George J. Mische (born 1937, some sources mistakenly list 1938) is an American Roman Catholic peace activist, best known for his part as one of the Catonsville Nine. [1] He was also one of the planners of the Milwaukee Fourteen. [2] On May 17, 1968, the group burned 378 1A draft cards with homemade napalm in a parking lot just outside the draft board office in Catonsville, Maryland. [3] Mische was one of the key organizers, and he has spent some energy in the ensuing decades correcting popular myths about the story. [4]
George Joseph Mische was born July 30, 1937, in St. Cloud, Minnesota to Cecelia and Louis Mische, and was one of five boys. [5] His father was a German immigrant and labor organizer who worked at a veterans' hospital, and had nearly been deported when he was accused of being a communist. [3] Two of Mische's brothers were also activists. Gerald F. Mische co-founded the Catholic-based Association for International Development in 1957. [6] Another brother founded a Catholic Worker house in Chicago. [3] George Mische spent time among the wounded and emotionally broken veterans at the hospital, and developed his anti-war stance. [7] He attended St. Cloud State College, dropping out after one quarter, and then joined the U. S. Army in 1955. [8] He was discharged in 1960 and first attended the Jesuit St. Peter's College, followed by Gannon College, graduating in 1963. [9]