In 1951, the
New Hampshire General Court, the legislature of
New Hampshire, passed an act that empowered the
New Hampshire Attorney General to investigate
subversion; that act, the Subversive Activities Act of 1951, was codified into state law as RSA 588. The law provided for fines of up to $20,000 and imprisonment for twenty years for failing to cooperate with the Attorney General during an investigation. In 1953, the legislature amended the law to allow the Attorney General to sit as a one-man legislative committee, subpoenaing witnesses, requesting funding, and holding public or
in camera sessions as he saw fit; thus delegated these powers, Attorney General
Louis C. Wyman proceeded to begin his investigation of
Communist subversion in New Hampshire later that year. His investigation looked into the connections, backgrounds, and beliefs of individuals such as Elba Chase Nelson, a former Communist candidate for governor;
Willard Uphaus, a theologian and director of the New Hampshire-based
World Fellowship Center,
Florence Luscomb, the architect and activist; and
Paul Sweezy, an economist and magazine editor. The latter two both contributed to the
socialist magazine
Monthly Review and the magazine of the
Socialist Union of America,
The American Socialist. Sweezy was a Marxist economist and the founding editor of the
Monthly Review. In January 1954, he was subpoenaed by the state Attorney General to answer questions related to his connections to socialists and communists; he was later ordered to appear again in June, to discuss the notes of a March 22 lecture on
Marxism he had delivered at the
University of New Hampshire. In particular, Attorney General Wyman sought to discover Sweezy's beliefs about the inevitability of socialism,
dialectical materialism, and whether Sweezy had advocated Marxism. At both times, Sweezy refused to answer particular questions related to his connections, the lecture, and Communism. Following his refusal to answer questions, on June 30, Wyman had Sweezy found in
contempt of court by the
Merrimack County Superior Court, but freed on $1,000 bond, pending appeal. During the appeals process, Sweezy continued to lecture at the University of New Hampshire. Sweezy appealed to the
New Hampshire Supreme Court, which affirmed his conviction. After the
Supreme Court of the United States decision in
Pennsylvania v. Nelson, Sweezy requested a rehearing in the New Hampshire Supreme Court, which was denied. Sweezy then appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States. At oral argument, Attorney General Wyman represented the state of New Hampshire. == Opinion of the Court ==