Category: ID#

Sam Patriot

When one of our student workers first alerted me to a poem titled, “My Country, I’ll Obey” by someone known as “Sam Patriot,” my first inclination was that it was written by everybody’s favorite patriotic Muppet, Sam Eagle:

Sam_Muppet

 

Coincidence? Possibly. However, the below poem and its corresponding letter written directly to Gordon Hall aptly exhibits the aim of this collection as a whole. The letter represents a single entity in the collection, and contains no additional information either about its author, or the poem’s real meaning.

0276_0010276_002

Is “Mr. Patriot’s” poem a cheeky retort of blatant disgruntlement of United States involvement in the Vietnam War, or does he truly bleed red, white and blue? Being that the Hall-Hoag Collection contains materials that represent both ends (and all those in between) of the extremism spectrum, we will most likely never know how Sam Patriot wanted his poem to be understood. I think I will choose to picture it as a passionate plea of the overtly patriotic eagle of my childhood, but leave personal interpretation up to the individual reader.

 

Women’s Liberation

This week’s post contains a few items from Boston during the 1970s about the Women’s Liberation Movement. One item is a flyer for a rally to have taken place April 17, 1971 in Boston Common. There is an additional item from World Socialist Party of the United States. This is a political sticker handed out around what I am guessing was the midterm elections of 1970.

Women's Liberation Flyer (1971)

Women’s Liberation Flyer (1971)

Women's Liberation Sticker (1970)

Women’s Liberation Sticker (1970)

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