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The symbol that would become synonymous with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CND was first brought to wide public attention on the Easter weekend of during a march from London to Aldermaston in Berkshire, the site of the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment.
Some symbols were held aloft by protesters as they walked the 52 miles from Trafalgar Square, which suggests that the organizers were aware of the need for both political and visual impact. The fact that, in the form of Gerald Holtom, they already had a professional designer and graduate of the Royal College of Art on board perhaps explains why the symbol achieved immediate success, as well as the swiftness with which it was officially adopted by CND a few months after the march.
Holtom was a conscientious objector during World War II he had worked on a Norfolk farm , and also an established designer. He had created designs as diverse as fabrics based on west African patterns from the late s and a range incorporating photographs of plankton for the Festival of Britain in According to Professor Andrew Rigby, writing in Peace News in , Holtom was responsible for designing the banners and placards that were to be carried on the Aldermaston march.
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