| VALB: A Brief History
In December 1937, while the war in Spain
continued, the first U.S. volunteers who returned from fighting
organized a formal group named Veterans of the Abraham
Lincoln Brigade (VALB). The fifty-some veterans elected
Paul Burns the first commander. Early activities focused on
awakening the public to the issues of the war, seeking to end
U.S. non-interventionism, and assisting the wounded and needy
volunteers. As returning veterans swelled the ranks, the VALB
took strong political stands not only on Spain, but about U.S.
policy in World War II. Besides the main office in New York,
VALB “Posts” appeared in numerous cities, such as Los
Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago.
After World War II, VALB faced charges of
being a Communist-front organization. In 1947, the Attorney
General placed VALB on a list of subversive organizations,
paving the way for subsequent inquiries by the Subversive
Activities Control Board. Although VALB lost its initial appeal
to be removed from the list, legal battles that carried as far
as the U.S. Supreme Court eventually vindicated the
organization. Despite such harassment, the VALB continued to
agitate for a republican government in Spain, and assisted needy
veterans. The VALB’s political position can be followed in the
periodical, Volunteer for Liberty.
As political passions eased in the 1970s
and 80s, VALB remained involved in supporting various
international causes -- sending assistance to victims of the
Franco regime in Spain, providing ambulances and medical support
to Nicaragua, and offering aid to a children’s hospital in
Cuba. In 1986, many returned to celebrate the 50th anniversary
of the Spanish Civil War in Madrid. Ten years later, the
survivors traveled once again to Spain to accept citizenship
from the restored Spanish democracy. VALB holds an annual
reunion event in San Francisco during the last weekend of
February (the anniversary of the battle of Jarama) and in New
York City during the last weekend of April. For more information
about VALB’s history, see Peter Carroll, The Odyssey of
the Abraham Lincoln Brigade: Americans and the Spanish Civil War
(Stanford University Press, 1994).
For additional information contact:
VETERANS OF THE ABRAHAM LINCOLN BRIGADE
799 Broadway, Room 227
New York, NY 10003
VALB-Bay Area Post
P.O. Box 11194
Berkeley, CA 94712-2194
Phone/fax: 510-548-3088 |
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