Carol Bates Brown wrote the following in response to questions about the origin of the POW/MIA bracelets.
History of the POW-MIA Bracelets
In recent months, several
individuals have contacted the National
League of POW/MIA Families looking
for information on the origin of the POW/MIA bracelets worn during
the early 1970s. The following is offered for those interested in
learning the history of the bracelet phenomena. I was the National
Chairman of the POW/MIA Bracelet Campaign for VIVA (Voices In Vital
America), the Los Angeles based student organization that produced
and distributed the bracelets during the Vietnam War. Entertainers
Bob Hope and Martha Raye served with me as honorary co-chairmen.
The idea for the bracelets
was started by a fellow college student, Kay Hunter, and me, as a way
to remember American prisoners of war suffering in captivity in
Southeast Asia. In late 1969 television personality Bob Dornan (who
several years later was elected to the US Congress) introduced us and
several other members of VIVA to three wives of missing pilots. They
thought our student group could assist them in drawing public
attention to the prisoners and missing in Vietnam. The idea of
circulating petitions and letters to Hanoi demanding humane treatment
for the POWs was appealing, as we were looking for ways college
students could become involved in positive programs to support US
soldiers without becoming embroiled in the controversy of the war
itself. The relatives of the men were beginning to organize locally,
but the National League of POW/MIA Families had yet to be formed.
During that time Bob Dornan
wore a bracelet he had obtained in Vietnam from hill tribesmen, which
he said always reminded him of the suffering the war had brought to
so many. We wanted to get similar bracelets to wear to remember US
POWs, so rather naively, we tried to figure out a way to go to
Vietnam. Since no one wanted to fund two sorority-girl types on a
tour to Vietnam during the height of the war, and our parents were
livid at the idea, we gave up and Kay Hunter began to check out ways
to make bracelets. Soon other activities drew her attention and she
dropped out of VIVA, leaving me, another student Steve Frank, and our
adult advisor, Gloria Coppin, to pursue the POW/MIA awareness
program. The major problem was that VIVA had no money to make
bracelets, although our advisor was able to find a small shop in
Santa Monica that did engraving on silver used to decorate horses.
The owner agreed to make 10 sample bracelets. I can remember us
sitting around in Gloria Coppin's kitchen with the engraver on the
telephone, as we tried to figure out what we would put on the
bracelets. This is why they carried only name, rank and date of loss,
since we didn't have time to think of anything else.
Armed with the sample
bracelets, we set out to find someone who would donate money to make
bracelets for distribution to college students. It had not yet
occurred to us that adults would want to wear the things, as they
weren't very attractive. Several approaches to Ross Perot were
rebuffed, to include a proposal that he loan us $10,000 at 10%
interest. We even visited Howard Hughes' senior aides in Las Vegas.
They were sympathetic but not willing to help fund our project.
Finally in the late summer of 1970, Gloria Coppin's husband donated
enough brass and copper to make 1,200 bracelets. The Santa Monica
engraver agreed to make them and we could pay him from any proceeds
we might realize.
Although the initial
bracelets were going to cost about 75 cents to make, we were unsure
about how much we should ask people to donate to receive a bracelet.
In 1970, a student admission to the local movie theater was $2.50. We
decided this seemed like a fair price to ask from a student for one
of the nickel-plated bracelets. We also made copper ones for adults
who believed they helped their "tennis elbow." Again,
according to our logic adults could pay more, so we would request
$3.00 for the copper bracelets. At the suggestion of local POW/MIA
relatives, we attended the National League of Families annual meeting
in Washington, DC in late September. We were amazed at the interest
of the wives and parents in having their man's name put on bracelets
and in obtaining them for distribution. Bob Dornan, who was always a
champion of the POW/MIAs and their families, continued to publicize
the issue on his Los Angeles television talk show and promoted the bracelets.
On Veterans Day, November 11,
1970, we officially kicked off the bracelet program with a news
conference at the Universal Sheraton Hotel. Public response quickly
grew and we eventually got to the point we were receiving over 12,000
requests a day. This also brought money in to pay for brochures,
bumper stickers, buttons, advertising and whatever else we could do
to publicize the POW/MIA issue. We formed a close alliance with the
relatives of missing men - they got bracelets from us on consignment
and could keep some of the money they raised to fund their local
organizations. We also tried to furnish these groups with all the
stickers and other literature they could give away.
While Steve Frank and I ended
up dropping out of college to work for VIVA full time to administer
the bracelet and other POW/MIA programs, none of us got rich off the
bracelets. VIVA's adult advisory group, headed by Gloria Coppin, was
adamant that we would not have a highly paid professional staff. As I
recall the highest salary was $15,000, a year and we were able to
keep administrative costs to less that 20 percent of income.
In all, VIVA distributed
nearly five million bracelets and raised enough money to produce
untold millions of bumper stickers, buttons, brochures, matchbooks,
newspaper ads, etc., to draw attention to the missing men. In 1976,
VIVA closed its doors. By then the American public was tired of
hearing about Vietnam and showed no interest in the POW/MIA issue.
--Carol Bates Brown
Reprinted with permission.