The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Vol. III: September 1920-August 1921

الغلاف الأمامي
University of California Press, 1983 - 886 من الصفحات
This is the third volume of Robert A. Hill's massive ten-volume survey of Marcus Mosiah Garvey and the extraordinary mass movement of black social protest he inspired. Hill brings together a wealth of original documents-speeches, letters, newspaper articles, intelligence reports, pamphlets, and diplomatic dispatches--to provide a record of the period between the first and second international conventions of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. The success of the August 1920 convention, as documented in Volume II, justified Garvey's expanded emphasis on African redemption and established his movement's substantial following in black communities around the world. And by the time of the August 1921 convention, the UNIA was the major political force among blacks in the postwar world. As Volume III reveals, however, there arose signs of crisis in the movement. Garvey's lieutenants began to doubt both the financial health of the Black Star Line and the wisdom of Garvey's methods of raising money for his Liberian colonization and trade scheme. Soon the entire Black Star Line enterprise hovered on the brink of bankruptcy and a steep decline in the shipping business made prospects for the Black Star Line even less promising. But Garvey capitalized on the momentum gathered at the August 1920 convention and spent much of his time in a new round of promotional tours devoted to selling Black Star Line stock, shoring up weak UNIA divisions, and chartering new ones. This gave J. Edgar Hoover his long-awaited opportunity to remove Garvey from the Afro-American political scene. When Garvey embarked on a promotional tour of the West Indies and Central America in February 1921, the United States government, with some assistance from the British, attempted to keep Garvey from returning to the country. Garvey's trip was to mark a turning point in the history of the UNIA. Garvey's lieutenants, who were charged with running the UNIA during his absence, frequently clashed over unclear lines of authority. This also created severe difficulties for the Black Star Line and the UNIA's Liberian project. Under these circumstances, Garvey asked for and received, from the 1921 convention, control over all UNIA and Black Star Line finances as a means of centralizing all authority in his hands. At the same time Garvey launched an attack at the convention against those black leaders, including W. E. B. Du Bois, whom he perceived as opponents of the UNIA. He further initiated a controversial campaign to label these political opponents as advocates of "social equality" between the races, while offering as an alternative his philosophy of "racial purity." This volume is the third of six that focus on America; the seventh and eighth focus on Africa, and the last two on the Caribbean. In Volume III, Robert Hill documents the complexities and turmoil of the Garvey movement from 1920 to 1921, as an unfolding drama emerges that pits American and European political, diplomatic, and economic interests against the first comprehensive expression of the modern black struggle for freedom.
 

المحتوى

ILLUSTRATIONS
xxvii
INTRODUCTION
xxxiii
EDITORIAL PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES
xxxix
TEXTUAL DEVICES
xlv
CHRONOLOGY
liii
September Editorial Letter by Marcus Garvey
3
September Marcus Garvey to Leo Healy II
11
September Report by Special Agent P138
12
May Newspaper Report
388
May Cyril A Crichlow to Marcus Garvey
396
May Memorandum by John Cooper Wiley
416
October
419
May Charles L Latham to Charles Evans Hughes
420
May Report by Special Agent P138
421
May Robert Woods Bliss to Joseph L Johnson
425
May Lewis J Baley to William B Matthews
431

November W E B Du Bois to the New York State
22
September Speech by Marcus Garvey
24
October Report by Special Agent P138
35
Report by Bureau Agent H J Lenon
41
October Report by Special Agent P138
48
November Report by Special Agent SAII
89
November W E B Du Bois to the American Bureau
93
December Report by Bureau Agents A A Hopkins
99
December Special Agent Robert S Sharp to Robert C
106
December Report by Bureau Agent William C Sausele
112
December Editorial Letter by Marcus Garvey
114
February Report by Bureau Agents A A Hopkins
176
February Speech by Marcus Garvey
206
February Marcus Garveys Farewell Speech
224
December Report by Special Agent P138 113
234
Leon E Howe
245
March Archibald Johnson to the
251
March First Negro World Spanish Section
261
March Schedule of Garveys Speeches
268
March J Edgar Hoover to William L Hurley
276
March John A Soulette to the Gleaner
285
March Report of Meetings at Montego Bay and Port
296
April John E Bruce on Bishop C S Smith
329
April Robert P Skinner American Consul General
339
April Marcus Garvey to the Gleaner
345
April Report by Bureau Agent A A Hopkins
354
April Report by Bureau Agent Claude P Light
363
April Gabriel M Johnson to the UNIA
375
ca May Black Star Line Circular
440
June Marcus Garvey to Charles L Latham
449
June Report by Special Agent J T Flournoy
458
June Gabriel M Johnson to Cyril A Crichlow
464
June UNIA Executive Council
470
June J Preston Doughten Visa Office
477
June Report by Special Agent J T Flournoy
492
July Report by Bureau Agent Leon E Howe
513
July Cable by Marcus Garvey
521
July Speech Announcement
527
July J Edgar Hoover to William L Hurley
545
July Marcus Garvey to E T Chamberlain
556
the Negro Citizens of New York
560
August Opening Speech of the Convention by Marcus
576
August Lewis J Baley to Frank X ODonnell
644
August Gabriel L Dennis Secretary Liberian
655
August Speech by Marcus Garvey
662
October
668
American Consul Antilla Cuba
697
August Henry C Von Struve to the Black Star Line
714
August Edward J Brennan to William J Burns
728
August Speech by Marcus Garvey
734
Revisions to the Constitution and Book
747
Finances of the Black Star Line
775
October Rev E J Echols to Marcus Garvey
776
Bureau of Investigation Summary
784
INDEX
791
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