Week 1 • August 6, 2005: Cindy Sheehan started her demonstration. She makes a makeshift camp in a ditch by the side of the road about 3 miles from George W. Bush's
Prairie Chapel Ranch near
Crawford, Texas and announces her intention to stay (sleeping in a pup tent at nights) until she is granted another face-to-face meeting with the President. • August 6, 2005: National security adviser
Stephen Hadley and deputy White House chief of staff
Joe Hagin meet briefly with Cindy Sheehan. Sheehan later called the meeting "pointless." • August 8, 2005: Cindy Sheehan states that she has been informed that beginning Thursday, August 10, 2005, she and her companions will be considered a threat to national security and will be arrested. Later there was a retraction of the story by the Daily Kos. Sheehan's camp is first referred to in the media as "Camp Casey." • August 9, 2005: Democratic congressmen request that Bush meet with Sheehan and the other relatives of fallen soldiers. The congressmen call on Bush to ensure that no one will be arrested for having a peaceful demonstration. • August 10, 2005: Bush holds a press conference, during which he mentions Sheehan's right to her view. • August 11, 2005: Cindy Sheehan writes an open letter to President Bush in response to his press conference statement. • August 12, 2005: Camp Casey protest draws hundreds of supporters (including actor
Viggo Mortensen), with a constant presence of just over 100. • August 12, 2005: Southern California members of
Veterans for Peace install
Arlington West, a memorial consisting of nearly 1,000 white crosses (as well as stars and crescents), each bearing the name of a fallen U.S. soldier in Iraq, along the side of the road near Sheehan's camp. • August 12, 2005: Bush's motorcade passes within 100 feet of Sheehan's roadside encampment en route to a nearby ranch to attend a fundraising barbecue expected to raise US$2 million for the
Republican National Committee; Sheehan holds a sign reading "Why do you make time for donors and not for me?" • August 12, 2005: Patrick Sheehan files for divorce from Cindy Sheehan in a California court. Mr. Sheehan was the father of Casey Sheehan.
Week 2 • August 13, 2005: A morning
counter protest is reported to bring over 250 people, who shout pro-Bush slogans for several hours. Sherry Bohlen, National Field Director for PDA, estimates that 1000 to 1500 people gathered at a park in Crawford for a peace demonstration, and that 500 cars ferried these people to Camp Casey. (Source: Email from Bohlen to PDA members) • August 14, 2005:
Larry Mattlage, who owns a cattle ranch across where Sheehan has set up her protest site, fed up with traffic near his home, fires a shotgun several times into the air. He later claims to have been practicing for
dove hunting season but also hints to reporters that the shots may also have been meant to drive off the protesters. • August 14, 2005: U.S. Representative
Maxine Waters, as well as a group of Iraqis living in Texas, visit Sheehan at Camp Casey. • August 15, 2005: Late in the night, a pickup truck driven by Waco, Texas resident
Larry Northern tears through the rows of white crosses stretching about two-tenths of a mile along the side of the road at the Crawford camp, each bearing the name of a U.S. soldier killed in Iraq. Several hundred of the crosses are damaged but no one is injured. Northern is later arrested and charged with criminal mischief by police. • August 16, 2005: Sheehan announces plans to move her camp closer to the Bush ranch after being offered the use of a piece of land owned by a supporter,
Fred Mattlage, a third cousin of Larry Mattlage, the rancher who had fired a shotgun on his property near the demonstration site several days earlier. • August 16, 2005:
Move America Forward announces a "You Don't Speak For Me, Cindy" caravan ending in Crawford, on August 27. • August 17, 2005: More than 1,600 anti-war candlelight vigils in support of Sheehan are held around the United States, including one outside the White House. • August 18, 2005: Sheehan announces she is leaving Crawford to see her elderly mother, who had suffered a stroke, but vows to return if possible and as soon as she can. • August 18, 2005: A walk is made by the Gold Star Mothers for Peace towards President Bush's ranch in Crawford to deliver letters written by them to
First Lady Laura Bush, appealing to her as a mother for support towards their movement.
Week 3 • August 20, 2005: President George W. Bush embarks on a five-day campaign to defend the Iraq war, speaking to veterans' and military groups in Utah and Idaho. • August 20, 2005: Supporters of the Iraq war, led by Crawford small business owner Bill Johnson, set up a small opposing camp, named "
Fort Qualls," behind his "Yellow Rose" gift shop in Crawford, Texas. • August 20, 2005: Texas singer-songwriter
James McMurtry and
country musician
Steve Earle perform at Camp Casey II, followed by speeches by Rev. Peter Johnson, organizer and former staffer of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and Rev. Joseph Lowery, preacher and co-founder of the SCLC. They introduce three African American mothers whose sons were killed in Iraq. • August 21, 2005: Folk singer
Joan Baez visits and performs at Camp Casey. • August 21, 2005: Bomb threat received at the "Yellow Rose" gift shop, owned by pro-Bush Crawford businessman Bill Johnson. • August 22, 2005: Motorcycle rider clubs roll by in support of the pro-Bush camp.( minutes 24–25) • August 22, 2005: U.S. Representative
Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) and actress
Margot Kidder visit Camp Casey. • August 22, 2005: The Pro-Bush "You Don't Speak for Me, Cindy" caravan, sponsored by the Sacramento-based group Move America Forward, leaves from San Francisco for Crawford, Texas. • August 22, 2005: Opponents of Sheehan set up "Camp Reality," located in a ditch across the road from Camp Casey. • August 23, 2005: In brief remarks to reporters in
Donnelly, Idaho, President George W. Bush states his opposition to Sheehan's call for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. • August 24, 2005: President George W. Bush addresses military families in
Nampa, Idaho and explains his reasons for being in
Iraq: "We will stay on the offense. We'll complete our work in Afghanistan and Iraq. An immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq, or the broader Middle East, as some have called for, would only embolden the terrorists and create a staging ground to launch more attacks against America and free nations. So long as I'm the President, we will stay, we will fight, and we will win the war on terror... We're spreading the hope of freedom across the broader Middle East." • August 25, 2005: Sheehan states that she will continue her campaign against the Iraq war even if granted a second meeting with the President, and announces plans to lead a national bus tour to Washington, D.C., which will leave on September 1 and arrive in Washington on September 24 for three days of action against the war.
Week 4 • August 27, 2005: Conflicting estimates of between 1000 and 4000 Pro-Bush supporters rally in Crawford as part of the "You Don't Speak for Me, Cindy" caravan. • August 27, 2005: Native American activist
Russell Means visits Camp Casey II. • August 28, 2005: Actor and long-time peace activist
Martin Sheen, who plays fictional Democratic President
Josiah Bartlet on
The West Wing, visits and speaks. • August 28, 2005: Rev.
Al Sharpton visits Camp Casey II. • August 29, 2005:
Hurricane Katrina, a Category 4 storm, makes landfall in southeastern
Louisiana. • August 29, 2005: Native American activist
Dennis Banks visits Camp Casey II. • August 30, 2005: President Bush decides to end his five-week vacation early to focus on relief efforts in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina. ==See also==