Everything about Marcus Mosiah Garvey totally explained
Marcus Mosiah Garvey, Jr.,
National Hero of Jamaica (
August 17,
1887–
June 10,
1940), was a
publisher,
journalist,
entrepreneur,
Black nationalist,
orator, and founder of the
Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League (UNIA-ACL).
Prior to the
twentieth century, leaders such as
Prince Hall,
Martin Delaney,
Edward Wilmot Blyden, and
Henry Highland Garnet advocated the involvement of the
African diaspora in African affairs. Garvey was unique in advancing a
Pan-African philosophy to inspire a global
mass movement focusing on Africa known as
Garveyism.}}
Early years
Garvey was born on August 17, 1887 at 32 Market Street in Saint Ann's Bay,
Saint Ann Parish, Jamaica to Marcus Mosiah Garvey, Sr., a
mason, and Sarah Jane Richards, a domestic worker and
farmer. Of eleven siblings, only Marcus and his sister Indiana reached maturity. Garvey's father was known to have a large library, and it was from his father that Marcus gained his love for reading. Sometime in the year 1900, Garvey entered into an
apprenticeship with his uncle, Alfred Burrowes. Like Garvey Sr, Mr. Burrowes had an extensive library, of which young Garvey made good use.
Near the age of fourteen, Garvey left Saint Ann's Bay for
Kingston, where he found employment as a compositor in the printery of P.A. Benjamin Limited. He was a master printer and foreman at Benjamin when, in November of 1907, he was elected vice-president of the Kingston Union. However, he was fired when he joined a
strike by printers in late 1908. Having been blacklisted for his stance in the strike, he later found work at the Government Printing Office. In 1909, his newspaper
The Watchman began publication, but it only lasted for three issues.
In 1910, Garvey left Jamaica and began traveling throughout the Central American region. He lived in
Costa Rica for several months, where he worked as a time-keeper on a banana
plantation. He began work as editor for a daily newspaper entitled 'La Nacionale' in 1911. Later that year, he moved to
Colón, Panama, where he edited a tri-weekly newspaper before returning to Jamaica in 1912.
After years of working in the Caribbean, Garvey left Jamaica to live in
London from 1912 to 1914, where, he attended
Birkbeck College, worked for the
African Times and Orient Review, published by
Dusé Mohamed Ali, and sometimes spoke at
Hyde Park's
Speakers' Corner.
Founding and Projects of the UNIA-ACL
During his travels, Garvey became convinced that uniting Blacks was the only way to improve their condition. Towards that end, he departed
England on
June 14,
1914 aboard the S.S. Trent, reaching Jamaica on
July 15,
1914. The
Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) was founded in August 1914 as a means of uniting all of Africa and its diaspora into "one grand racial hierarchy."
Amy Ashwood, who would later be Garvey's first wife, was among the founders. As the group's first President-General, his goal was "to unite all people of African ancestry of the world to one great body to establish a country and absolute government of their own."
Following much reflection the following day and night about what he learned, "the vision and thought came" to "name the organization the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities (Imperial) League."
After corresponding with
Booker T. Washington, Garvey arrived in the U.S. on
March 23,
1916 aboard the
S.S. Tallac to give a lecture tour and to raise funds for the establishment of a school in Jamaica modeled after Washington's
Tuskegee Institute. Garvey visited Tuskegee, and afterward, visited with a number of Black leaders. After moving to New York, he found work as a printer by day. He was influenced by
Hubert Harrison, and at night he'd speak on street corners, much like he did in London's Hyde Park. It was then that Garvey perceived a leadership vacuum among people of African ancestry, and so on
May 9,
1916, he held his first public lecture in
New York City at
St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery and undertook a 38-state speaking tour.
In May of 1917, Garvey and thirteen others formed the first UNIA division outside Jamaica and began advancing ideas promoting social, political, and
economic freedom for Blacks. On July 2, the
East St. Louis riots broke out. On July 8, Garvey delivered an address, entitled "The Conspiracy of the East St. Louis Riots," at Lafayette Hall in
Harlem. During the speech, he declared the riot was "one of the bloodiest outrages against mankind." By October, rancor within the UNIA had begun to set in. A split occurred in the Harlem division, with Garvey enlisted to become its leader; although he still technically held the same position in Jamaica.
Garvey next set about the business of developing a program to improve the conditions of those of African ancestry "at home and abroad" under UNIA auspices. On
August 17,
1918, publication of the widely distributed
Negro World newspaper began. Garvey worked as an editor for free up until November 1920. By June of 1919 the membership of the organization had grown to over two million.
On
June 27,
1919, the
Black Star Line of Delaware, was incorporated by the members of the UNIA with Garvey as President. By September, it obtained its first ship. Much fanfare surrounded the inspection of the S.S.
Yarmouth and its rechristening as the S.S.
Frederick Douglass on
September 14,
1919. Such a rapid accomplishment garnered attention from many.
One person who noticed was
Edwin P. Kilroe, Assistant
District Attorney in the District Attorney's office of the County of New York. Kilroe began an investigation into the activities of the UNIA, without finding any evidence of wrongdoing or mismanagement. After being called to Kilroe's office numerous times without any resolution, Garvey wrote an editorial on Kilroe's activities for the
Negro World. Garvey was arrested and indicted for criminal libel in relation to the article, but charges were dismissed after Garvey published a retraction.
While in his Harlem office at 56 West 156th Street on
October 14,
1919, Garvey received a visit from a man by the name of George Tyler, who told him that Kilroe "had sent him" to get Garvey. Tyler then pulled a .38-calibre revolver and fired four shots, wounding Garvey in the right leg and scalp. Garvey was taken to the hospital and Tyler arrested. The next day, Tyler apparently committed suicide by jumping from the third tier of the Harlem jail while he was being taken to his arraignment.
By August 1920, the UNIA claimed four million members. That month, the International Convention of the UNIA was held. With delegates from all over the world in attendance, over 25,000 people filled
Madison Square Garden on August 1 to hear Garvey speak.
Another of Garvey's ventures was the
Negro Factories Corporation. His plan called for creating the infrastructure to manufacture every marketable commodity in every big U.S. industrial center, as well as in Central America, the West Indies, and Africa. Related endeavors included a grocery chain, restaurant, publishing house, and other businesses.
Convinced that Blacks should have a permanent homeland in Africa, Garvey sought to develop
Liberia.
The Liberia program, launched in 1920, was intended to build colleges, universities, industrial plants, and railroads as part of an
industrial base from which to operate. However, it was abandoned in the mid-1920s after much opposition from European powers with interests in Liberia. In response to suggestions that he wanted to take all Americans of
African ancestry back to Africa, he wrote, "We don't want all the Negroes in Africa. Some are no good here, and naturally will be no good there."
Garvey has been credited with creating the biggest movement of people of African descent. This movement that took place in the 1920s is said to have had more participation from people of African descent than the
Civil Rights Movement. In essence the UNIA was the largest Pan-African movement.
Charge of mail fraud
In a memorandum dated
October 11,
1919,
J. Edgar Hoover, special assistant to the
Attorney General, and head of the General Intelligence Division (or "anti-radical division"), of The Bureau of Investigation or BOI (after 1935, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation) wrote a memorandum to Special Agent Ridgely regarding Marcus Garvey. In the memo, Hoover wrote that:
Sometime around November of 1919 an investigation by the BOI was begun into the activities of Garvey and the UNIA. Towards this end, the BOI hired
James Edward Amos,
Arthur Lowell Brent,
Thomas Leon Jefferson,
James Wormley Jones, and
Earl E. Titus as its first five African-American agents. Although initial efforts by the BOI were to find grounds upon which to deport Garvey as "an undesirable alien", a charge of
mail fraud was brought against Garvey in connection with stock sales of the
Black Star Line after the
U.S. Post Office and the
Attorney General joined the investigation. to having been told to mention certain dates in his testimony by Chief Prosecutor
Maxwell S. Mattuck. Furthermore, he admitted that he couldn't remember the names of any coworkers in the office, including the timekeeper who punched employees time cards. Ultimately, he acknowledged being told to lie by Postal Inspector F.E. Shea . He said Shea told him to state that he mailed letters containing the purportedly fraudulent brochures. The Black Star Line did own and operate several ships over the course of its history and was in the process of negotiating for the disputed ship at the time the charges were brought.
Of the four Black Star Line officers charged in connection with the enterprise, only Garvey was found guilty of using the mail service to defraud. His supporters called the trial fraudulent. While there were serious accounting irregularities within the Black Star Line and the claims he used to sell Black Star Line stock could be considered misleading, Garvey's supporters still contest that the prosecution was a politically motivated
miscarriage of justice, given the above-mentioned
false statement testimony and Hoover's explicit regret that Garvey had committed no crimes.
When the trial ended on
June 23,
1923, Garvey had been sentenced to five years in prison. He initially spent three months in the
Tombs Jail awaiting approval of bail. While on bail, he continued to maintain his innocence, travel, speak and organize the UNIA. After numerous attempts at appeal were unsuccessful, he was taken into custody and began serving his sentence at the
Atlanta Federal Penitentiary on
February 8,
1925. Two days later, he penned his well known "First Message to the Negroes of the World From Atlanta Prison" wherein he makes his famous proclamation:
Garvey's sentence was eventually commuted by President
Calvin Coolidge. Upon his release in November 1927, Garvey was deported via
New Orleans to
Jamaica, where a large crowd met him at Orrett's Wharf in
Kingston. A huge procession and band converged on UNIA headquarters.
Criticism
While
W. E. B. Du Bois expressed the
Black Star Line was “original and promising,” he also said: “Marcus Garvey is, without doubt, the most dangerous enemy of the Negro race in America and in the world. He is either a lunatic or a traitor.” Du Bois feared that Garvey's activities would undermine his efforts toward black rights.
Garvey suspected Du Bois was prejudiced against him because he was a Caribbean native with darker skin. Garvey called Du Bois “purely and simply a white man's nigger" and "a little Dutch, a little French, a little Negro … a mulatto … a monstrosity.” This led to an acrimonious relationship between Garvey and the
NAACP. Garvey accused Du Bois of paying conspirators to sabotage the Black Star Line to destroy his reputation. Du Bois was, nevertheless, a strong supporter of
Pan-Africanism.
Garvey recognized the influence of the
Ku Klux Klan, and in early 1922, he went to
Atlanta,
Georgia for a conference with KKK imperial giant
Edward Young Clarke.
According to Garvey, “I regard the Klan, the Anglo-Saxon clubs and White American societies, as far as the Negro is concerned, as better friends of the race than all other groups of hypocritical whites put together. I like honesty and fair play. You may call me a Klansman if you will, but, potentially, every white man is a Klansman, as far as the Negro in competition with whites socially, economically and politically is concerned, and there's no use lying.”
After Garvey's entente with the Ku Klux Klan, a number of African American leaders appealed to U.S. Attorney General
Harry M. Daugherty to have Garvey incarcerated.
Later years
Garvey travelled to Geneva in 1928 to present the Petition of the Negro Race, which outlined the worldwide abuse of Africans, to the
League of Nations. In September 1929, he founded the
People's Political Party (PPP), Jamaica's first modern political party, which focused on
workers' rights,
education, and aid to the poor.
Also in 1929, Garvey was elected councilor for the Allman Town Division of the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation (KSAC). He lost his seat, however, because of having to serve a prison sentence for
contempt of court, but in 1930, he was re-elected, unopposed, along with two other PPP candidates.
In April 1931, Garvey launched the
Edelweiss Amusement Company, which he set up to help artists earn their livelihood from their craft. Several Jamaican entertainers —
Kidd Harold,
Ernest Cupidon,
Bim & Bam, and
Ranny Williams — went on to become popular after receiving initial exposure that the company gave them.
In 1935, Garvey left Jamaica for
London, where he lived and worked until his death in 1940. During these last five years, he remained active and in touch with events in war-torn
Ethiopia (then known as
Abyssinia) and the
West Indies. In 1938, he gave evidence before the
West Indian Royal Commission on conditions there. Also in 1938, he set up the School of African Philosophy at 355 College St., in Toronto, Canada to train UNIA leaders. He continued to work on the magazine
The Black Man.
In 1937, a group of his American supporters, called the
Peace Movement of Ethiopia, openly collaborated with
Mississippi Senator
Theodore Bilbo in the promotion of a repatriation scheme introduced in the US Congress as the
Greater Liberia Act.
Death
On
June 10,
1940, Garvey died after two
strokes, putatively after reading a mistaken, and negative,
obituary of himself in the
Chicago Defender. Because of travel conditions during
World War II, he was interred at
Kensal Green Cemetery in
London.
In 1964, his remains were exhumed and taken to Jamaica. On
November 15,
1964, the government of Jamaica, having proclaimed him Jamaica's
first national hero, ceremoniously re-interred him at a shrine in
National Heroes Park.
Influence
Garvey's memory has been kept alive worldwide. Schools, colleges, highways, and buildings in Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, and the United States have been named in his honor. The UNIA
red, black, and green flag has been adopted as the Black Liberation Flag. Since 1980, Garvey's bust has been housed in the
Organization of American States' Hall of Heroes in
Washington, D.C.
Malcolm X's parents, Earl and Louise Little, met at a UNIA convention in
Montreal,
Canada. Earl was the president of the UNIA division in
Omaha,
Nebraska and sold the
Negro World newspaper while Louise was a contributor to the
Negro World.
Kwame Nkrumah named the national shipping line of
Ghana the Black Star Line in honor of Garvey and the UNIA. Nkrumah also named the national
soccer team the
Black Stars as well. The black star at the center of
Ghana's flag is also inspired by the Black Star Line.
During a trip to Jamaica,
Martin Luther King and his wife
Coretta Scott King visited the shrine of Marcus Garvey on
June 20,
1965 and laid a wreath. In a speech he told the audience that Garvey "was the first man of color to lead and develop a mass movement. He was the first man on a mass scale and level to give millions of Negroes a sense of dignity and destiny. And make the Negro feel he was somebody."
King was also the posthumous recipient of the first
Marcus Garvey Prize for Human Rights on
December 10,
1968 issued by the Jamaican Government and presented to
King's widow.
The
United States of Africa first saw light in a 1924 poem by Garvey and is still discussed.
There have been pop culture references to Marcus Garvey since he first came on the international scene. Garvey is cited repeatedly in a diverse variety of books, songs and films. He is mentioned particularly frequently in
blues,
reggae,
jazz and
hip hop music.
Garvey and Rastafari
Rastafarians consider Garvey a
religious prophet, and sometimes even the
reincarnation of
Saint John the Baptist. This is partly because of his frequent statements uttered in speeches throughout the 1920s, usually along the lines of "Look to Africa, when a black king shall be crowned for the day of deliverance is at hand!"
His beliefs deeply influenced the Rastafari, who took his statements as a prophecy of the crowning of
Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia. Early Rastas were associated with his
Back-to-Africa movement in Jamaica. This early Rastafari movement was also influenced by a separate, proto-Rasta movement known as the
Afro-Athlican Church that was outlined in a religious text known as the
Holy Piby — where Garvey was proclaimed to be a prophet as well. Thus, the Rastafari movement can be seen as an offshoot of
Garveyite philosophy. As his beliefs have greatly influenced Rastafari, he's often mentioned in
reggae music.
Garvey himself never identified with the Rastafari movement, and was, in fact, raised as a
Methodist who went on to become a
Roman Catholic.
Memorials to Garvey
There are a number of memorials worldwide which honor Marcus Garvey. Most are in Jamaica and the United States.
Jamaica
- A marker in front of the house of his birth at 32 Market Street, St. Ann's Bay, Jamaica.
- A statue on the grounds of St. Ann's Bay Parish Library.
- A secondary school in his name in St. Ann' Bay.
- A major highway in his name in Kingston.
- A bust in Apex Park in Kingston.
- Likeness on the Jamaican 50 cent coin and 20 dollar coin.
- A building in his name housing the Jamaican Ministry of Foreign Affairs located in New Kingston.
- A Marcus Garvey statue at National Heroes Park in Kingston, JA.
Trinidad
A statue on Harris Promenade, San Fernando
United States of America
Park in his name and a New York Public Library branch dedicated to him in New York City's Harlem.
A major street in his name in the historically Black Brooklyn neighbourhood of Bedford Stuyvesant in the USA
The Universal Hip Hop Parade held annually in Brooklyn on the Saturday before his birthday to carry on his use of popular culture as a tool of empowerment and to encourage the growth of Black institutions.
A park in his name in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco, California.
A Marcus Garvey Cultural Center, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, Colorado.
A secondary school in Trenton, New Jersey
A Community Center and Senior Housing Community in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts
Marcus Garvey school. A K through 8 grade private school in Los Angeles, California
Marcus Garvey school. A Pre-K through 8 grade public magnet in math and science in Chicago, Illinois
Record producer, CEO, clothing designer, actor, and rapper Sean John Combs's clothing line Sean John releases a pair of denim jeans whose style is named 'Garvey' after Marcus Garvey.
Boston indie band Piebald wrote a song titled "If Marcus Garvey Dies, Then Marcus Garvey Lives" for their 1999 release "If It Weren't For Venetian Blinds, It Would Be Curtains for us All"
Africa
A major street in his name in Nairobi, Kenya.
A street named after him in Enugu, Nigeria.
Europe
A small park in his name in Hammersmith, London, UK.
Marcus Garvey Centre in Lenton, Nottingham, UK.
A Marcus Garvey Library inside the Tottenham Green Leisure Centre building in North London, UK.
Marcus Garvey Road in Brixton, London.
Blue Plaque at 53, Talgarth Road, Hammersmith, London, UK:
GARVEY, Marcus (1887-1940)
Pan-Africanist Leader,
lived and died here, 53 Talgarth Road, W14.
[Hammersmithand Fulham 2005]Further Information
Get more info on 'Marcus Mosiah Garvey'.
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