Jane Fonda Writes A Letter About How To Support GIs Opposed To The Vietnam War An American Soldier Handwrites A Letter And Mentions Agent Orange Poet Allen Ginsberg Signs A Form, Attesting That He Is A Sponsor Of The Vietnam Peace Parade Committee A Large Victory In Vietnam Advertising The April 4, 1970 March In Washington, DC A Leaflet To Protest The 1968 Democratic National Convention In Chicago In Grant Park; This Led To Violence And The Infamous Police Riot John Kerry, Writing On Vietnam Veterans Against The War Letterhead, Invited A Congressman To The Ceremony Where He Threw Away His War Medals An Anti War Bumptersticker Jane Fonda Writes A Letter About How To Support GIs Opposed To The Vietnam War Poet Allen Ginsberg Signs A Form, Attesting That He Is A Sponsor Of The Vietnam Peace Parade Committee A Large Victory In Vietnam Advertising The April 4, 1970 March In Washington, DC A Leaflet To Protest The 1968 Democratic National Convention In Chicago In Grant Park; This Led To Violence And The Infamous Police Riot John Kerry, Writing On Vietnam Veterans Against The War Letterhead, Invited A Congressman To The Ceremony Where He Threw Away His War Medals An Anti War Bumptersticker A Pro War Pin An Abbie Hoffman Handwritten Letter Seeking Donated Books On “Poverty, Civil Rights Or Peace” (Page Two) A 1959 Letter From The American Friends Of Vietnam, A Pro Ngo Dinh Diem Organization A Pro War Pin National Guardsmen Face Off Against Anti War Protesters In Washington DC In 1969 A Pro War Bumpersticker National Guardsmen Line Up At An Anti War Protest In Washington, DC In 1969 An Abbie Hoffman Handwritten Letter Seeking Donated Books On “Poverty, Civil Rights Or Peace” (Page One) Anti War Protesters On The Steps Of The Lincoln Memorial In 1969 A 1963 Anti War Poster From Los Angeles, Opposing The Visit of Madame Nhu, The First Lady Of South Vietnam. This Is The Earliest Piece of Vietnam Anti War Material I Have Ever Seen A 1970 Anti War Pin An Anti War Pin A Leaflet For The 1966 Anti-War March On Fifth Avenue In New York City A Pin For A 1970 Anti-War March The Jewish Stake In Vietnam Book By Meir Kahane A First Edition Of The 1962 Port Huron Statement, The Clarion Call Of The Students For A Democratic Society. There Were Very Few First Editions Printed, So These Are Rare Artifacts Robin Moore, Author Of The Green Berets, Writes That I’m “On My Way To Viet Name To Write My Opus On The Special Forces, The Green Berets…I’m More Or Less Unofficial Writer For These Guys” An Ashtray From General Westmoreland’s Office Leaflets A North Vietnamese Poster Celebrating The Downing Of American Bombers And Fighters A 1957 Letter By An American On “United States Operations Mission To Vietnam” Letterhead A North Vietnamese Pamphlet From 1950 Decrying “U.S. Aggressive Activities Against Viet-Nam” A 1966 Letter From Malaysia Protesting The Visit Of President Lyndon Johnson To Southeast Asia; “We Oppose Your President’s Escalating Your Imperialist War Of Aggression In Vietnam” A Map Of South Vietnam, Showing Various Military Bases A Zippo Lighter Distributed By General William Westmoreland The American Anthropologist, Gerald Hickey, Kept A Typewritten Diary Of The 1968 Tet Offensive; He Was In Saigon During The Fighting A Form Filled Out In Saigon In 1951 A North Vietnamese Poster Celebrating The Downing Of American Bombers And Fighters Bill Clinton, Then A Student At Oxford, Writes About His Draft Lottery Number: “When I Returned I Lost My Deferment And Now Am Back In The Pool With A High Lottery Number But Still A Good Chance Of Being Called” (Page Two) Bill Clinton, Then A Student At Oxford, Writes About His Draft Lottery Number: “When I Returned I Lost My Deferment And Now Am Back In The Pool With A High Lottery Number But Still A Good Chance Of Being Called” (Page One) North Vietnamese General Nguyen Giap Signs His Book About His Victory Over The French At Dien Bien Phu First Lady Lady Bird Johnson Signs A Letter Commenting On The White House Luncheon In Which Singer Eartha Kitt Protested The Vietnam War Vice President Spiro Agnew Signs A Memo, Thanking His Staff For Coming To The Office Despite Massive Anti War Protests In Washington, DC On The Day President Lyndon Johnson Signs The Gulf Of Tonkin Resolution Into Law, Senator Pat McNamara Writes That The Bill “Will Prevent An Escalation Of The War In Viet Nam And Will Contribute To The Peace And Security Of Southeast Asia” President Lyndon Johnson Writes A War-Dated Letter To Secretary Of Defense Robert McNamara General William Westmoreland Signs A Condolence Letter For A Soldier Killed In The Tet Offensive Henry Kissinger Writes To General Maxwell Taylor About Some Of The Final Negotiating Points With North Vietnam President Lyndon Johnson Signs A Letter To A Newspaper Editor: “The Peace We Seek Will Come SOoner When All Americans Unite In Its Pursuit” Ronald Reagan Signs A Document To The President of North Vietnam, Asking That American POWs Be Treated Humanely In The Spirit Of The Geneva Convention President Carter Signs His Controversial 1977 Presidential Pardon Of The Conscientious Objectors Robert F. Kennedy Signs A Condolence Letter To The Family Of A Soldier Killed In Vietnam: “Courage Is Rightly Esteemed As The First Of All Human Qualities Because It Is The One That Guarantees All Others” Ronald Reagan Handwrites A Draft Of A Letter: “What To Do When Our Nation Is At War Unites Many Of Us Regardless Of Party” Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page Two) Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page One) The Pass For American Negotiator Philip Habib To Attend The Landmark 1968 Paris Peace Talks With North Vietnam; Note The Low Number Of “00003” Indicating His Rank And Importance President Lyndon Johnson Appoints Diplomat Philip Habib To Be “Counselor Of Embassy For Political Affairs At Saigon” Dr. Martlin Luther King, Jr. Signs His Famous 1967 Anti War Speech The Casualties Of The War In Vietnam President Nixon Writes To Henry Cabbot Lodge, His Ambassador To South Vietnam. Nixon, Seeing The American POWs Return To America After The Peace Treaty, Notes “I Was Never So Proud To Be An American” Dwight Eisenhower Writes About “The Militant Desire Of Every Underdeveloped Nation…To Be Free And Independent And To Live Under A Government Of Their Own Choosing” In 1954, President Eisenhower, Using This Memo, Sends Some Of The First American Military Advisors To South Vietnam. The Handwritten Portions Are In Eisenhower’s Writing David Hackworth, Creator Of The Tiger Force, Signs A Letter Telling A Father Of His Son’s Assignment Into The 39th Infantry Regiment Admiral Elmo Zumwalt Signs A Copy Of The Telegram Announcing The Vietnam War Ceasefire In 1973 Gerald Ford Writes: “I Am Very Optimistic About The Final Outcome Of The President’s Actions For Peace” Bob Hope Writes About His USO Shows: “People Here In The States Know What Our Boys Are Doing. Their Faith And Their Morale Are High And They Are Doing A Big Job Well. They Certainly Make Us Forget The Draft Card Burners” Bob Hope Writes About His USO Shows: “We Must Have A Good Peace. We Can’t Let Communism Take Over The World – We Don’t Want To Be Fighting This Whole Thing Over Again A Few Years From Now” Gerald Ford Writes “I Do Not Think Mr. Johnson Has Managed The War There As Well He Should…We Must Cut Off The Flow Of Supplies Into Vietnam” Ellsworth Bunker, The American Ambassador To South Vietnam, Writes To His Sister-In-Law About President Nixon Asking Him To Stay On In The Difficult Job (Page Two) Ellsworth Bunker, The American Ambassador To South Vietnam, Writes To His Sister-In-Law About President Nixon Asking Him To Stay On In The Difficult Job (Page One) Dwight Eisenhower Writes That “Manpower And Funds Are Vitally Important To Vietnam – Particularly In The Hour Of Emergency” Dwight Eisenhower Writes About “The Manner In Which The Rest Of The World Handles Riots” A Book, Last Men Out, Signed By Many Of The Last Marines Rescued From The United States Embassy Roof In Saigon During The Evacuation An American GI Photographs Local Villagers An American GI Bravely Peers Into A Cu Chi Tunnel During New York City’s 1973 Home With Honor Parade, A Civilian Greets And Thanks A Wounded Veteran A Disabled Veteran Appears In The 1973 Home With Honor Parade In New York City A Selective Service Notification (Draft Card) For A Young Minnesota Man Legendary Marine Sniper Carlos Hathcock Autographs His Book Marine Sniper: 93 Confirmed Kills Legendary Marine Sniper Carlos Hathcock Signs A Photograph Sal Veder Signs His Pulitzer Prize Winning Photograph, Burst Of Joy, Showing A Returning POW Reunited With His Family POW Richard Brenneman Writes From The Hanoi Hilton To His Father In Indiana; This Was The Family’s ONLY Communication With Their Son Until His Release In 1973 Lt. William Calley Writes During His Trial For The My Lai Massacre Serviceman Luther Taylor’s Carried-Through-The-Jungle Diary; He Discusses Firefights And Playing Dead Luther Taylor’s Purple Heart The American Legion Award Given To POW Chuck Tanner Upon His Return From The Hanoi Hilton And North Vietnam USAF Major Kay Huber Writes Shortly After American Involvement In The War Ended Legendary Entertainer Bob Hope Performs At A USO Show A North Vietnamese Propaganda Leaflet Trying To Convince GIs To Abandon The War A 1953 Edition Of Armed Forces Talk Discussing Indochina A Christmas Dinner Menu For A GI From 1968 An United States Air Force Aviator Patch Showing An Eagle Holding A Missile A Photograph Of The 1967 Induction Ceremony In West Virginia An American Soldier Handwrites A Letter And Mentions Agent Orange A Bronze Star Citation for Sergeant Edward T. Verdonck Vietnam Veterans Against The War Protest The Conflict In Washington DC During May 1971 A Vietnam Veterans Against The War Pin A Pro War March In New York City In May 1970 A Pro War March In New York City In May 1970 A Poster, Featuring A Quote From President Lyndon Johnson, Praising Our Soliders And Our Commitment To South Vietnam A Poster From Wayne State University In Michigan In The Wake Of Kent State; Using Paul Revere’s Patriotic Imagery, It Compares The National Guard Who Fired On The Students To The British Redcoats A Handpainted “Withdraw Now From Vietnam” Protest Sign A “Frag Jane Fonda” Pin A Pro War Pin An Abbie Hoffman Handwritten Letter Seeking Donated Books On “Poverty, Civil Rights Or Peace” (Page Two) A 1959 Letter From The American Friends Of Vietnam, A Pro Ngo Dinh Diem Organization A Pro War Pin National Guardsmen Face Off Against Anti War Protesters In Washington DC In 1969 A Pro War Bumpersticker National Guardsmen Line Up At An Anti War Protest In Washington, DC In 1969 An Abbie Hoffman Handwritten Letter Seeking Donated Books On “Poverty, Civil Rights Or Peace” (Page One) Anti War Protesters On The Steps Of The Lincoln Memorial In 1969 A 1963 Anti War Poster From Los Angeles, Opposing The Visit of Madame Nhu, The First Lady Of South Vietnam. This Is The Earliest Piece of Vietnam Anti War Material I Have Ever Seen A 1970 Anti War Pin An Anti War Pin A Leaflet For The 1966 Anti-War March On Fifth Avenue In New York City A Pin For A 1970 Anti-War March The Jewish Stake In Vietnam Book By Meir Kahane A First Edition Of The 1962 Port Huron Statement, The Clarion Call Of The Students For A Democratic Society. There Were Very Few First Editions Printed, So These Are Rare Artifacts Robin Moore, Author Of The Green Berets, Writes That I’m “On My Way To Viet Name To Write My Opus On The Special Forces, The Green Berets…I’m More Or Less Unofficial Writer For These Guys” An Ashtray From General Westmoreland’s Office Leaflets A North Vietnamese Poster Celebrating The Downing Of American Bombers And Fighters A 1957 Letter By An American On “United States Operations Mission To Vietnam” Letterhead A North Vietnamese Pamphlet From 1950 Decrying “U.S. Aggressive Activities Against Viet-Nam” A 1966 Letter From Malaysia Protesting The Visit Of President Lyndon Johnson To Southeast Asia; “We Oppose Your President’s Escalating Your Imperialist War Of Aggression In Vietnam” A Map Of South Vietnam, Showing Various Military Bases A Zippo Lighter Distributed By General William Westmoreland The American Anthropologist, Gerald Hickey, Kept A Typewritten Diary Of The 1968 Tet Offensive; He Was In Saigon During The Fighting A Form Filled Out In Saigon In 1951 A North Vietnamese Poster Celebrating The Downing Of American Bombers And Fighters Bill Clinton, Then A Student At Oxford, Writes About His Draft Lottery Number: “When I Returned I Lost My Deferment And Now Am Back In The Pool With A High Lottery Number But Still A Good Chance Of Being Called” (Page Two) Bill Clinton, Then A Student At Oxford, Writes About His Draft Lottery Number: “When I Returned I Lost My Deferment And Now Am Back In The Pool With A High Lottery Number But Still A Good Chance Of Being Called” (Page One) North Vietnamese General Nguyen Giap Signs His Book About His Victory Over The French At Dien Bien Phu First Lady Lady Bird Johnson Signs A Letter Commenting On The White House Luncheon In Which Singer Eartha Kitt Protested The Vietnam War Vice President Spiro Agnew Signs A Memo, Thanking His Staff For Coming To The Office Despite Massive Anti War Protests In Washington, DC On The Day President Lyndon Johnson Signs The Gulf Of Tonkin Resolution Into Law, Senator Pat McNamara Writes That The Bill “Will Prevent An Escalation Of The War In Viet Nam And Will Contribute To The Peace And Security Of Southeast Asia” President Lyndon Johnson Writes A War-Dated Letter To Secretary Of Defense Robert McNamara General William Westmoreland Signs A Condolence Letter For A Soldier Killed In The Tet Offensive Henry Kissinger Writes To General Maxwell Taylor About Some Of The Final Negotiating Points With North Vietnam President Lyndon Johnson Signs A Letter To A Newspaper Editor: “The Peace We Seek Will Come SOoner When All Americans Unite In Its Pursuit” Ronald Reagan Signs A Document To The President of North Vietnam, Asking That American POWs Be Treated Humanely In The Spirit Of The Geneva Convention President Carter Signs His Controversial 1977 Presidential Pardon Of The Conscientious Objectors Robert F. Kennedy Signs A Condolence Letter To The Family Of A Soldier Killed In Vietnam: “Courage Is Rightly Esteemed As The First Of All Human Qualities Because It Is The One That Guarantees All Others” Ronald Reagan Handwrites A Draft Of A Letter: “What To Do When Our Nation Is At War Unites Many Of Us Regardless Of Party” Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page Two) Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page One) The Pass For American Negotiator Philip Habib To Attend The Landmark 1968 Paris Peace Talks With North Vietnam; Note The Low Number Of “00003” Indicating His Rank And Importance President Lyndon Johnson Appoints Diplomat Philip Habib To Be “Counselor Of Embassy For Political Affairs At Saigon” Dr. Martlin Luther King, Jr. Signs His Famous 1967 Anti War Speech The Casualties Of The War In Vietnam President Nixon Writes To Henry Cabbot Lodge, His Ambassador To South Vietnam. Nixon, Seeing The American POWs Return To America After The Peace Treaty, Notes “I Was Never So Proud To Be An American” Dwight Eisenhower Writes About “The Militant Desire Of Every Underdeveloped Nation…To Be Free And Independent And To Live Under A Government Of Their Own Choosing” In 1954, President Eisenhower, Using This Memo, Sends Some Of The First American Military Advisors To South Vietnam. The Handwritten Portions Are In Eisenhower’s Writing David Hackworth, Creator Of The Tiger Force, Signs A Letter Telling A Father Of His Son’s Assignment Into The 39th Infantry Regiment Admiral Elmo Zumwalt Signs A Copy Of The Telegram Announcing The Vietnam War Ceasefire In 1973 Gerald Ford Writes: “I Am Very Optimistic About The Final Outcome Of The President’s Actions For Peace” Bob Hope Writes About His USO Shows: “People Here In The States Know What Our Boys Are Doing. Their Faith And Their Morale Are High And They Are Doing A Big Job Well. They Certainly Make Us Forget The Draft Card Burners” Bob Hope Writes About His USO Shows: “We Must Have A Good Peace. We Can’t Let Communism Take Over The World – We Don’t Want To Be Fighting This Whole Thing Over Again A Few Years From Now” Gerald Ford Writes “I Do Not Think Mr. Johnson Has Managed The War There As Well He Should…We Must Cut Off The Flow Of Supplies Into Vietnam” Ellsworth Bunker, The American Ambassador To South Vietnam, Writes To His Sister-In-Law About President Nixon Asking Him To Stay On In The Difficult Job (Page Two) Ellsworth Bunker, The American Ambassador To South Vietnam, Writes To His Sister-In-Law About President Nixon Asking Him To Stay On In The Difficult Job (Page One) Dwight Eisenhower Writes That “Manpower And Funds Are Vitally Important To Vietnam – Particularly In The Hour Of Emergency” Dwight Eisenhower Writes About “The Manner In Which The Rest Of The World Handles Riots” A Book, Last Men Out, Signed By Many Of The Last Marines Rescued From The United States Embassy Roof In Saigon During The Evacuation An American GI Photographs Local Villagers An American GI Bravely Peers Into A Cu Chi Tunnel During New York City’s 1973 Home With Honor Parade, A Civilian Greets And Thanks A Wounded Veteran A Disabled Veteran Appears In The 1973 Home With Honor Parade In New York City A Selective Service Notification (Draft Card) For A Young Minnesota Man Legendary Marine Sniper Carlos Hathcock Autographs His Book Marine Sniper: 93 Confirmed Kills Legendary Marine Sniper Carlos Hathcock Signs A Photograph Sal Veder Signs His Pulitzer Prize Winning Photograph, Burst Of Joy, Showing A Returning POW Reunited With His Family POW Richard Brenneman Writes From The Hanoi Hilton To His Father In Indiana; This Was The Family’s ONLY Communication With Their Son Until His Release In 1973 Lt. William Calley Writes During His Trial For The My Lai Massacre Serviceman Luther Taylor’s Carried-Through-The-Jungle Diary; He Discusses Firefights And Playing Dead Luther Taylor’s Purple Heart The American Legion Award Given To POW Chuck Tanner Upon His Return From The Hanoi Hilton And North Vietnam USAF Major Kay Huber Writes Shortly After American Involvement In The War Ended Legendary Entertainer Bob Hope Performs At A USO Show A North Vietnamese Propaganda Leaflet Trying To Convince GIs To Abandon The War A 1953 Edition Of Armed Forces Talk Discussing Indochina A Christmas Dinner Menu For A GI From 1968 An United States Air Force Aviator Patch Showing An Eagle Holding A Missile A Photograph Of The 1967 Induction Ceremony In West Virginia An American Soldier Handwrites A Letter And Mentions Agent Orange A Bronze Star Citation for Sergeant Edward T. Verdonck Vietnam Veterans Against The War Protest The Conflict In Washington DC During May 1971 A Vietnam Veterans Against The War Pin A Pro War March In New York City In May 1970 A Pro War March In New York City In May 1970 A Poster, Featuring A Quote From President Lyndon Johnson, Praising Our Soliders And Our Commitment To South Vietnam A Poster From Wayne State University In Michigan In The Wake Of Kent State; Using Paul Revere’s Patriotic Imagery, It Compares The National Guard Who Fired On The Students To The British Redcoats A Handpainted “Withdraw Now From Vietnam” Protest Sign A “Frag Jane Fonda” Pin