“I don’t think I have ever felt so damned alone as on that
day”
Lee Hays on his experience testifying before the House of Un-American Activities Committee
Subpoena received by Hays, 1955. Lee Hays Papers. Hays_02_02_055_001. Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections |
Lee Hays and Pete Seeger had been identified as Communists by an FBI informant. During this time, being identified as a Communist could be detrimental to one's livelihood. In the case of Lee Hays it led to a commercial blacklisting that would cast a shadow over the next several decades of his career. The Weavers and Lee Hays were responsible for penning hits in support of the working class such as "Roll the Union On" and "If I Had a Hammer".
Pete Seeger and Lee Hays. Photograph by Joe Thompson. Lee Hays Papers, Hays_02_073_j016. Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections. |
What follows is a short selection from his trial transcript:
Mr. Tavenner: What I am trying to get at, Mr. Hays, is to learn to what extent the Communist Party has used you in its program to advance the cause of the Communist Party in this country.Mr. Hays: I don’t know what you mean, sir, by the use of the word ‘used’.Mr. Tavenner: I mean used in the sense that you contributed your talent and your services, and your time, and your effort knowingly to assist the Communist Party in the field of your talent.
Mr. Hays: You are asking questions which to me are highly argumentative and debatable, and I don’t propose to get into that debate and argument because it is an area that deals with associations and beliefs and so I do decline to answer that under the reasons stated.Chairman Walter: You decline to answer because of the fifth amendment, is that right?Mr. Hays: Under the privilege of the fifth amendment.
Lee Hays, throughout his trial, declined to answer any questions that would identify anyone as being a communist. In personal correspondence, Hays has described the experience as being harrowing. He found it immoral and un-American to provide information on others' personal and political beliefs; even if they were not Communists or sympathizers.
Letter of condemnation, 1955. Lee Hays Papers, Hays_02_02_054_006. Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections. |
Letter of Support, 1955. Lee Hays Papers, Hays_02_02_054_015. Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections. |
Nichole Procopenko
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