Fort Lewis Six

The Fort Lewis Six arrested in June 1970 for refusing orders to Vietnam.

The Fort Lewis Six were six U.S. Army enlisted men at the Fort Lewis Army base in the Seattle and Tacoma, Washington area who in June 1970 refused orders to the Vietnam War and were then courts-martialed.[1] They had all applied for conscientious objector status and been turned down by the Pentagon. The Army then ordered them to report for assignment to Vietnam, which they all refused. The Army responded by charging them with "willful disobedience" which carried a maximum penalty of five years at hard labor. The six soldiers were Private First Class Manuel Perez, a Cuban refugee; Private First Class Paul A. Forest, a British citizen from Liverpool; Specialist 4 Carl M. Dix Jr. from Baltimore; Private James B. Allen from Goldsboro, North Carolina; Private First Class Lawrence Galgano from Brooklyn, New York; and Private First Class Jeffrey C. Griffith from Vaughn, Washington.[2][3] According to the local GI underground newspaper at Fort Lewis, this was the largest mass refusal of direct orders to Vietnam at the base up to that point in the war.[4] Their refusal and subsequent treatment by the Army received national press coverage.

  1. ^ "Lewis 6 Refuse Vietnam Duty". Fort Lewis Free Press. Wisconsin Historical Society: GI Press Collection. August 1970. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  2. ^ "Six Soldiers Are Arrested; Refused to Go to Vietnam". The New York Times. 1970-06-29.
  3. ^ "Trials Are Set for 5 Accused of Refusing War Duty". The New York Times. 1970-10-11.
  4. ^ "Ft. Lewis 6 Refuse Nam". Fed Up! Vol. 1 No. 6, p.1. July 1970.