Contents


Collection Overview

Administrative Information

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

Search Terms

Series 1: Newsletter

Series 2: Correspondence

Series 3: Campaigns and Projects

Series 4: Conferences and Summer Programs

Series 5: Clippings and Publicity

Traprock Peace Center Records, 1979-2008

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Linda Seidman.

Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

2002

Collection Overview

Creator: Traprock Peace Center
Title: Traprock Peace Center Records
Dates: 1979-2008
Abstract: A grassroots organization based in Deerfield, Massachusetts, that trains and educates people locally and globally in matters relating to disarmament and nonviolence. In 1980, the Center organized the first successful attempt in the United States to get a nuclear weapons moratorium referendum on the ballot. Records include correspondence, campaign materials (resolutions, organizing committee records, legislative packets), program reports, newsletters, newsclippings, and posters.
Extent: ca. 50 boxes(75 linear ft.)
Language: English.
Identification: MS 80

Administrative Information

Acquired from: Judith Ann Scheckel, 1985. Addition received in 2008.

Processed by Linda Seidman, January 1986.

Preferred Citation

Cite as: Traprock Peace Center Records (MS 80). Special Collections and University Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The collection is open for research.

Additions to the Collection

Approximately fifty boxes of material was added to the initial five box collection in 2008.

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A grassroots organization based in Deerield, Mass., the Traprock Peace Center has waged a long campaign to educate the public regionally and globally about peace and non-violence. The Center was founded in 1979 after the closure of the alternative Woolman Hill School on Woolman Hill, a retreat and (since 1982) conference center run by the Society of Friends. After considering various alternatives for what to do with the buildings, the school board reached consensus on establishing a center for education and training in non-violence, an effort to be coordinated by a long-time member of the War Resisters League, Beverly Woodward.

Beginning in 1979, a core group of peace activists began to meet to form what would become Traprock, including Randy Kehler, Frances Crowe, Gordon Faison, Pauline Bassett, and later, Meg Gage. To sharpen their focus, the core group turned their attention to the nuclear arms race, which they regarded as the "ultimate manifestation of violence" and the primary threat to peace in the world. During the early part of 1980, the Reagan era about to dawn, organization against the nuclear arms race began to coalesce, and Traprock helped lead the effort to place a referendum on a nuclear weapons moratorium on the ballot. That fall, even as Ronald Reagan swept into office, the nuclear freeze passed in all four districts in Western Massachusetts. Kehler and Crowe were significant national figures in the nuclear freeze movement in the 1980s, and many others at Traprock were vital supporters.

Even with the intense focus on the freeze, activists associated with Traprock soon began to tackle a wide range of issues in peace and social justice. Among the dozens of projects the Center has taken on over the years, it has been active in promoting public awareness of issues relating to nuclear power and nuclear energy, depleted uranium, the economic sanctions against Iraq and the Iraq wars, the "Star Wars" missile defense system, American intervention in Central America, and the growth of militarism in the United States.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The records of the Traprock Peace Center document the Center's efforts since its founding to train and educate people locally and globally in matters relating to disarmament and nonviolence. The records include full documentation of the Center's activities relating to the nuclear freeze referendum in 1980, including correspondence, campaign materials (resolutions, organizing committee records, legislative packets), program reports, newsletters, newsclippings, and posters.

A small portion of the overall collection is described here. The bulk of the collection was received in 2008 and these materials have not yet been processed, although they are open to research.

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Search Terms

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Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into five series:

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Series 1: Newsletter


Box

Folder

1 1-6
Newsletter: "The Traprock Report" 1979-1985

Series 2: Correspondence


Box

Folder

2 7-12
Correspondence 1979-1983

Series 3: Campaigns and Projects


Box

Folder

3 13a
Referendum Organizing Committee records: Minutes, schedules, notes 1980 April-Nov.

13b
Referendum Organizing Committee records: Lists

13c
Referendum Organizing Committee records: Mailings and press releases

14
Referendum packet originals

15
Referendum newsclippings 1980-1981

16
Post-referendum materials 1980 Nov.-1981 April

17
1982 Referendum 1982

Box

Folder

4 18
Resolution

19
Resolution packet originals

20
Resolution Hearing/Testimonial 1981 March

21
Hawley Tower 1985

22
Religious Task Force records 1980-1985

23
YES Campaign records 1981-1983

24
Endorsement packet and originals 1981-1982

25
Legislative packetlistings

26
Packets--finished

Series 4: Conferences and Summer Programs


Box

Folder

5 27
Conferences 1979-

28
Summer Internship Program 1981-1982

29
Traprock Summer 1980

30
International Workcamp 1983

Series 5: Clippings and Publicity


Box

Folder

5 31-33
Clippings 1979-1985

34
Posters and publicity