Lexington Books
Pages: 212
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4829-7 • Hardback • October 2010 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-4831-0 • eBook • October 2010 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
Donald W. Whisenhunt is professor of history, emeritus at Western Washington University.
1 Prologue
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. A Bonus of Their Own
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Riding the Tiger
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Too Many Disciples
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. A Plethora of Imitators
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. The Political Game
Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Too Many Enemies
Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Neither Red nor Yellow
Chapter 9 Chapter 8. The Demise
10 Afterword
11 Appendix 1. Manifesto of Veterans of Future Wars
12 Appendix 2. Manifesto of Future Gold Star Mothers
13 Appendix 3. Veterans' Preference Act
14 Appendix 4. By-Laws of the Veterans of Future Wars
15 Appendix 5. Act Introduced in Congress79
16 Bibliography
It began as college prank in 1936 when several Princeton students, mocking the demands of veterans for a bonus, founded an imaginary organization, Veterans of Future War, suggesting that youth get paid now for wars they'd be asked to fight in later. But almost overnight the organization took on a life of its own, with some 500 chapters and over 50,000 members on campuses from coast to coast. Though its founders did not seem motivated by antiwar sentiment the group's mockery of veterans and superpatriot organization tapped into youth's deep opposition to militarism and war. Donald Whisenhunt has given us the first study of the Veterans of Future Wars, a story that captures the political volatility of Depression America's college campuses. Grounded in careful research and narrated with clarity, candor, and humor, Whisenhunt's study has much to teach us about student politics and culture in the U.S. during the mid-1930s.
— Robert Cohen, New York University
Donald Whisenhunt's book evocatively recounts the uproarious history of the Veterans of Future Wars, a satirical anti-war movement that enlisted tens of thousands of college students in the 1930s. As this book demonstrates, the VFW was not merely a hoax or silly college hijinx, but a potent example of student activism and the power of political satire.
— Chris Rasmussen, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Until now, professors have mentioned the Veterans of Future Wars (VFW), created in March 1936, to liven up class lectures. In an engaging account, Whisenhunt (emer., Western Washington Univ.) provides the first serious, full-scale study of this admittedly ephemeral organization. Far from being organized by radical pacifists, the VFW was launched by a group of politically conservative undergraduates at Princeton University to satirize the effort to grant government bonuses to all veterans of WW I, irrespective of any overseas service. Skillful publicity inadvertently led to the formation of a genuinely intercollegiate body that, at the height of its growth, encompassed over 500 chapters and up to 60,000 members. On some campuses, women formed the Future Gold Star Mothers, a phenomenon followed by the establishment of such bodies as future chaplains, propagandists, profiteers, war correspondents, unknown soldiers, munitions makers, and venereal doctors. The VFW lasted only a few months, falling victim to lack of a general program, the distraction of forthcoming national elections, and congressional adoption of the bonus bill. Sources include the VFW papers at Princeton University, other manuscript collections, personal interviews, and the collegiate press. Summing Up: Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Whisenhunt writes an interesting and enjoyable book.
— Military Review
Whisenhunt does historians and general readers a favor by providing a description and analysis of this largely forgotten episode.
— Journal of American History