Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament

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Antinuclear movement begun in Great Britain in 1958; founders included Bertrand Russell, Josef Rotblat, Kingsley Martin, and J.B. Priestley; CND opposed all preparations, material or political, to engage in nuclear war or threaten it as a means of national policy.

From the description of Collection, 1958- (Swarthmore College, Peace Collection). WorldCat record id: 40214943

The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), an organization formed in Great Britain in January 1958, intended to persuade the government to "renounce unconditionally the use or production of nuclear weapons and refuse to allow their use by others in its defense."

From the description of Records of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, 1941-1972 (bulk 1958-1963). (University of Delaware Library). WorldCat record id: 668400755

The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), an organization formed in Great Britain in January 1958, intended to persuade the government to "renounce unconditionally the use or production of nuclear weapons and refuse to allow their use by others in its defense."

Fearing a retreat by the United States back into isolationism after World War II, Britain felt compelled to provide for its own defense. In a secretive era under the Labour Party, the British government began work on its own atomic weapons in 1947, and tested its first atomic bomb in Australia five years later. Over the next decade, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) grew in face of Soviet imperialism, and the United States and Britain pursued coordinated but independent nuclear programs.

By 1957, two groups had emerged to coordinate the anti nuclear movement in Britain. The National Committee for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Tests (NCANWT) and the Emergency Committee for Direct Action Against Nuclear War (DAC) were created to oppose the Conservative Party's White Paper on Defense (1957) which openly supported a nuclear program. The White Paper expressed the first official government support for what had been a secretive ten-year effort to produce an atomic weapon.

The formation of NATO in 1949 and eventually the Korean War prompted a NATO effort to match the nuclear weaponry of the Soviet Union. The NATO nuclear relationship progressed to the point where, in 1958, the United States based several of its nuclear fleet submarines and intermediate range nuclear missiles in Britain, thereby committing the U.S. to respond to Warsaw Pact aggression and allowing Britain to feel more confident.

It was at this point that the peace movement took its first steps toward prominence in the British political arena. Initially the peace movements were small and independent, but they forced the issue of disarmament onto the political agenda of the parties. The Labour Party, in power from 1945–51, initiated the British nuclear program. By 1957, Labour was the opposition party, torn between its left and center-left components. The left demanded Britain's unilateral nuclear disarmament to set an example for the United States and the Soviet Union. Debate raged within the Labour Party and among non-Parliamentary notables, the most influential of whom was the author J.B. Priestley.

Priestley's article in The New Statesmen in support of unilateral disarmament prompted a meeting of Britain's intelligentsia. Those attending included Bertrand Russell, Sir Julian Huxley, Kingsley Martin, Priestley, and members of NCANWT. The meeting resulted in the formation of the CND with Bertrand Russell installed as President, Canon Collins as Chairman, and Peggy Duff from NCANWT as organizing secretary. This prominent group was able to draw a large following.

The first major decision facing the newly organized CND was whether to endorse the "street politics" of the DAC or to utilize available links with Parliament to promote their agenda. The first important direct action endorsed by the CND was the DAC- organized Aldermaston march. The protest attracted 10,000 people its first year (1958), and upwards to 50,000 and 100,000 participants by the early 1960s. In addition, the CND worked through traditional channels to pressure the Labour Party Conference to adopt a unilateralist plank in their 1960 platform. They were successful in both approaches, but the CND began to split between the supporters of direct action and those who favored making use of traditional channels.

The debate became public in 1960. Bertrand Russell resigned his presidency and formed the "Committee of 100." The breakaway Committee advocated non-violent direct action (billed as civil disobedience by the English media) throughout the country. The common purpose of the Committee of 100 and the DAC brought on their merger within a year.

In the meantime, Canon Collins and the CND survived the media fiasco and loss of support created by Russell's split. The CND distanced themselves from the Committee of 100 by insisting that, unlike Russell's group, the CND was not strictly pacifist and, furthermore, believed unilateral disarmament could be pursued most effectively through the existing political system. However, lacking a formal membership until 1966, the CND found it difficult to use the political process. Their main target, the Labour Party, was not united, and the issue of unilateral nuclear disarmament became a pawn in the power game being played within the Party.

By 1963 the Labour Party under Harold Wilson had rejected unilateralism, the British Navy was equipped with polaris missiles from the United States, the world had seen through the Cuban Missile Crisis that nuclear war could be averted, and the Partial Test Ban Treaty (banning nuclear tests in the atmosphere) had been signed. That year was the last of the Aldermaston marches.

CND activity remained in decline until the debate over inter-continental ballistic missile (ICBM) deployment in Europe arose during the late 1970s. Even then, the strength and effectiveness of the movement could not reach the peak it achieved in the early 1960s.

Byrne, Paul. The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. New York: Croom Helm, 1988. Much of the organizational information has been derived from the contents of the collection. Mattausch, John. A Commitment to campaign: a sociological study of CND. New York: Manchester University Press, 1989.

From the guide to the Records of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, 1941–1972, 1958–1963, (University of Delaware Library - Special Collections)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn D'Urso, S. (Salvatore), 1928-. Papers. Libraries Australia
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. [Miscellaneous pamphlets on the British nuclear disarmament movement]. University of Wisconsin - Madison, General Library System
referencedIn Lawrence Daly Papers, 1946-1983 Modern Records Centre
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. The archives of the CND [microform]. Mount Saint Vincent University Library, Mount Library
referencedIn Guide to the Tamiment Library Newspapers, 1873-2014 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament archives, 1958-1985 (inclusive), [microform]. Yale University Library
creatorOf Hiroshima Day Committee for Peace (Auckland). Records. National Library of New Zealand
referencedIn The Benn W. Levy Papers, 1945-1973 University of Sussex Library
referencedIn Euan Duff photographs, [196-]-[197-] University of Sussex Library
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Records, 1958-1985. American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library
referencedIn Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), 1958-2008 British library of political and economic science
referencedIn Pinney Collection, 1538-1948 University of Bristol Information Services - Special Collections
creatorOf Records of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, 1941–1972, 1958–1963 University of Delaware Library - Special Collections
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Records of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, 1941-1972 (bulk 1958-1963). University of Delaware Library, Hugh M Morris Library
referencedIn Mary Brennan Peace Movement Papers, 1980-1996 Modern Records Centre
referencedIn Marjorie Thompson Papers, 1985-1992 Modern Records Centre
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament archives, 1958-1990 (inclusive), [microform]. Yale University Library
creatorOf Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Collection, 1958- Swarthmore College, Peace Collection, SCPC
referencedIn Dodd/Thompson Research Correspondence, 1963-1979 Modern Records Centre
referencedIn Greater Manchester and District Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (GMD CND), 1959-2005 Working Class Movement Library
referencedIn The Fraser Nuclear Disarmament Collection, 1982-1988 Bradford University Library
referencedIn Jain, Devaki, 1933-. Oral history interview with Devaki Jain, 2002. Nolan, Norton & Company, Incorporated
referencedIn The Jacquetta Hawkes Archive, 1910-[ongoing] University of Bradford
referencedIn Tucker, Archibald Norman, 1898-1970's School of Oriental and African Studies
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Brennan, Mary person
associatedWith British Library of Political and Economic Science. corporateBody
associatedWith CND, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament person
associatedWith Duff, Euan, b 1945 person
associatedWith D'Urso, S. (Salvatore), 1928- person
associatedWith Fraser, Liz person
associatedWith Greater Manchester and District Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament corporateBody
associatedWith Hiroshima Day Committee for Peace (Auckland) corporateBody
associatedWith Jacquetta Hawkes, archaeologist and writer person
associatedWith Jain, Devaki, 1933- person
associatedWith Levy, Benn Wolfe, 1900-1974 person
associatedWith Pinney family. family
associatedWith Swarthmore College. Peace Collection. corporateBody
associatedWith Tamiment Library. corporateBody
associatedWith Thompson, Marjorie person
associatedWith University of Warwick. Library. Modern Records Centre. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Great Britain
Great Britain
Great Britain
Great Britain
Subject
Antinuclear movement
Disarmament
Disarmament
Nuclear disarmament
Nuclear disarmament
Nuclear disarmament
Nuclear disarmament
Peace
Peace
Peace movements
Socialism
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1958

Active 1985

Information

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