The Palo Alto History Project
Venceremos
                                                                                        665 & 666 Channing Street
2006
Venceremos: Arming for a Fight

The late sixties and early seventies were a time of awkward cultural juxtaposition, both in the nation at large
and here in Palo Alto.  Today, pop culture sometimes simplifies those years as a time when the whole
society turned into LCD-dropping, free-love making hippies.  But in reality, most Americans --- especially
outside big cities --- were living a life a lot closer to the 1950s.  While the counterculture certainly had a
large influence on mainstream life, most Americans were still living according to the rules of the “silent
majority.”

In a small university town like Palo Alto, the juxtaposition could be even stranger.  While hometown locals
might be marching in the May Fete Parade on Saturday morning, campus radicals would be clashing with
police on Saturday night --- all on the same street.  It was a time when two countries existed side-by-side,
sometimes engaging in a cultural civil war, sometimes pretending the other didn’t exist.

One example of this odd Palo Alto political juxtaposition was Venceremos, the communist radical group
headquartered in and around Palo Alto in those years.  Founded in 1966 by Aaron Manganiello, the
originally Latino left-wing protest organization was named for Che Guevera’s battle cry, “We will prevail!”   
By 1970, Venceremos had evolved into a multicultural Maoist/Communist revolutionary brigade that was a
mainstay at any mid-Peninsula protest in those years.  Under the leadership of Stanford Professor and
Melville scholar H. Bruce Franklin (fired in 1972 for leading a student takeover of the university’s computer
lab), Venceremos took an active role in community issues and demonstrations.  

And these guys weren’t fooling around.  Venceremos believed that “an unarmed people are subject to
slavery at any time” and held vast amounts of weaponry to back it up.  They had secret stashes of rifles,
grenades, pipe bombs, and other explosives and they urged members to stay armed at all times --- advice
that was apparently followed.  With their rifle logo and violent rhetoric, Venceremos startled the local
population and caught the eye of federal law enforcement.  Many believed they were one of the largest
revolutionary groups in the country and a 1972 House Internal Security Committee Report called the group
“a potential threat to the United States.”

Venceremos’ ultimate stated goal was the overthrow of the government.  On their way to armed
insurrection, their platform called for (among many other things): “The firing of…profit-motivated murderers,
like David Packard and Richard Nixon,” “an end to the fascist court system and fascist judges,” and “an
education which exposes the lies and oppression created by the corrupt court system and teaches us the true
history of oppressed people.”  Venceremos were also enemies of the police and were convinced that “the
best pigs are always dead pigs.” Pretty radical stuff.

But Venceremos stressed actions over rhetoric.  In 1970, they opened a revolutionary community college in
a Redwood City storefront that lasted until it ran out of money two years later.  They were actively involved
in an anti-drug campaign on the streets of Palo Alto in the summer of ’71 and later with the Palo Alto Drug
Collective.  They often showed up at City Council and School Board meetings in Palo Alto with a verbal
aggressiveness never before seen in the city’s politics.   At an August 1971 meeting, for instance, Jeffrey
Youdelman shouted down school board members as “racist, fascist pigs.”  They also tried to win elections.  
In May of ’71, Venceremos ran Jean Hobson for City Council, although she only garnered 798 votes, some
7,000 short of victory.  Undaunted, Youdelman ran as a candidate in 1973, but he fared no better.  
Venceremos member Doug Garrett also ran for Palo Alto School Board and Joan Dolly in the 1972 Menlo
Park council elections.

Venceremos was also part of the ever-present street protest scene that marked Palo Alto counterculture life
in the late 1960s and early ‘70s.  Every Saturday night at 7:00 PM, Venceremos held a rally with speakers
and bands at
Lytton Plaza, which they dubbed “The People’s Plaza.”  This often led to clashes with police
as the hour grew late and the music got louder.    

The beginning of the end for Venceremos came in 1972, when a number of its members were involved in a
headline-grabbing murder.  The incident centered around a Venceremos recruit and prison inmate named
Ronald Beaty.  A habitual stick-up artist and con, Beaty was serving time for armed robbery and kidnapping
at Chino Prison.  He apparently had romantic ties to Jean Hobson --- the former Venceremos candidate for
council --- that would lead to an attempt by the organization to help him escape.

On October 6th, 1972 two unarmed prison guards were taking Beaty to a court appearance in San
Bernardino when they were ambushed.  According to police and Beaty, who would become the prosecution’
s star witness, the government car was forced off a remote highway road near Chino.  Four Venceremos
members jumped out of two vehicles to set Beaty free.  As they prepared to flee the scene, 23 year old
Venceremos member Robert Seabok shot both guards at point blank range, killing 24 year-old Jesus
Sanchez and wounding his partner George Fitzgerald.  Venceremos members Hobson, Seabok, Andrea
Holman Burt and Benton Burt were named as the other ambushers.  Both Hobson and Seabok were Palo
Altans and neighbors, residing at the time at 656 and 666 Channing Street.

Hobson and Beaty, possessing a trunk load of weapons, were arrested two months later on the Bay Bridge
by San Francisco police without incident.  Now wanted for murder on top of past convictions, prosecuting
lawyers convinced Beaty to sing.  He named the four members who helped him escape, fingered Robert
Seabok as the gunman, and described how other members of Venceremos helped hide him in a rural San
Mateo County mountain cabin for close to a month.  Beaty pleaded guilty for his involvement in Sanchez’
death and received a life sentence.

All four Venceremos members would eventually be found guilty in subsequent trials.  Jean Hobson, 19 year-
old Andrea Holman Burt and 31 year-old Douglas Burt were all found guilty of second degree murder in
1973 and 1974, while Seabok got life imprisonment and a first degree murder conviction.  

Following their legal difficulties related to the incident at Chino, Venceremos began to come apart at the
seams.  Arguments erupted between various factions in the organization and members began to pull out and
join other groups.  Venceremos founder Aaron Manganiello also blamed a convict dope addict in the group’
s central committee for stealing thousands of dollars from the group’s treasury.  By September of 1973,
Venceremos had officially disbanded.

Many ex-Venceremos members went on to other organizations, including the SLA (Symbionese Liberation
Army) group that assassinated Oakland superintendent Dr. Marcus Foster at a school board meeting in
November 1973 and then kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst in February of 1974.  While the
SLA never operated in Palo Alto, law enforcement saw substantial links between the two groups.  

Today Venceremos has either been forgotten by Palo Altans or remembered as part of the city’s wacky
early 70’s counterculture.  But at their height in 1971 and ’72, when Venceremos was leading weekly rallies,
advocating violent action, and shouting down school board members, Venceremos had more than a few
Palo Altans spooked.
                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                 -Matt Bowling
Ronald Beaty, escaped
Chino detainee. (PA
Times)
A banner for a People's Rally.
(Venceremos Pamoja)
Palo Alto Home Page
Venceremos members
giving a salute of
solidarity. (Veceremos
Pamoja)
Historic Events
Police & Crime
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of Venceremos?  Post them in
our memory bank.  Corrections
or comments are also always
welcome... Thanks!
Your name:
Email:
Subject:
Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Historical Association
Pamoja Venceremos
Above left is a picture from the 1971 rally at the People's Festival in Downtown's Lytton Plaza.  The Venceremos
banner, along with plenty of graffiti covers the building to the south of the plaza.  A new building now stands housing
the popular Pizza My Heart restaurant.  A Burger King previously occupied the site.
One of H. Bruce
Franklin's many
authored books
Weaponry found at a
Menlo Park Venceremos
safehouse.
Many Venceremos members
later worked as part of the
SLA, the group at the center
of the Patty Hearst heist.
A message to the  readers of
the Veceremos newspaper,
Pamoja. (Venceremos Pajoma)
Jean Hobson was eventually
convicted of second degree
murder. (PA Times)
Ronald Beaty became a star
witness for the prosecution.
(PA Times)
H. Bruce Franklin
today --- the
one-time leader of
Venceremos.  After
being fired by
Stanford, he
eventually became
a professor at
Rutgers University.
The banner of an edition of
Pamoja Venceremos, the
organization's newspaper.
Links
H. Bruce Franklin's Website
Palo Alto: Then & Now

1971
2007
"I was a classmate of [Andrea Holman's] at Gunn High School and
remember the shock when I heard of her involvement with this
group. We traveled in completely different circles but she and I had
many youthful and good natured debates concerning the Vietnam
War and other issues of the day. Such an intelligent person, such a
shame.

Does anyone know what happened to her? Has she been released
from prison?"
-James
Memories added by our readers:
"My son was in a class [of Bruce Franklin's] and didn't agree with
him.  Anyway, [Franklin] said, 'Today we're going to meet outside'
and so they did.  And they met outside the computer center and he
said, 'We are now going to go in and destroy it'...He did these
horrible things."  -Kim
"Bruce was the very first tenured professor in America to be fired .
He was actually world renowned for his Marxist interpretation of
Moby Dick, specifically. I had many pleasant encounters with Bruce
(who let me sneak in and 'audit' his course,) ) and the group, itself
(who were gracious enough to smuggle me out of California after a
rather nasty  situation went awry, once. Nice kids. As for the
negative comments r: Bruce (in the comments section), bear in mind
that Stanford was the last school in the States to shut down after the
carpet bombing of  Cambodia. (Foothill College in Los Altos Hills,
was actually first, followed a couple days later by UC Berkeley, and
the rest of the country. That's all you really need to know about the
bias inherent in Stanford students at the time. If the whole country
had their insights we'd still be bombing Vietnamese poor people in
their sleep."  -Brian