55 years ago, Oct 15 1966, Huey P. Newton & Bobby Seale, radical students at Oakland's Merritt College formed the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense. Inspired by SNCC's Lowndes County Freedom Organization, the BPP would have an enormous impact on global revolutionary politics
While they quickly made a major impact on the American political scene, the BPP didn't come out of nowhere. The mid-'60s Oakland they emerged from was swirling with Black radical organizations, thinkers, and militants which they worked with, learned from, imitated, and critiqued
Specifically, Newton & Seale were profoundly influenced by the politics & rhetoric of the Revolutionary Action Movement, a pioneering Black Maoist group, and the community organizing tactics of the Oakland Direct Action Committee, a militant civil rights group led by Mark Comfort
RAM began in 1962 as a study group in Philadelphia (with roots in an Ohio chapter of SDS). Inspired by Robert F. Williams, an NAACP leader who was exiled to Cuba after advocating armed Black self-defense, they promoted the idea of revolutionary urban guerrilla warfare
The Oakland RAM chapter founded a student group at Merritt College called the Soul Students Advisory Council, with which Newton & Seale became involved. In 1965 Seale became the distribution manager for RAM's Berkeley-based theory and poetry journal Soulbook
Much of the analysis which later became synonymous with the BPP (the combination of militant Black nationalism with revolutionary internationalism, along with a strong emphasis on armed insurrection) was developed by RAM and can be found in the pages of Soulbook
At the same time, another major current of Black radicalism in Oakland emphasized practical activity over theory. The Oakland Direct Action Committee formed out of the collapse of the Ad Hoc Committee to End Discrimination, an early civil rights group
ODAC was led by Curtis Lee Baker (the "Black Jesus of West Oakland") and Mark Comfort. As a young man, Comfort was trained as an organizer by the Communist Party's Roscoe Proctor, after a CP campaign saved him from a lengthy jail sentence for defending himself from a white racist
ODAC turned away from organizing students (although they maintained very close ties to the student left in Berkeley) and towards organizing Black working class youths. ODAC organized street gangs in East Oakland to protest police brutality while agitating for jobs and against war
In what would serve as a direct inspiration to the BPP, ODAC also performed police patrols, following cops and monitoring their behavior. When ODAC witnessed a person being unjustly arrested, they would accompany them to the police station and pay their bail
In 1965, Comfort led a West Coast delegation to Lowndes County, Alabama to support SNCC's efforts to form an independent political party to represent the interests of the Black population. Called the Lowndes County Freedom Organization, it became known as the Black Panther Party
Inspired by what he had seen in Lowndes, Comfort asked SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture) for permission to start a Black Panther Party in California, to which Carmichael replied: "It's the people's. We ain't got a patent... If local conditions indicate, go for it."
In Oakland, Comfort worked to spread the Panther name and symbol. According to Ture, by late 1966, 10 to 12 groups were using the name in California, along with groups in Detroit, Cleveland, and Chicago. An attempt by Carmichael to merge these groups in Oakland failed
Around this time, frustrated with RAM's "armchair intellectual" inaction, Newton & Seale performed an ODAC-style police patrol, using SSAC money to bail out a Black man whom they had seen be harassed by police. After this resulted in a reprimand from SSAC leadership, the two quit
Shortly thereafter, Newton & Seale borrowed the Black Panther Party name & symbol, ODAC's police patrols (to which they added guns), RAM's revolutionary rhetoric & analysis, and Mark Comfort's signature black berets, creating the Bay Area's best-known revolutionary group
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16 years ago, January 1 2009, BART police officer Johannes Mehserle murdered Oscar Grant III at Oakland's Fruitvale Station. Outrage over the killing and Mehserle's lenient sentence sparked the 2009 anti-police terror movement, a precursor to Occupy and Black Lives Matter
After celebrating New Year's Eve in San Francisco, Grant had been heading home to Hayward on BART. Around 2AM, a fight broke out on the train, and police were called. When they arrived, the fight had already been broken up by other passengers
Unsure who had been involved in the fight, police began violently pulling out passengers they suspected may have been, including Grant. Officer Anthony Pirone, who later lied that Grant had attacked him, punched Grant in the face, kneed him in the head, and called him the n-word
45 years ago, May 21 1979, over a dozen cop cars burned as thousands marched and rioted in San Francisco after word broke that Dan White received the most lenient verdict for murdering George Moscone and Harvey Milk. The evening would become known as the White Night riots
Once the verdict was announced several hundred gathered in the Castro to chants of "No justice, no peace" and "Out of the bars, into the streets." After a moving speech from Cleve Jones, friend and student intern of Milk, a march and candlelight vigil was led to city hall
By the time the march reached city hall, thousands had joined the crowd and new chants emerged: "Kill Dan White" and "Dump Diane." As cops arrived to city hall, many of whom had contributed to White's defense fund, the crowd began smashing windows of the hall and battling cops
56 years ago, April 18 1968, marked the end of a 3-day insurrection at the El Pueblo housing project in Pittsburg. After police arrested several Black men for shooting dice, a crowd attacked them with rocks and bottles. When reinforcements arrived, they were met with sniper fire
For those three days, police from Pittsburg, Concord, Antioch, and Martinez battled with snipers who fired from at least five directions. Six cops were wounded; only one rioter was. No one on either side was killed
Pittsburg schools were closed during the insurrection, which came 13 days after those same schools saw riots following the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.
105 years ago, March 18 1919, a bomb exploded at the Oakland home of banker George Greenwood, killing his wife. Within days, Russian-born IWW member Pavel Melnikov was arrested for the murder on scant evidence. He was deported without trial in December 1919 as a "dangerous alien"
Melnikov, who had participated in revolutionary groups in Russia, New Jersey, and Seattle, was arrested at the IWW's Jack London Memorial Library in Oakland, and accused of plotting the murders of local capitalists as a member of an alleged IWW secret society, the Cat's Claw Club
At the request of the federal government (who claimed Melnikov was an expert bomb maker simply because he had studied chemistry) he and his alleged co-conspirator, IWW member Basil Saffores, were immediately handed over to immigration authorities
54 years ago, March 13 1970, members of the Berkeley Tenants Union, along with members of People’s Architecture and the Berkeley Food Conspiracy, published “And But For the Sky There Are No Fences Facing” in underground newspaper the Berkeley Tribe
The essay, also known as “Blueprint for a Communal Society," was published in the early weeks of BTU’s massive 1970 Berkeley-wide rent strike. A manifesto of sorts, it analyzes housing in Berkeley from a radical social and ecological perspective
It calls for a number of dramatic changes to the social organization of space in order to “encourage communalism and break down privatization,” such as removing fences, turning backyards & streets into huge communal gardens, and building community "lifehouses”
56 years ago, March 9 1968, the Peace and Freedom Movement inaugurated the “Freedom Festival Week” with a parade of ten thousand people marching from the Peace and Freedom Party HQ at 55 Colton St, weaving through the Haight, out to the Polo Grounds of Golden Gate Park
The march was led by the San Francisco Mime Troupe’s rag-tag Gorilla Band, a 27 member radical musical crew that included flag-bearing majorettes, a chorus, a brass section and a man who hummed through a comb. A goal of the march was to bring collective arts into the streets
After reaching the Polo Grounds, a massive party began featuring speeches from Kathleen Cleaver and several other Peace & Freedom Party representatives, and musical performances by Allmen Joy, Celestial Hysteria, Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Santana Blues Band and others