Staughton Lynd, ¡Presente!

People’s historian Staughton Lynd died on Nov. 17 after an extraordinary life as a conscientious objector, peace and civil rights activist, tax resister, professor, author, and lawyer.

Lynd inspired us with his role as a people’s historian, always working in solidarity with struggles for justice today.

Lynd served as director of the Freedom Schools in the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project. He worked with prisoners and challenged the prison-industrial complex.

Staughton Lynd speaks with Freedom School teachers in Oxford, Ohio, 1964. Photo by Herbert Randall.

While teaching at Spelman College, his family and Howard Zinn’s developed a lifelong friendship. Zinn said of Lynd, “He is an exemplar of strength and gentleness in the quest for a better world.”

Among Lynd’s many books is Doing History from the Bottom Up, in which he described three key perspectives that are guides for any teacher or student of history.

1. History from below is not, or should not be, mere description of hitherto invisible poor and oppressed people: it should challenge mainstream versions of the past.

2. The United States was founded on crimes against humanity directed at Native Americans and enslaved African Americans.

3. Participants in making history should be regarded not only as sources of facts but as colleagues in interpreting what happened.

Historian Stephen West tweeted about an earlier book of Lynd’s on Reconstruction.


In that book, Lynd critiqued liberal analysis and uplifted the arguments of people like W. E. B. Du Bois and Thaddeus Stevens:

In my opinion a third point of view is crystalizing. It seeks to escape the debate as to whether Northern policy was too soft or too hard by contending that it was hard in the wrong way, or more precisely, in the wrong area of social life. This third view holds that the fundamental error in Reconstruction policy was that it did not give the freedman land of [their] own. Whether by confiscation of the property of leading rebels, by a vigorous Southern homestead policy, or by some combination of the two, Congress should have given the ex-slaves the economic independence to resist political intimidation.

After Freedom Summer, Lynd got involved in anti-Vietnam War organizing.

Dave Dellinger, Staughton Lynd, and Robert Moses at a protest against the Vietnam War in Washington, D.C., in August 1965. From Direct Action: Radical Pacifism from the Union Eight to the Chicago Seven.

Despite his talents as a scholar, academia closed their doors to him after he traveled on a fact-finding mission to Hanoi. In a 2013 essay about Lynd, Andy Piascik explains what happened next:

Lynd never looked back. He became an accomplished scholar outside the academy and one of the most perceptive and prolific chroniclers of “history from below,” with a special interest in working class organizing. From a series of interviews, he and [his wife] Alice produced the award-winning book Rank and File, which begat the Academy Award-nominated documentary film Union Maids.

Lynd moved to Ohio in 1976, became an attorney and, when the mills in Youngstown began to close, assisted steelworkers in an unsuccessful attempt to take them over. In a book he wrote about the effort, Lynd explored the biggest little secret of all, one that people everywhere would do well to heed: We who do the work can build a better world, and we can best do it without the parasitic Super Rich who contribute nothing and weigh us down like a monstrous ball and chain.

In a memorial tribute to Howard Zinn at the Organization of American Historians, Lynd said, “When a comrade dies in the struggle for nonviolent revolution, we try to pick up his dreams.” May we all do that now: pick up Lynd’s dreams and his principled, grassroots approach to making those dreams a reality.

Books

accompanying9781604866667 laborlaw9781604864199 lucasville9781604862249 rankandfile9781608461509
fromheretothere9781604862157 admirableradical9781606350515

Read Lynd’s edited collection on Reconstruction below.

Videos

Accompanying: The Journey of Alice and Staughton Lynd, a film produced by Maestra Productions in collaboration with Prison Radio.

 


Staughton Lynd on Democracy Now!, January 4, 2011, discussing prisoner hunger strike at an Ohio supermax prison.

 


The film Union Maids — directed by Julia Reichert, Jim Klein, and Miles Mogulescu — an oral history of three women labor activists featured in the book Rank and File.

 


More Tributes and Obituaries

The Return of Staughton Lynd by David Waldstreicher in History News Network

Staughton Lynd Remembered by Carl Mirra via Historians for Peace and Democracy (H-PAD)

A Tribute to Staughton Lynd by Eric Kerl via Haymarket Press

An Historian in History: Staughton Lynd (1929-2022) by Forrest Hylton in Counter Punch

Staughton Lynd’s Radicalism From Below by Marcus Rediker in The Nation

 

One comment on “Staughton Lynd, ¡Presente!

  1. joseph mulligan on

    I am grieving the death of my good friend, Staughton Lynd, and I extend my sympathy to Alice and all the family. At the same time, I celebrate his life, love, and untiring work for justice and peace.
    Staughton and Alice were among my most important mentors regarding the Vietnam War and were influential in my decision to do civil disobedience in resistance to it. Much later we became very close friends during their visits to Nicaragua in the 1980s and 1990. While they did some volunteer work in an agricultural co-op, they were really here to learn and to meet the people.
    In recent years I interviewed Alice and Staughton several times, and the following playlist has the 7 YouTube videos which resulted: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTliTiLAqs8_MqnRwT3D2BNUB0MrYfPte
    Joe Mulligan, SJ

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