Curio

State Library of New South Wales

Protest badges for peace and nuclear disarmament, 1960s – 1980s

Metal and plastic

R 858 / 1­–16


Show your allegiance, display solidarity, campaign for change, protest injustice or express what matters to you. Wear a badge and participate in democracy ... Opposition to the use of nuclear weapons, nuclear energy and nuclear testing is chronicled on a large number of badges, with evocative slogans such as ‘Children need smiles not missiles’, ‘Arms are for linking’ and ‘Hiroshima Never Again’, a reference to the bombing of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States in August 1945.


A button badge consists of several layers (from rear to face): the metal pinback, the metal shell; the artwork on a thin substrate such as paper; and a plastic film such as mylar. They are layered over each other then pressed together under pressure with shell being rounded over edges of pinback.


In the 1800s, the Patrick Family began a photo medallion and picture framing business in Redfern, Sydney. Some years later the business expanded to include the manufacture and sale of button badges in King Street, Newtown, Sydney …


Mobilise for survival – Stop nuclear madness, Patrick Bros., Melbourne

Uranium? No thanks, 1974–1980

Patricks developed badges for charity fund raising promotions and was a key figure in the fund raising effort for the First World War. These badges helped raise more than $50 million …


Together we can stop the bomb, Nuclear Disarmament Lobby, 1960–1981

The button badge is regarded as one of the first promotional products to be used in Australia.

www.patricksmarketing.com.au/history

By their very nature badges are pithy, condensed and catchy, intended to convey their message in a snappy phrase or iconic symbol. Aside from the clever, blunt, declarative language used on political badges, many of them rely on strong images to convey their meaning.

Steven Murkett, 'I am an enemy of the state ...', Museum of Australian Democracy blog, 28 November 2012

B.A.M. (Badge-A-Minit) is the acronym for a semi-automatic button badge making machine. The acronym is impressed into the plastic insert at the rear of two of the button badges on display: 'Keep the Pacific nuclear-free' and 'Children need smiles not missiles'.