Happy 82nd Birthday to the late Huey P. Newton. He was the co-founder & leader of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense.
It was originally founded to fight police racism, they were dedicated to liberating people from white supremacism & much more. #BlackHistoryMonth
A THREAD
In the wake of the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, Merritt Junior College students Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale founded the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense on October 15, 1966, in West Oakland, California. Shortening its name to the Black Panther Party.
The party sought to set itself apart from black cultural nationalist organizations, such as the Universal Negro Improvement Association & the Nation of Islam, to which it was commonly compared.
Although the groups shared certain philosophical positions and tactical features, the Black Panther Party & cultural nationalists differed on a number of basic points.
For instance, whereas black cultural nationalists generally regarded all white people as oppressors…
the Black Panther Party distinguished between racist and nonracist whites & allied themselves with progressive members of the latter group.
Also, whereas cultural nationalists generally viewed all black people as oppressed, the BPP believed that black capitalists & elites could and typically did exploit and oppress others, particularly the African American working class.
The party’s original purpose was to patrol black neighbourhoods to protect residents from acts of police brutality.
The Panthers eventually developed into a Marxist revolutionary group that called for the arming of all African Americans…
…the exemption of African Americans from the draft and from all sanctions of so-called white America, the release of all African Americans from jail & the payment reparations for centuries of exploitation by white Americans.
At its peak in the late 1960s, Panther membership exceeded 2,000, and the organization operated chapters in several major American cities.
The Black Panther Party outlined a Ten Point Program:
The Black Panther Party found itself squarely in the crosshairs of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and its counterintelligence program, COINTELPRO. In fact, in 1969 FBI director J. Edgar Hoover considered the Black Panther Party the greatest threat to national security.
The Black Panther Party came into the national spotlight in May 1967 when a small group of its members, led by its chair, Seale, marched fully armed into the California state legislature in Sacramento.
Emboldened by the view that African Americans had a constitutional right to bear arms (based on the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution), the Black Panther Party marched on the body as a protest against the pending Mulford Act.
The Mulford Act was a 1967 California bill prohibiting the public carrying of loaded firearms, named after Assemblyman Don Mulford.
The bill was signed by California Governor Ronald Reagan.
The Black Panther Party viewed the gun control bill, as a political maneuver to thwart the organization’s effort to combat police brutality in the Oakland community.
In addition to challenging police brutality, the Party launched Survival Programs and provided community help, such as education, tuberculosis testing, legal aid, transportation assistance, ambulance service, and the manufacture and distribution of free shoes to poor people.
Notwithstanding the social services, the FBI declared the group a communist organization and an enemy of the government.
The measures employed were so extreme that, years later when they were revealed, the director of the FBI publicly apologized for “wrongful uses of power”
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More than 8000 post black women in Mississippi and S. Carolina were given involuntary hysterectomies (removal of uterus) between 1920s and 80s when they went to see white doctors for other complaints.
These came to be known as 'Mississippi Appendectomies'
In 1847, Missouri banned education for black people.
John Berry Meachum went ahead and equipped a steamboat with a library, desks, chairs and opened a 'Floating Freedom School'. #blackhistorymonth
A THREAD!
John Berry Meachum was born into slavery in Virginia in 1789 but by the age of 21 he had earned enough money doing carpentry work to purchase his own freedom and then his father’s.
Meachum was a married man, but before he could save up enough to buy his wife’s freedom she was moved to St. Louis. He followed her here and eventually managed to purchase her freedom as well.
Did you know that an entire Manhattan village owned by black people was destroyed to build Central Park.
The community was called Seneca Village. It spanned from 82nd Street to 89th Street.
Successful Black Communities and Towns.
A THREAD! #blackhistorymonth
Blackdom, New Mexico
It was founded by Frank Boyer and Ella Louise McGruder and it was the first black town in New Mexico. It was a safe haven for our people. It had a population of 300 residents by 1908.
In 1919, the town struck oil!
The residents then created the Blackdom Oil Company, and they became set for generations of wealth but tragedy struck too…
The town suffered a drought and became uninhabitable. Families left and by the end of World War I, it was essentially a ghost town.