|
Many thanks to veteran activist Marv Davidov for
providing the following information. Please
contact us if you have
any additional information.
Honeywell International was started by inventor Albert Butz,
who developed a “damper flapper,” a prototype thermostat. A
series of mergers and acquisitions followed, and the company
became known mostly for its controls and regulators. Their
biggest contribution was the “Honeywell T-86 Round,” a type
of thermostat invented in 1953 and found in most homes in
America.
During the Viet Nam War, Honeywell was the largest military
contractor in Minnesota, and had sales offices and plants
all over the world. It was one of the top 20 arms
manufacturers. An Ordnance journal quoted an ad: “We stand
ready to build weapons that work, to build them fast and to
build them in quantity.” The company’s headquarters was at E
28th Street and 5th Ave. So. in Minneapolis.
The source of much protest was the manufacture of Cluster
Bomb Units (CBUs). These were “globes full of BB-like
projectiles that would spread over a large area when the
globe impacted, tearing human beings to pieces but no
harming property. The anti-personnel bomb was used primarily
to terrorize and intimidate civilians, and may have been
responsible for the death and maiming of more non-combatants
than any other single weapon.” About 90 million fell on Laos
alone, and it is estimated that 10-30 percent of them are
still unexploded, occasionally killing more civilians.
Millions more fell on Cambodia and Viet Nam – North and
South.
The bomb was made up of a canister that the Air Force called
the “mother bomb.” Inside were 300-500 Bomb Live Units –
“Bomblets” – “sisters and daughters” that exploded in
mid-air, releasing steel ball bearings that fell at 22
ft/sec. Activists argued that the use of this weapon, which
killed and maimed an alarming number of women and children,
was against Article 23 of the 1907 Hague Convention with
regard to “unnecessary suffering.”
Enter Marv Davidov. A native of Detroit, Davidov was a
seasoned activist – former freedom rider, draft resistance
organizer, and now founder of the Honeywell Project. The
first meeting was held on December 8, 1968 with 25 in
attendance. Their purpose was to call attention to the fact
that Honeywell was manufacturing weapons that were killing
innocent people. Honeywell Project chapters were formed at
the U of M and other colleges in the area.
In 1969, Davidov met with Jim Binger, Chairman of Honeywell.
Davidov offered to bring people in to convert plants to make
peaceful products without a loss of jobs. This idea was not
well received, so on April 29, 1969, the first demonstration
was held at headquarters, where the group leafleted
shareholders at a corporate meeting.
Two weeks later, in May 1969, project activists leafleted
the St. Louis Park manufacturing plant, alerting employees
of the evils of the product they were making. Demonstrations
were only held at headquarters, never at plants. There were
about 14 plants at the time in the Twin Cities – the plants in
St. Louis Park and Hopkins were the main weapons plants.
At a 1969 St. Louis Park city council meeting, citizens
requested that zoning law be changed to remove the plant,
but this was not considered.
On December 12, 1969, the group leafleted all Honeywell plants in the
Twin Cities. Demonstrators picketed Headquarters and then
went downtown to leaflet Christmas shoppers.
On April 28, 1970, a group of 3,000+ people that included
activists Jerry Rubin and Dennis Banks marched from Fair
Oaks Park by the Art Institute to Honeywell Headquarters.
Although the members of the Honeywell Project were committed
to disciplined nonviolence, others in the group, perhaps
including paid informants, broke their agreement not to use
violence and pushed the door in. The demonstration became a
riot of broken windows and mace.
The Honeywell Project did organize some protests in the
early 1970s, but the movement collapsed with end of Viet Nam
War in 1975. The group fell apart and got back together
twice during the 1970’s. Honeywell scaled down too:
arms had been up to 20 percent of
the company's business, and with the end of the war, 50,000
jobs were eliminated worldwide.
All along the group suspected that they had been infiltrated
by the FBI, and in 1977, the ACLU sued Honeywell and the FBI
for the release of documents regarding surveillance of
antiwar activities. The FBI was ordered to provide names of
paid informants who infiltrated the Honeywell Project from
1969-1972. In August 1984, a Federal judge ordered the FBI
to disclose the names of those hired to spy on the Honeywell
Project and other groups. The suit was settled in 1985 when
Honeywell and the FBI paid $70,000 to the Honeywell Project.
The work continued and the group ebbed and flowed:
- In June 1981 vigils were held at Honeywell Plaza.
- In June 1982, the group protested Honeywell’s
manufacture of cluster bombs that were used by Israeli
forces shelling Beirut.
- In November 1982, the group, including Daniel
Berrigan, padlocked and barricaded Headquarters. 36
people were arrested.
- On April 18, 1983 there was another blockade, this
time attended by Phillip Berrigan. 151 people were
arrested, including Erica Bouza, wife of Minneapolis
police chief Tony Bouza.
- At an October 24, 1983 demonstration at
Headquarters, 577 were arrested, including a
young Honeywell engineer who quit his job to join the
protest.
- 15 people were arrested at a December 28, 1983
demonstration.
- On April 27, 1984, 284 arrests were made.
- 135 were arrested on May 16, 1985.
- 48 were arrested on November 4, 1985.
- On October 2, 1985, HP protested the use of
Honeywell-manufactured weapons and components used in US
attacks on Libya. The Gandhi’s Birthday party yielded 98
arrests out of 300 participants.
- Arrests were made at the April 21, 1988 action to
block Orchestra hall, site of the
Honeywell annual meeting.
From 1982-89, about 2,200 people had been arrested at
these protests, and had served a combined two years in jail.
Davidov himself was arrested 25 times, and sentenced to jail
three times.
In 1989, Honeywell spun off its defense contracts into
Alliant Tech Systems, a separate corporation. The new
company was first located in Hopkins and moved to Edina in
1995.
The Honeywell Project disbanded for good in 1991.
The building that had housed the St. Louis Park plant was
demolished in 1996. Honeywell had to remediate the mercury
that was used in bomb fuses.
The debate continues about cluster bombs, as it does about
land mines. The United States has not participated in
movements and agreements to ban such weapons.
|
 |