In April 1970, Tom Norpell was an aspiring photojournalist working as a darkroom technician in Washington, D.C. After hearing about a rally in support of US involvement in the Vietnam War, he borrowed his brother’s camera and headed to the Washington Monument with six rolls of film.
The pro-war protest held on Wednesday April 8, 1970, Norpell recalls, “was neither the largest pro-war rally nor one that represented the majority of Americans who supported the war.” The rally was organized by a fundamentalist coalition, though neo-Nazis and other extreme right-wingers also showed up, as did pro-peace counterprotesters. Nonetheless, “For marchers fed up with antiwar protests dominating the evening news, it was their moment in the sun.”
All photographs by Tom Norpell.