Background
Walter Ford Gormly was born February 7, 1915, the middle son of Will J. and Anna L. Gormly of Mount Vernon, Iowa.
Walter Ford Gormly was born February 7, 1915, the middle son of Will J. and Anna L. Gormly of Mount Vernon, Iowa.
After transferring from Colorado State College, he received his Bachelor of Surgery (1939) from Iowa State College (University) in Mechanical Engineering. Because he was a conscientious objector, and because he refused to serve in government-sanctioned work camps, Gormly was incarcerated for three years during World World War II in the federal prison at Sandstone, Minnesota. While in prison he staged a hunger strike, which lasted for four months and four days (during which time he was federal intravenously) before he was freed without parole.
Gormly, believing that federal tax dollars funded the military, continued his anti-war activities by refusing to pay federal income tax during the 1950s.
In 1962, he staged another hunger strike in front of the Internal Revenue Service building in Des Moines, Iowa, and was once again jailed for a short time. During this period, Gormly also became very interested in food and drug issues and was a vocal opponent of fluoride.
He published "Newsman"s Gadfly" during the 1960s and authored a column, "Voice from the Woods". Gormly died February 26, 2000.
He was a member of the Society for Social Responsibility in Science (SSRS) and the Humanists of Iowa.