Sacco y Vanzetti, por Clifford Harper.
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Sacco y Vanzetti, por Clifford Harper.

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At the height of the Big Red Scare-in April, 1920-there had taken place at South Braintree, Massachusetts, a crime so unimportant that it was not even mentioned in the New York Times of the following day-or, for that matter, of the whole following year. It was the sort of crime which was taking place constantly all over the country. A paymaster and his guard, carrying two boxes containing the pay-roll of a shoe factory, were killed by two men with pistols, who thereupon leaped into an automobile which drew up at the curb, and drove away across the railroad tracks. Two weeks later a couple of Italian radicals were arrested as the murderers, and a year later-at [...] the Italians were tried before Judge Webster Thayer and a jury and found guilty. The trial attracted a little attention, but not much. A few months later, however, people from Maine to California began to ask what this Sacco-Vanzetti case was all about. For a very remarkable thing had happened. Three men in a bleak Boston office-a Spanish carpenter, a Jewish youth from New York, and an Italian newspaperman-had been writing industriously about the two Italians to the radicals and the radical press of France and Italy and Spain and other countries in Europe and Central and South America. The result: A bomb exploded in Ambassador Herrick's house in Paris. Twenty people were killed by another bomb in a Paris Sacco-Vanzetti demonstration. Crowds menaced the American Embassy in Rome. There was an attempt to bomb the home of the Consul-General at Lisbon. There was a general strike and an attempt to boycott American goods at Montevideo. The case was discussed in the radical press of Algiers, Porto Rico, and Mexico. Under the circumstances it could not very well help becoming a cause celebre in the United States. But bombings and boycotts, though they attracted attention to the case, could never have aroused widespread public sympathy for Sacco and Vanzetti. What aroused it, as the case dragged on year after year and one appeal after another was denied, was the demeanor of the men themselves. Vanzetti in particular was clearly a remarkable man-an intellectual of noble character, a philosophical anarchist of a type which it seemed impossible to associate with a pay-roll murder. New evidence made the guilt of the men seem still more doubtful. When, in 1927- seven long years after the murder-Judge Thayer stubbornly denied the last appeal and pronounced the sentence of death, public opinion forced Governor Fuller of Massachusetts to review the case and consider pardoning Sacco and Vanzetti. The Governor named as an advisory commit- tee to make a further study of the case, President Lowell of Harvard, President Stratton of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Judge Robert Grant-all men respected by the community. A few weeks later the committee reported: they believed Sacco and Vanzetti to be guilty. There was no pardon. On the night of August 22, 1927, these two men who had gathered about their cause the hopes and fears of millions throughout the world were sent to the electric chair.
Frederick Lewis Allen, Only Yesterday: An Informal History of the 1920's, Bantam Books, New York, 1959; pages 59-60. [ 1st edition 1931 ]
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Sacco & Vanzetti
On 23 August 1927 Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, defendants in a controversial murder trial in Massachusetts, were executed, still maintaining their innocence.
They had been sentenced to death by Judge Webster Thayer, who had described the two as “anarchist bastards”. He had condemned each of them to “suffer the punishment…
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Helmut Ortner - Sacco y Vanzetti. El enemigo extranjero
Pocos escándalos judiciales en el mundo han causado la sensación del caso Sacco y Vanzetti. Pocos han perdurado tanto en el tiempo, tal vez porque fue el preludio de una política de control social e ideológico todavía vigente. Enlace [PDF]: Helmut Ortner - Sacco y Vanzetti. El enemigo extranjero
“Anarchists are the radical of the radical – the black cats, the terrors of many, of all the bigots, exploiters, charlatans, fakers and oppressors. Consequently, we are also the most slandered, misrepresented, misunderstood and persecuted of all.” - Bartolomeo Vanzetti: Letters
In America things are going very badly. There is a great deal of unemployment and enough misery to soften the heart of a tiger. Those responsible could not care less. You are not aware of the present condition of this nation. This is no longer the America that excited your imagination. America, dear sister, is called the land of liberty, but in no other country on earth does a man tremble before his fellow man like here.
Bartolomeo Vanzetti in a letter to his sister