Fielding M. McGehee III Papers MS-0525
Taylor de Klerk
Special Collections & University Archives
07/01/2015
5500 Campanile Dr. MC 8050
San Diego, CA 92182-8050
askscua@sdsu.edu
Contributing Institution:
Special Collections & University Archives
Title: Fielding M. McGehee III Papers
Creator:
McGehee, Fielding M., III (Fielding Merwin McGehee III)
Identifier/Call Number: MS-0525
Physical Description:
0.42 Linear Feet
Date: 1967-1999
Date (bulk): 1967-1980
Language of Material:
English
.
Scope and Contents
The
Fielding M. McGehee III Papers (1967-1999) consist primarily of correspondence between McGehee and his parents, Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee,
and also include some correspondence to and from other family members. Many letters include discussion about draft resistance
efforts as well as
Peoples Temple and the agricultural settlement at Jonestown, Guyana. Some writings related to the draft are also included.
Some of the letters in the collection from friends and family members contain stories about Hillary Ann Moore, the youngest
of three siblings adopted by Fielding and his wife Rebecca Moore while living in South Dakota. Hillary was born with endomyocardial
disease, a condition which resulted in her death in 1995 at the age of 15. Determined not to let memories of her pass into
oblivion, Fielding and Rebecca gathered these stories into a published memoir of her life,
A Streak of Scarlet.
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
The copyright interests in some of these materials have been transferred to or belong to San Diego State University. The nature
of historical archival and manuscript collections means that copyright status may be difficult or even impossible to determine.
Copyright resides with the creators of materials contained in the collection or their heirs. Requests for permission to publish
must be submitted to the Head of Special Collections, San Diego State University, Library and Information Access. When granted,
permission is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical item and is not intended to include or imply
permission of the copyright holder(s), which must also be obtained in order to publish. Materials from our collections are
made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. The user must assume full responsibility for any use of the
materials, including but not limited to, infringement of copyright and publication rights of reproduced materials.
Source of Acquisition
Fielding M. McGehee III
Related Materials
Rebecca Moore Papers (1951-2013)
http://jonestown.sdsu.edu
Preferred Citation
Identification of item, folder title, box number, Fielding M. McGehee III Papers, Special Collections and University Archives,
San Diego State University Library.
Biographical Note
Fielding Merwin McGehee III was born in Charlottesville, Virginia at the end of the 1940s at the height of the Baby Boom.
He is the oldest child of parents Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee. Due to his father's occupation, McGehee spent a
significant portion of his adolescence in the Netherlands. He was rebellious as a teenager, a time that coincided with the
period of social tumult in the mid-to late-1960s. As part of that rebellion, at Antioch College in Ohio McGehee became an
activist against U.S. involvement in Vietnam, an activism which led him to drop out of college and pursue a leadership role
in antiwar organizations. Furthermore, McGehee became an active resister to the military draft.
After a four-year hiatus, McGehee returned to Antioch College to complete a degree in journalism and political science. Following
the failures of an early marriage and an ill-conceived business venture in journalism that had taken him to California, Fielding
returned to Washington in 1977. There he renewed a friendship with a former college classmate and fellow writer, Rebecca Moore
- a friendship that soon evolved into romance and marriage in 1980, both of which continue to this day. Fielding followed
Rebecca Moore in her several careers – first in television production, then as a college professor – in South Dakota, Montana,
Nevada, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and California, before their recent relocation to Friday Harbor in Washington State.
Fielding McGehee has had several careers with public interest groups – the National Council to Repeal the Draft, the Military
Audit Project, and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press among them – but it wasn't until the 1978 tragedy in Jonestown,
Guyana which resulted in the deaths of more than 900 people that he found his calling. He is the co-founder of the
Jonestown Institute, an online resource which seeks to honor both the living and the dead from the tragedy, and to gather as much information
as possible – including reflections of the survivors – into a single place. More than 15 years after its beginning, the resource
is the largest repository of government records on the tragedy, the only location with a complete listing of everyone who
died that day – including biographical information, photos, and remembrances from loved ones – and a collection of original
and reprinted academic articles from numerous perspectives. The
Jonestown Institute continues to thrive at
http://jonestown.sdsu.edu .
Accruals
May 2015
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Draft--History--20th century--Sources
Personal Papers
Correspondence--20th century
McGehee, Fielding M. III
box 1, folder 1
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Family Members Folder 1
1969-1976
box 1, folder 2
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee Folder 2
1967-1969
box 1, folder 3
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee Folder 3
1970-1972
box 1, folder 4
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee Folder 4
1977-1979
box 1, folder 5
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee Folder 5
1980, 1999
box 1, folder 6
Correspondence from Fielding (Mac) McGehee III to Fielding McGehee, Jr. and Helen McGehee Folder 6
n.d.
box 1, folder 7
Correspondence from Fielding McGehee, Jr. to Fielding (Mac) McGehee III Folder 7
1968-1971
box 1, folder 8
The Imact of the Draft and Draft Repeal Research Project of the National Council to Repeal the Draft
Folder 8
1970
box 1, folder 9
Poetry by Fielding (Mac) McGehee III Folder 9
1967
box 1, folder 10
Writings about Draft Resistance Folder 10
1970, n.d.