled his own
beliefs into the program, it gradually
became more right wing. The new director
guided the program's efforts to expose
radical elements and subversive
organizations operating inside our country.
These activities reached their peak in World
War II. During the war, the Department of
Americanism cooperated with the F.B.I. in
reporting subversive groups and acts of
sabotage.
Devereaux also began the VFW Youth Activity
program in 1935. The following year, the
National Encampment passed a resolution
requiring that a national director of Youth
Activities be appointed and instructing each
department and post to appoint a director of
these junior activities. Through this
program, many Sons and Daughters of the VFW
units were formed. These groups reached a
membership peak of 50,000 to 65,000 before
the outbreak of World War II. Later, many
sons' units were disbanded when their
members joined the service, and the Junior
Girls units were absorbed into the
Auxiliary. Other youth projects included a
National Softball Tournament, rifle shooting
tournaments, Bicycle Safety Clubs,
sponsorship of Boy Scout and Cub Scout
troops, and a model airplane building club
with over 50,000 members. So successful
would these youth activities become that in
1945 youth activities were made into a
separate program with their own director.
Another of Devereaux's accomplishments was
to found a speaker's club whose members
presented prepared speeches about America,
veterans, youth activities, and other topics
to groups and social gatherings across the
nation. Through this club, 300 to 400
speakers each gave about a dozen speeches a
year.
Upon the resignation of Devereaux in 1945,
Mark Kinsey, an Iowa newspaperman and radio
writer, became Americanism director. His
primary contribution to the program was to
compile, evaluate, and distribute
information on Americanism and to speak for
the VFW on Americanism matters. Under his
direction, the Americanism Department
prepared scripts that were used by 500 radio
stations across the country, as well as
articles that were published in 120
magazines and newspapers. He also set up a
section to answer requests from
organizations and individuals for
information concerning VFW policies and
general patriotic subjects. In 1947, the
Americanism Department mailed over 5,600
"Speak Up for Democracy" scripts and press
releases, 4,300 sets of articles and
speeches, and 3,500 personal letters.
In 1949, the Americanism Department began a
long fight to have May 1st designated as
"Loyalty Day." In doing so, it hoped to
counteract the messages of hate which the
Communists broadcast during their annual May
Day celebrations. For many years, the VFW
struggled to get Congress to consider the
bill. Finally, in 1954, Congressman and
three-time National Commander-in-Chief James
E. Van Zandt of Pennsylvania introduced a
House Joint Resolution calling for the
declaration of Loyalty Day. His bill passed
the House, but not the Senate. Undaunted, he
reintroduced the bill in 1955. This time,
Congress passed the bill, but designated
only May 1st of that year as "Loyalty Day."
Not satisfied, the VFW continued its push to
have May 1st of each year proclaimed as
"Loyalty Day." This date was finally given
official recognition in 1958 when Congress
adopted Public Law 529 designating May 1st
as Loyalty Day. Although never recognized as
a major national holiday, Loyalty Day is
still celebrated by posts, county councils,
and districts all across this nation. To
demonstrate their loyalty to our nation, its
ideals, and its flag these units sponsor
parades, hold dinners to honor wartime and
peacetime heroes, and donate and
ceremoniously replace worn and tattered
flags flying in their community.
Shortly after the campaign for Loyalty Day
was concluded, the Americanism Department
succeeded in achieving another long-standing
goal. For twenty years, the VFW had been
working for the admission of Hawaii into the
union; in fact, it had been the first
patriotic organization to propose admission.
On August 21, 1959, Hawaii became the
fiftieth state.
Just as the VFW Creed had set the tone for
the Americanism Department's activities in
the 1920's, in the 1960's the Americanism
Department was guided by a new manifesto.
During the 1961 to 1962 year, the national
Americanism committee approved the following
Code of Ethics for The Veterans of Foreign
Wars Fight Against Communism.
CODE OF ETHICS
-
We will support the principles of
freedom and justice, law and order upon
which our country, the United States of
America, is founded.
-
We will support and seek to strengthen
our institutions, public or private,
which preserve, protect and defend our
American freedoms.
-
We will initiate steps and work with
others to solve local problems by means
of positive, constructive community
action, no matter how small or large the
problem.
-
We recognize that it is our duty as
loyal, active citizens to vote
intelligently, based on careful
consideration of issues and candidates,
and to follow through by keeping elected
officials informed of our views on all
issues affecting the interests of all
the people.
-
We accept as a basis for action that
Communists - whatever they profess at
any given moment - are seeking by any
and all means to subvert and destroy our
ideals and national security. We will
seek to defeat Communist objectives by
the use of all legitimate means within
the framework of our free society.
-
We will not resort to gossip-mongering,
name-calling tactics, or characterize
any individual or organization as
Communist on our own authority. We will
regard such actions as threatening the
basic freedoms which we are striving to
defend.
-
We will carry our fight against
Communists and at their objectives on
the basis of issues rather than
personalities relying upon the
persuasiveness of our position, rather
than upon any form of intimidation or
force, to bring success to our cause.
-
We will test every issue two ways: (1)
on the basis of whether action stemming
from it will strengthen or weaken the
free institutions and national security
of the United States, and (2) on the
basis of whether such action will
strengthen or weaken the Communist cause
in our country or abroad.
-
We recognize that one of the greatest
needs in our country today is education
against Communism. We will initiate and
support efforts to more fully enlighten
all the people concerning Communist
principles, objectives and techniques,
and follow through by emphasizing the
attributes of our American way of life.
-
Our objective in supporting American
ideals and in defeating Communist aims
is not to act alone in order to win
honor for ourselves; rather it is to
work with like-minded citizens for the
security, for the increased unity, and
for the continuing improvement of our
country.
Throughout the 1960's, the Americanism
Department worked to foster support for our
troops fighting Communism in Vietnam. With
the help of the Auxiliary, VFW
members gathered and sent relief supplies
such as food, clothing, and medical supplies
to our soldiers in Vietnam for distribution
among the Vietnamese civilians whose way of
life had been devastated by the war.
While it was supporting the players in the
current conflict, the VFW did not forget
those who had served in earlier wars. After
learning that nowhere in France was there a
memorial to World War I American
Expeditionary Forces Commander and VFW
member John J. Pershing, the VFW set about
rectifying that oversight. In February of
1967, with another VFW member, Dwight D.
Eisenhower, heading the memorial committee,
an impressive statue sculpted by
world-famous artist Felix W. de Weldon was
erected. Because of the high regard the
French veterans had for their American
counterparts, the city of Paris approved
$10,000 for landscaping the site.
As the 1960's gave way to the 1970's, the
Americanism Department and its activities
had become such an integral part of the
organization as a whole that less and less
distinction was made between what was a VFW
project and what was an exclusive project of
the Americanism Department. Certainly in
reporting activities to the media, it was
less cumbersome to say that something was
done by the VFW, rather than as an
Americanism Project of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars of the United States. It was
the same work, done in the same way, by the
same people, only the credit was given in a
different way. Inside the organization,
however, the work was still accredited and
reported and judged by the same people in
the same way.
During the nation's bicentennial year, the
VFW and its Auxiliary unveiled yet
another monument - the "Torch of Freedom"
monument. Located on the grounds of the VFW
Washington Office in our nation's capital,
this thirty-six-foot-high, three-sided
marble and bronze sculpture features
three-dimensional plaques recalling
America's battles for freedom. At the top is
a simulated flame which is lighted at night.
The monument bears the inscription:
"Out of the past so great to build a greater
future in honor and memory of the veterans
of all America's wars who by their service
kept the Torch of Freedom burning. This
monument is dedicated by the Veterans of
Foreign Wars and the Auxiliary to the
VFW in honor of all who have served, their
parents, wives and children."
Over the next years, recognition of those
who had kept the Torch of Freedom burning
remained a high priority of the VFW and its
Americanism Department. At the VFW National
Convention in August 1982, Jan Scruggs,
president of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Fund paid tribute to the VFW's part in
helping the Vietnam Veterans Memorial become
a reality. Scruggs recalled that in 1969 he
recommended to Congress that a monument be
erected to Vietnam veterans. When Congress
backed away from the project, he elected to
undertake the project himself. "I needed
money to stimulate the necessary interest,
and the VFW was the only organization to
come forward with some money. Then I had to
go to Congress to get two acres near the
Lincoln Memorial. Cooper T. Holt, the
Executive Director of the VFW Washington
Office, got personally involved. Then the
VFW had fund raising dinners and everywhere
I went the VFW was right in the middle of
it. They actually contributed $300,000. Even
during the arguments over the style of the
monument, the VFW stood with us."
During the Vietnam Memorial Monument
Dedication on November 10 to 14, 1982, the
VFW was well represented by its Jr. Vice
Commander-in-Chief and Vietnam veteran Billy
Ray Cameron of North Carolina. Cameron
participated in all of the events and was
one of the principle speakers for the actual
dedication ceremony of November 23rd.
Cameron told the 250,000 assembled for the
dedication, "The VFW has always held, and
will continue to hold to the ancient wisdom
that says, ‘Hate War, Yet Honor The
Warrior.'"
Two years later, on Memorial Day 1984, the
VFW helped win another struggle for the
Vietnam veterans. After years of advocating
by the VFW and other veteran's
organizations, the body of an unknown
Vietnam veteran was interred in Arlington
National Cemetery alongside his
comrades-in-arms from the First and Second
World Wars and the Korean War.
In 1989 and 1990, the VFW again manned the
ramparts, this time in a war with the
Supreme Court and the Congress over the
"Desecration of the American Flag Issue." On
June 11, 1989, the Flag Act of 1989-which
prescribed penalties for the desecration or
burning of the American Flag-had been
declared unconstitutional in a 5:4 decision
by the Supreme Court. The VFW announced it
would keep the heat on Congress until it
passed a constitutional amendment to resolve
this controversial issue. In a hurried, but
massive effort, the VFW and other patriotic
organizations attempted to force Congress
into calling for and ratifying a
constitutional amendment. Although their
effort came to naught, they vowed to keep
the issue alive until some adequate
protection is given our national banner.
In another emotional area, the VFW took a
leading role in prompting Congress and the
nation in remembering the virtually
forgotten veterans of the Korean War.
Putting its money where its mouth was, the
VFW surpassed its fund-raising commitment by
tendering $550,000 toward the Korean War
Memorial Fund. The Auxiliary
contributed an additional $97,000.
The top ten contributors
to the Korean War Memorial were:
-
Hyundai Motor America and U.S.
Distributors: $1,204,000
-
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United
States: $550,000
-
Disabled American Veterans: $520,000
-
Korean War Veterans Association:
$500,000
-
Paralyzed Veterans of America: $175,000
-
VFW Auxiliary: $97,000
-
AFLICIO Affiliates: $80,000
-
American Legion: $75,000
-
Ford Motor Company: $50,000
-
Pohang Steel America: $50,000
To drum up further recognition for those who
fought in Korea, the VFW helped convince
Congress to pass a resolution honoring
veterans of the Korean War. The resolution
declared that June 25, 1990, would be known
as Korean War Veterans Recognition Day. On
that day, VFW posts worldwide offered
special recognition to those who had served
in that worthy effort.
Obviously, the Department of Americanism is
charged with a staggering responsibility. It
is the conscience of the VFW, and, to a
lesser degree, of the nation. The department
takes direction from the Commander-in-Chief
and the National Encampment, and on occasion
remind both of what that direction should
be. Americanism and the VFW are so closely
intertwined that they cannot be separated.
|