-->
|
|
Hubert Harrison (1883-1927):
Race Consciousness and the Struggle for Socialism
Jeffrey B. Perry
The historian Joel A. Rogers, in World's Great Men of Color, describes the
brilliant writer, orator, educator, critic, and political activist Hubert
Harrison (1883-1927) as "the foremost Afro-American intellect of his
time" and "one of America's greatest minds." Rogers adds (amid
chapters on Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Marcus Garvey), "No
one worked more seriously and indefatigably to enlighten his fellow-men"
and "none of the Afro-American leaders of his time had a saner and more
effective program." (1)
Variants of Rogers' lavish praise were offered by other contemporaries.
William Pickens, field secretary of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP), a former college dean, and an oratory prize winner at
Yale, described Harrison as "a plain black man who can speak more easily,
effectively, and interestingly on a greater variety of subjects than any other
man I have ever met in the great universities." Pickens added that it made
"no difference" whether he spoke about "Alice in Wonderland or
the most extensive work of H.G. Wells; about the lightest shadows of Edgar Allen
Poe or the heaviest depths of Kant; about music, or art, or science, or
political history." (2) The novelist Henry Miller, a
socialist in his youth, remembered Harrison on a soapbox as his "quondam
idol" and as an unrivaled, electrifying speaker (3).
Eugene O'Neill, America's leading playwright and a future Nobel Prize winner for
literature, lauded Harrison's ability as a critic and considered his review of
the ground-breaking play The Emperor Jones to be "one of the very few
intelligent criticisms of the piece that have come to my notice."
(4) W. A. Domingo, one of the early Black socialists and the
first editor of Marcus Garvey's Negro World, emphasized the fact that Garvey, A.
Philip Randolph, Chandler Owen, Cyril Briggs, Grace Campbell, Richard B. Moore
and the other leading Black activists of their generation, "all followed
Hubert Harrison." (5) Hodge Kirnon, a freethinker and one
of those activists in Harlem, praised the fact that Harrison "lived with
and amongst his people," "taught the masses," and was "the
first Negro whose radicalism was comprehensive enough to include racialism,
politics, theological criticism, sociology and education in a thorough-going and
scientific manner." (6)
Despite such high praise from his contemporaries and despite being rated
"one of the 20th century's major thinkers" by the double Pulitzer
Prize winning Du Bois biographer David Levering Lewis, Harrison is, as Harvard
University's Henry Louis Gates, Jr. writes, "a major but neglected figure
in our history." While his name has an "almost mythical
character" to activists such as Black Radical Congress co-chair Bill
Fletcher, he is largely a "forgotten" and "unknown"
radical. Historian Gerald C. Horne considers him "a scandalously ignored
thinker and activist." Columbia University's Winston James, placing this
neglect in perspective, observes: "Seldom has a person been so influential,
esteemed, even revered in one period of history" and within a matter of
years become "so thoroughly unremembered." (7)
The effects of this historical neglect were again brought home at the 2003
Socialist Scholars Conference, where discussions with participants made clear
that many progressive activists and intellectuals remain unaware of Harrison's
life and work. There is great loss in this since his life was one of remarkable
contributions; since he exerted major influence on a generation of early
20th-century activists and "common people"; since many of his views,
as historian James points out, became "the stock-in-trade of the black
left" in the 20th century; and since his writings and speeches offer
profound insights on the struggle against white supremacy, on socialism and
democracy in America, and on a wide range of other subjects. (8)
Harrison's class and race conscious political message merits special
attention. More than any other political leader of his era he combined class
consciousness and (anti-white supremacist) race consciousness in a coherent
political radicalism. He opposed white supremacy, capitalism, and imperialism;
challenged the idea that racism was innate; developed a socio-historical as
opposed to a religious or biological understanding of race; maintained that
white supremacy was central to capitalist rule in the United States; argued that
racism and racist practices were not in workers' class interests; and urged
"Negroes" not to wait on white Americans while struggling to shape
their future.
This message was combined with a consistent internationalism, a scientific
approach to social problems, and an impressive grasp of history, science,
politics, religion, freethought, literature, and the arts. His militant,
mass-based approach broke from the patron-based leadership of Booker T.
Washington and the "Talented Tenth"-based leadership of W.E.B. Du Bois
and profoundly influenced a generation of activists that included Randolph and
Garvey. Harrison was more race conscious than Randolph and more class conscious
than Garvey; he is the key ideological link in the two great trends of
20th-century African American struggle the labor and civil rights trend
associated with Randolph and Martin Luther King, Jr. and the race and
nationalist trend associated with Garvey and Malcolm X.
Harrison's political message, repeatedly delivered to the masses, enabled him
to uniquely play signal roles in the development of what were, up to that time,
the largest class-radical movement (socialism) and the largest race-radical
movement (the "New Negro"/Garvey movement) in U.S. history. Harrison
served as the foremost Black organizer, agitator, and theoretician in the
Socialist Party (SP) of New York during its 1912 heyday; as the founder and
leading figure of the militant World War I-era "New Negro" movement;
and as the editor of the Negro World and principal radical influence on the
Garvey movement during its radical high point in 1920. He also worked with the
Industrial Workers of the World, the Communist Party, the Farmer Labor Party,
the American Negro Labor Congress and a number of other radical and progressive
organizations. Such efforts, during the period when Harlem became the
"international Negro Mecca" and "the center of radical Black
thought," led Randolph and others to revere him as "The Father of
Harlem Radicalism." (9)
Harrison was not only a radical activist, however. He was also an immensely
popular orator and freelance educator; a highly praised journalist, editor,
literary critic, and book reviewer (who initiated the first "regular
book-review section known to Negro newspaperdom"); a promoter and aide to
Black writers and artists (including writers J.A. Rogers and Claude McKay, actor
Charles Gilpin, musician Eubie Blake, and sculptor Augusta Savage); a pioneer
Black activist in the freethought and birth control movements; and a bibliophile
and library popularizer (who helped to found and develop the 135th Street Public
Library into an international center for research in Black culture known today
as the Schomburg Center). In his later years he was the leading Black lecturer
for the New York City Board of Education when such lectures served as a
principal form of adult education in the city. (10)
Hubert Henry Harrison was born at Estate Concordia, St. Croix, Danish West
Indies, on April 27, 1883. Little is known with certainty about his parents.
Rogers writes that they were of "unmixed African ancestry" and church
records indicate that his mother was a poor, laboring-class woman, who was not
formally married at the time of Hubert's birth, had several other children, and
died in 1899. (11)
Harrison's first seventeen years on St. Croix provided a firm foundation for
his future work. In St. Croix he became familiar with important traditions
"rooted in the African communal system" (including free public gardens
and Saturday markets) which mitigated some of the oppressive pressures of the
capitalist economy on laboring families. He learned of the Crucian people's rich
history of direct action mass struggle including the 1848 enslaved-led
emancipation victory and the 1878, week-long, island-wide, labor protest known
as "The Great Fireburn" (led by rebel leaders "Queen Mary"
Thomas, "Queen Agnes" and "Queen Matilda"). He also came to
know poverty, and that experience, he said, helped to keep his "heart open
to the call of those who are down" and kept him from developing "such
airs as might make a chasm between myself and my people." (12)
Interestingly and instructively, Harrison claimed that as a youth he knew
nothing of the "doctrine of chromatic inferiors and superiors" which
was "violently thrust upon the islanders" by the occupying U.S. Navy
after the United States purchased the Danish West Indies in 1917. Due to
different historical particulars, class struggle, and social control, the color
line and "race relations" in St. Croix differed from those in the
United States. In St. Croix there was a historic policy of promotion of a sector
of the African-descended population (under slavery, Crucian "coloreds"
were the key to the social control force, served in the militia, and were
extended an edict of full equality in 1834). In the United States laboring
"whites," not "coloreds," were the historic key social
control force, and the general rule under slavery (as described in the 1857 Dred
Scott decision) was one of severe racial proscription for the African-descended
population (African Americans "had no rights which the white man was bound
to respect"). The extension and development of these differences took such
form that the St. Croix of Harrison's youth did not have the lynching, formal
segregation, virulent white supremacy, or severe racial proscriptions against
advancement for those of African descent that Harrison would encounter in the
United States. (13)
These differences help to explain why Harrison was provided more
encouragement to pursue his educational interests in St. Croix than was afforded
the overwhelming majority of African American youth in the southern United
States. He used the library at St. John's Episcopal Church in Christiansted,
studied under one of the island's best teachers (Wilfurd Jackson, whose son, D.
Hamilton Jackson, was Harrison's friend and schoolmate, and became the island's
foremost labor leader), and excelled enough as a student that he was chosen as a
teaching assistant. These differences also help to explain why Harrison would
challenge the virulent white supremacy he encountered in the United States. When
he left for the U. S., though virtually penniless, the fires of learning were
burning and Harrison believed he was the equal of any other. (14)
Shortly after his mother died Harrison immigrated to the United States,
arriving in 1900 as a 17-year-old orphan. His move from the rural, agricultural
island of St. Croix to the teeming urban/industrial metropolis of New York was
truly a move from the 19th into the 20th century. His arrival coincided with
U.S. capitalism's ascent to new imperialist heights, with the period of intense
racial oppression of African Americans known as the "nadir," and with
the era of critical writing and muckraking journalism that, according to one
social commentator, produced "the most concentrated flowering of criticism
in the history of American ideas." These factors would play an important
part in shaping the remainder of his life. (15)
Over the next twenty-seven years, until his unexpected death at age 44 (from
appendicitis-related complications), Harrison made his mark in the United States
by struggling against class exploitation and racial oppression; by participating
in and helping to create a remarkably rich and vibrant intellectual life; and by
working for the enlightened development of the lives of "the common
people." His political/educational work emphasized the need for
working-class people to develop class consciousness; for "Negroes" to
develop race consciousness, self-reliance, and self-respect; and for all those
he reached to develop modern, scientific, critical, and independent thought as a
means toward liberation. His work was especially marked by his focus on
education of the masses, for which he utilized indoor and outdoor talks and mass
oriented publications.
Soon after his arrival in New York he began working low-paying service jobs
and attending high school at night. He finished school, read constantly, and,
after several years, obtained postal employment, married Irene Louise Horton
(whose family came from Antigua, Demerara, and Puerto Rico), and started to
raise a family that eventually included five children born between 1910 and
1920. His insatiable thirst for knowledge and his critical mind led him to break
from "orthodox and institutional Christianity" and to develop an
"agnostic" "philosophy-of-life" that stressed rationalism,
modern science, and evolution and placed humanity at the center of its
worldview. In his "Diary" Harrison wrote that he would never "be
anything but an honest Agnostic" because "I prefer... to go to the
grave with my eyes open." (16)
During his first decade in New York Harrison set out to write a "History
of the Negro in America" and he began to participate in the vibrant
intellectual life that was created by working-class Black New Yorkers. He was
active in church lyceums, the YMCA and YWCA, the White Rose Home social work
center, a postal worker study circle, and a press club. He befriended
working-class scholar/activists such as bibliophiles Arthur Schomburg and George
Young, the journalist John E. Bruce, the actor Charles Burroughs, and the social
worker/educator/activist Frances Reynolds Keyser. Harrison's approach,
especially his efforts at getting "in full-touch with the life of my
people" as an aid "to understanding them better," makes clear
that he was what Antonio Gramsci would later describe as an "organic
intellectual." (17)
Harrison was a critical and independent thinker; his wide-ranging interests
included history, politics, science, freethought, literature, social and
literary criticism, and the protest philosophy of activists such as W.E.B. Du
Bois. Like Du Bois, Harrison criticized the approach of Booker T. Washington.
His differences with Washington centered on politics, education, labor unions,
protest, and dissent. Washington, the most powerful Black man in the U.S., had
achieved his position of influence by building an extensive patronage machine
through ties to powerful whites. Washington's policy was one of Black
subordination in political and economic spheres, and his core philosophy
emphasized industrial over higher education for African Americans, Christian
character-building, economic base-building before demands for equal civic and
political rights, and co-operation with wealthy and powerful Southern
"white friends." Washington warned that "the agitation of
questions of social equality is the extremist folly," advised that African
Americans must begin "at the bottom of life" and "not at the
top," and emphasized that "the Negro" was "not given to
strikes and lockouts." Washington also pledged unquestioning loyalty to
President Theodore Roosevelt and firmly opposed those African Americans who
dared to criticize him. (18)
Harrison described Washington as "subservient." He criticized the
core of Washington's philosophy, which he referred to as "one of submission
and acquiescence in political servitude." In contrast to Washington,
Harrison was staunchly anti-Republican Party and favored protests and struggles
for equality, "modern education," thought unfettered by religion,
support of trade unions, and Black leaders who were chosen by Black people
rather than by powerful whites. Only in the area of economic base-building, and
only at a later date, would Harrison articulate some views remotely similar to
Washington. (19)
Harrison's readings in history and politics along with events like the 1906
Brownsville, Texas, affair (in which, under Republican leadership, 167 Black
soldiers were unjustly dishonorably discharged from the army), led him to reject
the Republican Party to which African Americans had been wedded since the Civil
War era. (He repeatedly challenged what he called "the great
superstition" that "the Negro is a born Republican" whose
"political philosophy is presumed to be summed up in the aphorism that .The
Republican Party is the ship and all else is the open sea.'") In addition,
as his readings extended further into sociology, economics, evolution, and
single taxism, he became familiar with the authors Karl Marx, Herbert Spencer,
Lester F. Ward, Charles Darwin, Thomas Huxley, Henry George, Karl Kautsky, T.
Thomas Fortune, Mary MacLean, Francisco Ferrer, and Du Bois, and he moved in the
direction of socialism. The rejection of the Republican Party and the sympathy
for the socialist message accelerated his move toward third-party politics and
toward the Socialist Party. (20)
In this vibrant intellectual environment and with a developing
self-confidence, Harrison began lecturing, teaching, and writing letters to
newspapers. (His first piece of literary criticism, at age 23, appeared in The
New York Times Saturday Review of Books Literary Section in 1907.) His boldness
soon affected him economically. After he wrote two 1910 letters to the New York
Sun that criticized Booker T. Washington (for inaccurately portraying abroad the
oppressive conditions faced by African Americans at home) Harrison lost his
postal employment through the efforts of Washington's powerful "Tuskegee
Machine." It was a devastating blow and the resultant loss of income and
security seriously impacted his remaining years with his family and at times
influenced his political and educational efforts. (21)
Shortly after his postal firing, Harrison, who had briefly served as
assistant editor of The Masses, turned to full-time work with the Socialist
Party. From 1911 to 1914 he was America's leading Black socialist a
prominent party speaker (at times delivering over twenty talks in a week) and
campaigner (especially in the 1912 presidential campaign of Eugene V. Debs), an
articulate and popular critic of capitalism, the leading Black socialist
organizer in New York, and the initiator of the Colored Socialist Club an
unprecedented effort by U.S. socialists at organizing African Americans. His
most important theoretical contributions were two series of articles on the
subject of "The Negro and Socialism" which appeared in the Socialist
Party's New York Call and in the International Socialist Review. The articles
provided the first comprehensive political, economic, social, and educational
analysis of "The Negro Question" by a Black Socialist, challenged the
racism-is-innate and the racism-is-in-workers'-class-interest arguments used to
support white supremacist thinking, moved "Negro problem" discussion
from the biological and religious spheres to the socio-historical arena, and
broke new ground by calling on Socialists to champion the cause of African
Americans as a revolutionary doctrine, to develop a special appeal to and for
African Americans, and to affirm the duty of all socialists to oppose white
supremacy. His proposal that "the crucial test of Socialism's
sincerity" was its "duty" to "champion" the cause of
the African American anticipated by over a year Du Bois's dictum that the
"Negro Problem... [is] the great test of the American Socialists."
(22)
In his writings Harrison maintained (in an assessment that offers insight
into the catalytic nature of Civil Rights struggles fifty years later) that
simple democracy for Black people in America implied a revolution
"startling to even think of." In direct reference to the philosophy of
Booker T. Washington he explained "that the prevailing social philosophy
among Negroes that which white capitalism will pay to have them taught
is one of submission and acquiescence in political servitude." He
described the dehumanizing and anti-working class effects of the betrayal of
democracy and noted that "the broad denial of justice to colored men as
exemplified in lynchings, segregation, public proscription and disfranchisement
results in the vitiation of democratic faith." This provided "the
supplying power" for other deceitful practices and as the public mind
accustomed itself to seeing such inhumanity it became immunized to the injustice
in "the jailing of innocent labor leaders and the murder of working girls
in a fire trap factory" [a reference to the March 25, 1911, Triangle
Shirtwaist factory fire in which 146 were killed]. (23)
Harrison focused particular attention on "The Duty of the Socialist
Party." He suggested that the party take up the largely ignored "Negro
Question" at its 1912 National Convention because the time was ripe
"for taking a stand against the extensive disfranchisement of the Negro in
violation of the plain provisions of the national constitution." He asked:
"If the Negroes, or any other section of the working class in America, is
to be deprived of the ballot, how can they participate with us in the class
struggle?" He directly challenged the party's practices citing instances of
gross racism within the Socialist Party including: "dirty diatribes against
the Negro in a Texas paper [The Rebel]" that was still on the national list
of Socialist papers; the experiences of party speaker Theresa Malkiel in
Tennessee "where she was prevented by certain people from addressing a
meeting of Negroes on the subject of Socialism"; and "other
exhibitions of the thing called southernism." He emphasized that the party
could no longer ignore the question "Southernism or Socialism
which?" (24)
As he placed his challenge before the national party leadership Harrison also
addressed the two large groupings in the party, the political (evolutionary)
socialists and the industrial (revolutionary) socialists, on their own terms. In
each case, using the logic of their theoretical positions, he called for special
emphasis on African Americans in the interests of the working class.
First he addressed the political socialists. He agreed that the power of the
voting proletariat could be expressed through the ballot and that with good
political organization the workers could "secure control of the powers of
government by electing members of the working class to office" and could
"secure legislation in the interests of the working class until such time
as the workers may be able, by being in overwhelming control of the government,
to .alter or abolish it, and to institute a new government.'" He stressed,
however, that in this work for "the abolition of capitalism, by
legislation," the "Negro, who feels most fiercely the deep damnation
of the capitalist system[,] can help" and would be "the balance of
power" in certain elections. (25)
While recognizing the need for political work in electoral politics, Harrison
also sought to reach the industrial socialists. He recognized that there was a
serious problem to be faced: the majority of African Americans, particularly in
the South, were disfranchised. This fact led him to his ultimate conclusions on
"The Negro and Industrial Socialism." He argued for an IWW type,
point-of-production, economic organizing, even in the South, and explained that
"even the voteless proletarian can in a measure help toward the final
abolition of the capitalist system." These workers, though absent the
ballot, possess "labor power which they can be taught to
withhold" and they can organize themselves "at the point of
production" and "work to shorten the hours of labor, to raise
wages,... [and] to enforce laws for the protection of labor." He noted that
the Western Federation of Miners, an IWW union, had done this and had
successfully won the eight-hour workday "without the aid of the
legislatures or the courts." This approach required "a progressive
control of the tools of production and a progressive expropriation of the
capitalist class." In such work African Americans could help. Thus far,
many, under the influence of Booker T. Washington's pro-capitalist philosophy,
remained unorganized industrially, but industrial unionism beckoned to them. The
program of the Socialist Party in the South, in Harrison's opinion, could
"be based upon this fact." (26)
The implications of Harrison's analysis were profound. For the majority in
the party the key political debates concerned positions on revolutionary vs.
evolutionary socialism and revolutionary unionism vs. AFL craft unionism.
Harrison, in 1911-12, proposed a new litmus test, a new "crucial
test," for U.S. Socialists "to champion" the cause of the
"Negro." He thought this was central to revolutionary change. For the
rest of his life he would seek "to champion" the cause of the
"Negro" and to get others to do the same. (27)
The Socialist Party's National Convention met in Indianapolis May 12-18,
1912, and essentially ignored the "Negro Question." The only person
who raised the issue was William D. "Big Bill" Haywood, who argued
that industrial unionism was the best way to organize disfranchised southern
Blacks. The convention, however, did not limit itself to mere indifference and
neglect on the race issue. In the debate over Asian immigration, the Socialists,
couched in the cloak of "science," expressed some of the most rabidly
racist sentiments in U.S. left history and effectively gave Harrison the answer
to his question, "Southernism or Socialism?" In this case it was not
only "Southernism," but "Westernism," too, for the racism in
the party seemed to know no sectional bounds. Immigration was an issue of
particular concern among Western "white" delegates who spoke of fear
of an influx of Japanese workers. Both the Majority Report and the Minority
Report were approved and each opposed Asian immigration. The Majority Report of
the Committee on Immigration went even further and declared, in words Harrison
would never forget, that:
Race feeling is not so much a result of social as of biological evolution. It
does not change essentially with changes of economic systems. It is deeper than
any class feeling and will outlast the capitalist system. It persists even after
race prejudice has been outgrown... We may temper this race feeling by
education, but we can never hope to extinguish it altogether.
Class-consciousness must be learned, but race-consciousness is in-born and
cannot be wholly unlearned. (28)
Here was the "racism is innate" argument that Harrison
dubbed the core of all racist arguments and it was proclaimed loudly by
national leaders of the Socialist Party at their convention. If race feeling was
innate, if race consciousness superseded class consciousness, then the Socialist
Party was implicitly saying that corrective actions against racism would be
minimal and that they would be of no real importance to a Socialist agenda.
(29)
The significance of this convention towards Harrison's future work is clear.
The Majority Report on Immigration favored Asian exclusion as "legislation
restricting the invasion of the white man's domain by other races." In a
similar debate at the 1908 convention Victor Berger had argued that socialism
would be victorious only by keeping the U.S. a "white man's country."
The convention debates support the point made by historian Mark D. Naison that
"beneath their rhetoric of class struggle, most Socialist Party leaders
accepted the political and economic hegemony of whites over non-white
peoples..." Leading white socialists were, in Harrison's words, putting
[the "white"] ".race first' rather than .class first.'"
Harrison later referred to such "white" Socialists as "the
bourgeois opportunists of the Socialist Party," and during the remainder of
his life his theoretical development and race consciousness would be shaped, in
part, by his efforts to respond to their positions. (30)
The relation between white supremacy and class consciousness offers insights
into one of the most important questions in U.S. left history what German
scholar Werner Sombart asked in 1906 "Why is there no socialism in
the United States?" The answer that Harrison repeatedly suggested was that
there was no socialism because whites, particularly white socialists and white
workers, put race first before class. Over time Harrison would stress that race
consciousness among African Americans was necessary, not only as a measure of
self-defense, but also as a means of challenging white supremacy (which was the
principal roadblock to class consciousness among European Americans).
(31)
At the 1912 National Convention the Socialist Party not only took its
"white race" first position on the immigration question; it also, as
historian Sally M. Miller has explained, "abruptly terminated"
activities of its woman's sector "by an arbitrary decision by the party's
executive committee." After years of intensive work, the Woman's National
Committee "was phased out by the National Executive Committee" of the
party. In the period after the convention, woman's work was increasingly denied
financial assistance and "meetings were discouraged while further
propaganda or organizational work were simply suspended." It was in some
ways similar to the treatment afforded to the Colored Socialist Club earlier.
Harrison considered "the Negro [as] the touchstone of the modern democratic
idea" and, in fact, the demise of the Woman's Clubs had been preceded by,
and was similar to, the demise of the Colored Socialist Club, the party's effort
at special work among African Americans. (32)
Socialist Party theory and practice as well as a number of personal incidents
contributed to Harrison's move toward the more egalitarian, militant,
action-oriented, Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). He was a featured
speaker (along with the IWW leaders "Big Bill" Haywood, Elizabeth
Gurley Flynn, Carlo Tresca, and Patrick Quinlan) and the only Black speaker at
the historic 1913 Paterson silk strike. He also publicly defended Haywood
against attack by the right wing of the Socialist Party on the issue of
"sabotage." SP leaders soon moved to restrict Harrison's speaking,
however, and as their attacks on both his political views and his principal
means of livelihood intensified, his disenchantment grew, he was suspended, and
he then left the Socialist Party.
After leaving the Socialist Party, Harrison took what he revealingly
described in his "Diary" as the first truly self-initiated step of his
life the founding of the Radical Forum. The forum was an effort at
drawing together radicals from various different movements who were "sick
of the insincerities of cults and creeds" and desired to receive "the
awakening breath of the larger liberalism, from which all alike may draw
inspiration." In this same period he began teaching at the Modern School
(along with some of America's foremost artists and intellectuals) and he
lectured indoors and out on birth control, the racial aspects of World War I,
religion, science, evolution, sex, literature, and education. (33)
Harrison's outdoor lectures pioneered the tradition of militant street-corner
oratory in Harlem. As a soap-box orator he was brilliant and unrivalled. He had
a charismatic presence, wide-ranging intellect, remarkable memory, impeccable
diction, and wonderful mastery of language. Factual and interactive, he utilized
humor, irony, and a biting sarcasm. With his popular outdoor style he paved the
way for those who followed including A. Philip Randolph and Marcus Garvey
and, much later, Malcolm X. (34)
By 1915-1916 his experiences with the racial oppression, glaring racial
inequality, and white supremacy of U.S. society as well as with the "white
first" attitude of the organized labor movement and the Socialists, led
Harrison, the former leading Black socialist, to respond with a "race
first" political perspective.35 Important steps in this direction were made
through the frontier of art as Harrison wrote several theater reviews in which
he described how the "Negro Theatre" revealed the "social mind...
of the Negro." (36)
During the summer of 1917, as the "Great War" raged abroad, along
with race riots, lynchings, segregation, discrimination, and white-supremacist
ideology at home, Harrison founded the Liberty League and The Voice. They were,
respectively, the first organization and the first newspaper of the "New
Negro" movement. The Liberty League was called into being, he explained, by
"the need for a more radical policy" than that of existing civil
rights organizations such as the NAACP. Harrison felt that the NAACP limited
itself to paper protests, was dominated by white people's conceptions of how
Black people should act, concentrated too much on "The Talented
Tenth," and repeatedly stumbled over the problem of "white" minds
that remained "unaffected" and refused "to grant guarantees of
life and liberty." In contrast to the NAACP, the Liberty League encouraged
direct action, was not dependent on "whites," and aimed beyond
"The Talented Tenth" at the "common people" of "the
Negro race." Its program emphasized internationalism, political
independence, and class and race consciousness. In response to white supremacy,
The Voice called for a "race first" approach, full equality, federal
anti-lynching legislation (which the NAACP did not support at that time),
enforcement of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, labor organizing,
support of socialist and anti-imperialist causes, and armed self-defense in the
face of racist attacks. It stressed that new Black leadership would emerge from
the masses. (37)
As Harrison later explained, he had grown dissatisfied with strategies such
as those advocated by the NAACP that sought "to secure certain results by
affecting the minds of white people" when, in fact, African Americans had
"no control" over those minds and had "absolutely no answer to
the question, .What steps do you propose to take if those minds at which you are
aiming remain unaffected?'" As an alternate strategy he began to advocate
"the mobilizing of the Negro's political power, pocket book power and
intellectual power," which were "within the Negro's control" in
order "to do for the Negro the things which the Negro needs to have
done." This would be accomplished "without depending upon or waiting
for the co-operative action of white people." Though interracial
cooperation, whenever it came, would be "a boon" which "no Negro,
intelligent or unintelligent" would "despise," he emphasized that
Blacks could not "afford to predicate the progress of the Negro upon such
co-operative action," because such action "may not come."
(38)
With this race conscious approach Harrison served as the founder and
intellectual guiding light of the "New Negro" Movement. This race and
class conscious, internationalist, mass-based, autonomous, militantly assertive
movement sought political equality, social justice, civic opportunity, and
economic power, and laid the basis for the Garvey movement. It also encouraged
mass involvement with literature and the arts and contributed mightily to the
vibrant literary climate leading to the 1925 publication of Alain Locke's
well-known The New Negro. (39)
Contemporaries readily acknowledged that Harrison's work laid the groundwork
for the Garvey movement. From the Liberty League and The Voice came the core
progressive ideas and leaders later utilized by Marcus Garvey in both the
Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) and the Negro World (this
included two presidents of the UNIA, the secretary of the New York local of the
UNIA, the first three editors of the Negro World, the president of the Ladies
Division, and the originator of the idea for, president, and vice-president of
the Black Star Line). Harrison himself claimed, with considerable basis, that
from the Liberty League "Garvey appropriated every feature that was
worthwhile in his movement" and that the secret of Garvey's success was
that he "[held] up to the Negro masses those things which bloom in their
hearts racialism, race-consciousness, racial solidarity things
taught first in 1917 by The Voice and The Liberty League." (40)
After The Voice ceased publication in early 1918, Harrison briefly served as
an organizer for the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and then chaired the
Negro-American Liberty Congress. The June 1918 Liberty Congress (co-headed by
the long-time activist William Monroe Trotter) issued wartime demands against
discrimination and segregation and petitioned the U.S. Congress for federal
anti-lynching legislation. This autonomous and militant effort was undermined by
the U.S. Army's anti-radical Military Intelligence Bureau (MIB) in an ominous
foreshadowing of future government tactics.
The Military Intelligence campaign was spearheaded by the prominent NAACP
founder and leader Joel E. Spingarn who enlisted the support of Emmett Scott
(Booker T. Washington's former chief assistant) and the NAACP's Du Bois in
speedily calling a preemptive June Editors Conference of more moderate leaders
to undermine the Liberty Congress and support President Woodrow Wilson's war
effort. During this period Du Bois attempted to secure a commission in Military
Intelligence (that branch of government which monitored radicals and the African
American community) and wrote what was probably the most controversial editorial
of his life "Close Ranks" which appeared in the July
1918 issue of the Crisis. It urged African Americans, "while this war
lasts," to "forget our special grievances and close ranks shoulder to
shoulder with our own white fellow citizens and allied nations that are fighting
for democracy." (41)
Following the Liberty Congress, Harrison initiated "New Negro"
criticism of Du Bois for urging African Americans to forget justifiable
grievances, for "closing ranks" behind President Woodrow Wilson's war
effort, and for following Spingarn's lead and seeking a captaincy in Military
Intelligence. Harrison's exposé, "The Descent of Dr. Du Bois," was a
principal reason that Du Bois was denied the captaincy he sought in Military
Intelligence and, more than any other document, it marked the significant break
between the "New Negroes" and the older leadership.42 Harrison's
Liberty Congress strategy of pushing wartime demands for equality, rather than
Du Bois's infamous "Close Ranks" and "forget our special
grievances" approach, was a clear forerunner of the A. Philip Randolph-led
March on Washington Movement (MOWM) during World War II and of the 1963
Randolph/Martin Luther King, Jr.-led March on Washington during the Vietnam War.
(43)
This was Harrison's most forceful critique of Du Bois, but over the years he
developed others. He was particularly critical of Du Bois's notion of "The
Talented Tenth" the "educated and gifted" group whose
members "must be made leaders of thought and missionaries of culture among
their people" in order to lead African Americans forward. Harrison, in
contrast, emphasized education of, and self-development of the masses, the
so-called "common people." He also increasingly equated "The
Talented Tenth" concept with the concept of "Colored" [or
"Mulatto"] leadership of the "Negro race." He did not think
that such a "Talented Tenth" was in any way preordained to lead the
"Negro race"; nor did he think that it had effectively done so.
Harrison rejected the white domination that unchallenged acceptance of such
leadership implied. As he explained, for two centuries African Americans
"have been told by white Americans that we cannot and will not amount to
anything except in so far as we first accept the bar sinister of their mixing
with us." Thus, "always when white people had to select a leader for
Negroes they would select some one who had in his veins the blood of the
selector." Under slavery, according to Harrison, "it was those whom
Denmark Vesey of Charleston described as .house niggers' who got the master's
cut-off clothes, the better scraps of food and culture which fell from the white
man's table, who were looked upon as the Talented Tenth of the Negro race."
Historically, "the opportunities of self-improvement, in so far as they lay
within the hand of the white race, were accorded exclusively to this class of
people who were the left-handed progeny of the white masters."
(44)
Harrison's differences with Du Bois extended beyond domestic protests for
equality and redress of grievances during World War I, the "Talented
Tenth," relations with "white friends," and the NAACP program.
Other differences over the years included those on the question of lynchers and
lynching (Harrison called for armed self-defense and federal anti-lynching
legislation when Du Bois and the NAACP did not); on the Socialist Party's
approach to African Americans (Harrison had called for a special effort, the
Colored Socialist Club, which Du Bois opposed); on the 1912 presidential
election (Harrison had supported the Socialist candidate Debs while Du Bois left
the Socialists in order to support Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson); and on
segregated military camps during World War I (Harrison had opposed them, while
Du Bois supported them). By the end of the war Harrison's core differences with
Du Bois were clear. Whereas, to Harrison, Du Bois's strategy revolved around
"The Talented Tenth," paper protests, and hoped for inter-racial
cooperation, Harrison increasingly advocated the alternate strategy of
"mobilizing of the Negro's political power, pocket book power and
intellectual power" rather than "depending upon or waiting for the
co-operative action of white people." (45)
During the First World War Harrison was deeply concerned with international
matters and the racial implications of the conflict. In particular, he opposed
the imperialist and white-supremacist aims of the major war powers, the
imperialist oppression of nations, the imperial powers' designs on Africa, and
the use of working people as cannon fodder. He also explained that the conflict
was destroying many resources of the "white world," facilitating
contact among oppressed peoples, and providing the oppressed an opportunity to
press their demands and improve their conditions. After the war he offered
instructive comments on the white supremacist aims of the disarmament sought by
the U.S. and European powers. (46)
Sensing the need to articulate a new direction, Harrison restarted The Voice
and worked on a daring plan to bring it into the Deep South.47 Ill health caused
him to abort that plan. After the resurrected Voice failed, Harrison next edited
the monthly New Negro magazine from August through October 1919. The New Negro
was "intended as an organ of the international consciousness of the darker
races especially of the Negro race"; it aimed to be for African
Americans what The Nation was for "white" Americans. Harrison's
attention to international matters intensified over the next several years and
he wrote many powerful pieces critical of imperialism ("the most dangerous
phase of developed capitalism") and supportive of internationalism. He was
abreast of current events and wrote knowledgeably on Africa, India, Asia, the
Islamic world, the Caribbean, the Americas, Europe, Russia, and the Russian
Revolution. He repeatedly began his analysis of situations from an international
perspective and emphasized that it was important for Black people to overcome
ignorance of international events and for African Americans "to get in
international touch" with "the downtrodden section of the human
population of the globe and establish business, industrial and commercial
relations with them." (48)
On the domestic front, Harrison's criticism of left, labor, and Black
leadership grew. He increasingly sought to mobilize "the Negro's political
power, pocket book power and intellectual power." What was particularly new
in his strategy was his conception of, and approach to, race unity. As he later
explained, many who sought race unity were unclear as to what they actually
meant was it to be "unity of thought and ideas," "unity of
organization," "unity of purpose," or "unity of
action"? For Harrison unity of thought was neither desirable nor possible,
except in the graveyard, and unity of organization was exceedingly difficult and
not likely. Unity of purpose was a real possibility, however. The fault with
previous efforts, he wrote, was that the uniters (and here he referred
principally to Washington and Du Bois) had "generally gone at the problem
from the wrong end." As he explained, "They have begun at the top when
they should have begun at the bottom." "To attempt to unite the
.intellectuals' at the top" was "not the same thing as uniting the
Negro masses," who were the key to "racial solidarity."
(49)
In December 1919, Marcus Garvey approached Harrison and asked him to head a
college that he planned to develop. Harrison was a superb educator and
considered modern educational work in the Black community to be a revolutionary
endeavor. In an article "Education and the Race" he explained how, in
"the dark days of Russia, when the iron heel of czarist despotism was
heaviest on the necks of the people,... Leo Tolstoi and the other intelligentsia
began to carry knowledge to the masses." Then, as "knowledge spread,
enthusiasm was backed by brains, and the developing Russian revolution .began to
be sure of itself,' thus confirming the age-old wisdom that .Knowledge is
power.'" Harrison repeatedly emphasized that "brains and ... the
product of brains" offered the power to open "political, social and
economic" doors. (50)
Though Garvey approached Harrison to head a UNIA college, in fact, he wanted
him to edit his organization's paper, the Negro World. Harrison became the
principal editor of the Negro World in January 1920 and proceeded to reshape and
develop that paper changing its style, format, content, and editorial
page. He was primarily responsible for developing it into the preeminent
radical, race-conscious, political and literary publication of the day. He
initiated the "Poetry for the People" and "West Indian News
Notes" sections, wrote book reviews, and, over the first eight months of
1920, he was the Negro World's chief radical propagandist. In August, at the
UNIA's 1920 convention, he was the one who gave "radical tone" to the
UNIA's "Declaration of the Negro Peoples of the World."
(51)
By the 1920 convention Harrison was highly critical of Garvey. His criticisms
concerned the extravagance of Garvey's claims, Garvey's ego, the conduct of his
stock-selling schemes, and his politics and practices. Though Harrison continued
to write columns and book reviews for the Negro World into 1922, their political
differences grew and Harrison worked against, and sought to develop political
alternatives to, Garvey. In particular, Harrison urged political action in terms
of electoral politics; he attempted to build the all-Black Liberty Party (to run
African American candidates for political offices, including the presidency); he
consistently maintained the position that African Americans' principal struggle
was in the United States (and that they should therefore not seek to develop a
state in Africa); he opposed imperialism and did not seek an African empire; he
argued that Africans, not African Americans, would lead struggles in Africa; he
vociferously opposed the Ku Klux Klan; and he favored reason, science, and
fact-based knowledge over more exaggerated claims to the masses.
(52)
In the 1920s, after breaking with Garvey, Harrison continued his full
schedule of activities. He lectured on a wide range of topics for the New York
City Board of Education and for its "Trends of the Times" series,
which included prominent professors from the city's foremost universities. His
book and theater reviews and other writings appeared in many of the leading
periodicals of the day including the New York Times, New York Tribune,
New York World, Nation, New Republic, Modern Quarterly, Pittsburgh Courier,
Chicago Defender, Amsterdam News, Boston Chronicle, and Opportunity magazine. He
also spoke against the revived Ku Klux Klan and the horrific attack on the
Tulsa, Oklahoma, Black community, and he worked with numerous groups, including
the Virgin Island Congressional Council, the Democratic Party, the Farmer-Labor
Party, the single tax movement, the American Friends Service Committee, the
Urban League, the American Negro Labor Congress, and the Workers (Communist)
Party.
One of his most important activities in this period was the founding of the
International Colored Unity League (ICUL) and its organ, The Voice of the Negro.
The ICUL was Harrison's most broadly unitary effort (particularly in terms of
work with other Black organizations and with the Black church). It urged Blacks
to develop "race consciousness" and its 1924 platform had political,
economic, and social planks urging protests, self-reliance, self-sufficiency,
and collective action. It also included as its "central idea" the
founding of "a Negro state, not in Africa, as Marcus Garvey would have
done, but in the United States," as an outlet for "racial
egoism." It was a plan for "the harnessing" of "Negro
energies" and for "economic, political and spiritual self-help and
advancement" (which preceded a somewhat similar plan by the Communist
International by four years). (53)
Overall, in his writing and oratory, Harrison's appeal was both mass and
individual. He focused on the man and woman in the street and emphasized the
importance of each individual's development of an independent, critical
attitude. The period during and after World War I was one of intense racial
oppression and great Black migration from the South and the Caribbean into urban
centers, particularly in the North. Harrison's race-conscious mass appeal
utilized newspapers, popular lectures, and street-corner talks and marked a
major shift from the leadership approaches of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du
Bois. Harrison's affective appeal (later identified with that of Garvey) was
aimed directly at the urban masses and, as the Harlem activist Richard B. Moore
explained, "More than any other man of his time, he [Harrison] inspired and
educated the masses of Afro-Americans then flocking into Harlem."
(54)
Though he was extremely popular among the masses who "flocked to hear
him," Harrison, according to Rogers, was often overlooked by "the more
established conservative Negro leaders, especially those who derived support
from wealthy whites." Others, "inferior ... in ability and altruism,
received acclaim, wealth, and distinction" that was his due. When he died
on December 17, 1927, the Harlem community, in a major show of affection, turned
out by the thousands for his funeral. A church was (ironically) named in his
honor and his portrait was to be placed prominently at the 135th Street Public
Library, where he, along with the bibliophile Arthur Schomburg and others, had
helped to found and develop the world-famous "Department of Negro
Literature and History." (55)
Despite these manifestations of love and respect from his contemporaries,
Harrison has been greatly neglected in death. Some reasons for this neglect are
readily apparent. Harrison was poor, Black, foreign born, and from the
Caribbean. Each of these groups has suffered from discrimination and neglect in
the United States. He opposed capitalism, racism, and the Christian church
dominant forces of the most powerful society in the world. He supported
socialism, "race consciousness," racial equality, women's equality,
freethought, and birth control. The forces arrayed against the expression of
such ideas were, and continue to be, formidable. Others, most notably (the
similarly poor, Black, Caribbean-born) Garvey, who challenged the forces of
white supremacy only began to emerge from similar historical neglect with the
increase in Black studies and popular history that were by-products of the civil
rights/Black power struggles of the 1960s. Even then, however, Harrison was
largely overlooked. In part this was undoubtedly due to his
"radicalism" on issues other than race particularly on matters
of class and religion. (56)
There is one other important factor that has served to keep Harrison's
achievements and ideas from the prominence they deserve. He was a candid critic.
He criticized the ruling classes, white supremacists, organized religion,
organized labor, politicians, civil rights and race leaders, socialists, and
communists. Many leaders who might have publicly preserved his memory made
little effort to do so; some actually led in the great neglect that followed.
(57)
While students of African American history are familiar with the work of the
early 20th-century leaders Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus
Garvey, it is important to recognize in Hubert Harrison a major alternative
intellectual and political voice, rooted in the working class, with significant
mass appeal. (58) It is also important to consider the
nature of Harrison's radicalism. Among African-American leaders of his era, he
was the most class conscious of the race radicals, and the most race conscious
of the class radicals. This seeming incongruity was made possible by the
political-economic system of the United States in which a system of racial
oppression was central to capitalist rule. Harrison's radicalism was grounded in
his study, his analysis of society, and his practical work. He stressed modern
and historical knowledge, critical and scientific approaches to problems,
political independence while working with different groups and parties, and
concern with the great democratic issues of the day. He worked tirelessly with
those he referred to as the "common people." The radicalism in all
this stems from the fact that it came from an African American who would not
deny that race and class divided America. Then, as now, the demands for economic
justice premised on true racial equality struck at the very heart of the
existing social order and were inherently radical. (59)
1. J[oel] A. Rogers, "Hubert Harrison: Intellectual
Giant and Free-Lance Educator (1883-1927)," in J[oel] A. Rogers, World's
Great Men of Color [hereafter WGMC], edited with an introduction, commentary,
and new bibliographical notes by John Henrik Clarke, 2 vols. (1947; New York:
Collier Books, 1972), 2:432-42, esp. 432f.
2. William Pickens, "Hubert Harrison: Philosopher of
Harlem," Amsterdam News, February 7, 1923, 12.
3. Henry Miller, The Rosy Crucifixion, Book Two: Plexus
(1963; New York: Grove Press, 1965), 560f.
4. Eugene O'Neill to Hubert Harrison (hereafter HH) June 9,
1921, copy in HH Papers, Correspondence, possession of author.
5. W.A. Domingo, interview with Theodore Draper, January 18,
1958, New York, Theodore Draper Papers, Robert W. Woodruff Library for Advanced
Studies, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, Preliminary listing as Box 20,
Folder 7, "Negro Question for Vol. 1 (cont.)," Notes re: W. A.
Domingo, 2.
6. Hodge Kirnon, "Hubert Harrison: An
Appreciation," Negro World [hereafter NW], December 31, 1927.
7. David Levering Lewis to author, August 13, 2001,
possession of author; Henry Louis Gates, Jr., to author, December 12, 1996,
possession of author; Gerald C. Horne, BRC-Discuss, general internet discussion
group of the Black Radical Congress, June 1, 2001,
http://www.mail-archive.com/brc-discuss@lists.tao.ca/msg01433.html;
Bill Fletcher, Jr., "Radicals Known and Unknown," Monthly Review,
December 2001, 57-59, quote 57; Winston James, Holding Aloft the Banner of
Ethiopia: Caribbean Radicalism in Early Twentieth-Century America (New York:
Verso, 1998), 123.
8. Winston James, "Notes on the Ideology and Travails of
Afro-America's Socialist Pioneers, 1877-1930," Souls, 1 no. 4 (Fall 1999):
45-63, esp. 54. Bibliographic material on Harrison is found in Jeffrey B. Perry,
ed. A Hubert Harrison Reader (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2001),
(hereafter cited as AHHR), 407-09 and Jeffrey B. Perry, "Hubert Henry
Harrison .The Father of Harlem Radicalism': The Early Years 1883 Through
the Founding of the Liberty League and The Voice in 1917" (Ph. D. Diss.,
Columbia University, 1986), 711-809.
9. On Harrison as the "Father of Harlem Radicalism"
see Jervis Anderson, A. Philip Randolph: A Biographical Portrait (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973), 79f.
10. Rogers, WGMC, 2:432; AHHR, 294.
11. Baptism Record of "Hubert Henry [Harrison],"
July 7, 1883, St. John's Anglican Church, Christiansted, St. Croix, United
States Virgin Islands, 9; HH, "Diary," cover, possession of author;
Rogers, WGMC, 2:433.
12. AHHR, 241-50, esp. 243, 420f, nn. 48-49. For the St.
Croix years see Perry, "Hubert Henry Harrison," 1-40.
13. AHHR, 247; Perry, "Hubert Henry Harrison,"
7-12; Theodore W. Allen, The Invention of the White Race 2 vols. (New York:
Verso, 1994, 1997) 1:113, 2:238; and Winston James, Holding Aloft the Banner of
Ethiopia, 5.
14. AHHR, 240-41, 420 n. 48; Perry, "Hubert Henry
Harrison," 14-19.
15. Daniel Bell, "The Background and Development of
Marxian Socialism in the United States," in Donald Drew Egbert and Stow
Persons, eds., Socialism and American Life, 2 vols. (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1952), 1:213-405, quote 268, and Rayford W. Logan, The
Betrayal of the Negro: From Rutherford B. Hayes to Woodrow Wilson, New Enlarged
Edition (1954; New York: Macmillan Company, 1970), 11, 62.
16. AHHR, 36-39, 428-429 n. 8. Harrison considered his
agnosticism to be similar to that of Thomas Huxley. Huxley explained his
agnosticism as "not a creed but a method, the essence of which lies in the
vigorous application of a single principle ... the fundamental axiom of modern
science. Positively the principle may be expressed as in matters of intellect,
follow your reason as far as it can carry you without other considerations. And
negatively, in matters of the intellect, do not pretend the conclusions are
certain that are not demonstrated or demonstrable." With such a
perspective, a person "shall not be ashamed to look the universe in the
face, whatever the future may have in store." See Thomas Henry Huxley,
"Agnosticism," (1889), rptd. in Gordon Stein, ed., An Anthology of
Atheism and Rationalism (Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1980), 42-45, quotes 43, 44.
Harrison's break from religion made possible a critical approach to all
matters as had been noted in 1844 by a young Karl Marx who pithily concluded
that "criticism of religion is the premise of all criticism." See Karl
Marx, "Toward the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right," in Lewis
S. Feuer, ed., Marx & Engels: Basic Writings on Philosophy and Politics (Garden
City: Doubleday, 1959), 262-66, quote 262. Freethought also influenced other
Black activists and writers of Harrison's era including Randolph, Rogers,
Briggs, Moore, Claude McKay, Chandler Owen, Walter Everette Hawkins, George S.
Schuyler, and Rothschild Francis, while Du Bois was influenced by agnosticism.
See AHHR, 35f, 427f, nn. 6-7.
17. AHHR, 33-39; Antonio Gramsci, "The Modern
Prince" and Other Writings (New York: International Publishers, 1957),
118-20 and Manning Marable, Black Leadership (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1998), 97-101.
18. AHHR, 13, 442 n. 58.
19. HH, "The Negro American Vol. VIII: The Negro
Factions. The Negro Factions, The Protestants, The Subservients,"
scrapbook [5], HH Papers.
20. AHHR, 129-36, 151-61.
21. HH to the Editor, New York Times Saturday Review of
Books, April 13, 1907, 242 and April 27, 1907, 274; HH to the editor, New York
Sun, December 8, 1910, 8 and December 19, 1910, 8; Charles W. Anderson to Booker
T. Washington September 10 and October 30, 1911, in Louis R. Harlan &
Raymond W. Smock, eds. The Booker T. Washington Papers, 13 vols. (Urbana:
University of Illinois Press, 1972-1984), 11:300-01, 351.
22. AHHR, 52-62, 71-78, 107-116, quotes p. 73.
23. AHHR, 54f.
24. AHHR, 75; ".Socialists' Despise Negroes in
South," NYC, August 21, 1911, 3.
25. AHHR, 60-62, 76.
26. AHHR, 76; Seth M. Scheiner, Negro Mecca: A History of
the Negro in New York City, 1865-1920 (New York: New York University Press,
1965), 73.
27. David A. Shannon, The Socialist Party of America: A
History (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1955), 10f; Bell, "The Background
and Development of Marxian Socialism in the United States," 275, 277.
28. Socialist Party, National Convention of the Socialist
Party Held at Indianapolis, Ind., May 12 to 18, 1912, Stenographic Report by
Wilson E. McDermut, assisted by Charles W. Phillips, ed. by John Spargo
(Chicago, 1912), 209-11; Philip S. Foner, American Socialism and Black
Americans: From the Age of Jackson to World War II (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1975), 350.
29. AHHR, 55f.
30. Socialist Party, National Convention . . . 1912, 210.
Harrison writes that "The quoted passage [on immigration] cuts the very
heart out of their [the Socialists'] case." See AHHR, 109, 113-17. See
Foner, American Socialism and Black Americans, 258; Mark Naison, "Marxism
and Black Radicalism: Notes on a Long (and continuing) Journey," Radical
America, May-June 1971, 3-25, quote 6.
31. Werner Sombart, Why Is There No Socialism in the United
States? [1906], ed. and with an introductory essay by C. T. Husbands (White
Plains, N.Y., 1976), esp. xix-xxiii.
Theodore W. Allen is instructive on the theme of white supremacy and class
consciousness in the U.S. Allen reviews a host of Marxist and labor historians
(including Frederick Engels, Frederick A. Sorge, Richard T. Ely, Morris
Hillquit, William Z. Foster, John R. Commons, Selig Perlman, Norman J. Ware,
Mary and Charles Beard, Allan Nevins, Henry Steele Commager, and Frederick
Jackson Turner) who, he argues, created a classic consensus which ascribes the
low level of class consciousness to "six peculiar objective factors of
United States historical development." The six factors which Allen
maintains were adopted, at least in part, by all of the writers he cites,
include: 1) early existence of the right to vote and other democratic liberties;
2) heterogeneity of the working class; 3) the "safety valve" of
western homesteading opportunities; 4) social mobility; 5) relative shortage of
labor and higher wages; and 6) development of trade unions prior to development
of a labor party. Allen argues that each point of this six-pronged rationale is
refuted or seriously challenged by factual analysis and that each thesis of the
consensus "must be decisively revised in the light of the question of white
supremacy." For Allen, "the key to the defeat of labor and popular
forces" in the U.S. has historically been the theory and the practice [as
exhibited by the Socialist Party in 1912] of white supremacy. See Theodore W.
Allen, ".The Kernel and the Meaning . . .,' A Contribution to a Proletarian
Critique of United States History," n.p., c. 1967, possession of author,
1-41, esp. 8-9, 13-14, 20-21; Theodore W. Allen, "Can White Radicals Be
Radicalized?," in Noel Ignatin and Ted Allen, "White Blindspot"
"Can White Radicals Be Radicalized?" (New York, 1969), 12-18, esp. 13;
and Theodore W. Allen, "On Roediger's Wages of Whiteness," CLogic,
4:2, esp. paragraphs 7-10, at
http://wwww.eserver.org/clogic/4-2/allen.html.
32. Sally M. Miller, "Other Socialists: Native Born and
Immigrant Women in the Socialist Party of America, 1900-1917," Labor
History, 24, No. 1 (Winter 1983), 84-102, esp. 101.
33. HH, "Diary," September 28, 1914.
34. "The Reminiscences of A. Philip Randolph,"
interview with Wendell Wray, July 25, 1972, 152, in Oral History Project, Butler
Library, Columbia University, New York; Lester A. Walton, "Street Speaker
Heralds Spring in Harlem," New York World, March 23, 1928, 17.
35. HH, "Introductory," in HH, When Africa Awakes:
The "Inside Story" of the Stirrings and Strivings of the New Negro in
the Western World (New York: Porro Press, 1920), 5-8; HH, The Negro and the
Nation (New York: Cosmo-Advocate Publishing Co., 2305 Seventh Avenue, 1917), 3
n.
36. AHHR, 370-76.
37. AHHR, 86-88, 143-47.
38. AHHR, 177f.
39. AHHR, 97f; Nathan Huggins, Harlem Renaissance (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1974), 53-59; Alain Leroy Locke, The New Negro (1925;
New York: Athenaeum, 1968). Tony Martin in Literary Garveyism: Garvey Black Arts
and the Harlem Renaissance (Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1983), ix-x, 2, 5 and
African Fundamentalism: A Literary and Cultural Anthology of Garvey's Harlem
Renaissance (1983; Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1991), xv-xvi, emphasizes the
major literary importance of the Garvey movement and the Negro World (starting
around 1920 [when Harrison became editor-JP]) to the literary epoch known as the
Harlem Renaissance. The Harrison Papers make clear that the Garvey movement was
a component of the New Negro movement and that Harrison's book review and poetry
sections were central to the Negro World's literary appeal.
40. AHHR, 104, 196f.
41. W.E.B. Du Bois, "Close Ranks," Crisis, 16
(July 1918): 111; AHHR, 168-174; Ernest Allen, Jr., ".Close Ranks': Major
Joel E. Spingarn and the Two Souls of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois," Contributions in
Black Studies, No. 3 (1979-1980), 25-38; AHHR, 173-74; Mark Ellis, "W.E.B.
Du Bois and the Formation of Black Opinion in World War I: A Commentary on .The
Damnable Dilemma,'" Journal of American History 81, no. 4 (March 1995):
1584-90. According to Mark Ellis, over the next forty years, Du Bois would refer
to his activity around the period of the Great War with "a mixture of shame
and bitterness." See Mark Ellis, ".Closing Ranks' and
.Seeking Honors': W.E.B. Du Bois in World War I," Journal of American
History, 79, no. 1 (June 1992), 96-124, esp. 96, 98, 122.
42. AHHR, 170-73.
43. The MOWM led to president Franklin D. Roosevelt's
signing of Executive Order 8802 (on June 25, 1941) which stated that it shall be
the "policy of the United States that there shall be no discrimination in
the employment of workers in defense industries or Government because of race,
creed, color, or national origin" and called for the establishment of a
Fair Employment Practices Committee. The 1963 march led to the 1964 Civil Rights
Act (that forbade discrimination in public accommodations and employment). See
Herbert Garfinkel, When Negroes March: The March on Washington Movement in the
Organizational Politics for FEPC (1959; New York: Athenaeum, 1969), 56-61,
117-31; James Gilbert Cassedy, "African Americans and the American Labor
Movement," Prologue, 29, no. 2 (Summer 1997): 113-20, esp. 119.
44. AHHR, 170-182, esp. 179f.
45. AHHR, 20-21,216-19; HH, "The Problems of
Leadership," When Africa Awakes, 54f.
46. AHHR, 202-12, 229-34.
47. [HH,] "The Voice Is Coming Out to Stay!" c.
July 4, 1918, HH Papers, Writings; Voice, July 11, 1918.
48. AHHR, 101-02, 216-19
49. AHHR, 402-04. Du Bois reached a similar conclusion in
1940 in his autobiography. At that time Du Bois explained that Booker T.
Washington had proposed "a flight of class from mass in wealth with the
idea of escaping the masses or ruling the masses through power placed by white
capitalists into the hands of those with larger income. My own panacea of
earlier days was flight of class from mass through the development of a Talented
Tenth." See W.E.B. Du Bois, Dusk of Dawn: An Essay Toward an Autobiography
of a Race Concept [1940] (New York: Schocken Books, 1971), 216f; Huggins, Harlem
Renaissance, 5.
50. AHHR, 122-28, 183-88; HH, "Opening the Doors,"
Boston Chronicle, April 5, 1924, and HH, "The Feet of the Young Men,"
Boston Chronicle, March 22, 1924, both in HH Papers, Writings.
51. AHHR, 182-88, 191-94. Comments from activist Bill
Fletcher and historians Ernest Allen, Gerald Horne, and Portia James say much
about the caliber of Harrison's editorials. Fletcher writes that Harrison was
"a revolutionary intellectual who wrote eye-opening exposures and rigorous
political analysis" that "ideologically and politically" were
"clearly in the vanguard of Black political thought of the time."
Allen views Harrison as "pivotal to black intellectual life from the
Progressive to the post-war era" and he adds that "his editorials and
commentary were certainly no less insightful and often a good deal more
so than anything in this vein that Du Bois ever produced in the Crisis
magazine." His writings "fill a gap not only in our understanding of
black radical and nationalist writings around the World War I period and beyond,
but [they] also,... change the way in which we have tended to look at black
thought generally in this period." Horne agrees that "in many ways
Harrison's analyses of the World War I era and countless other matters
are sharper than those of Du Bois." Historian Portia James concludes
that "It is impossible to have a full understanding of the 1900-1930 period
in Black politics without knowing Harrison and his influential work." See
Fletcher, Jr., "Radicals Known and Unknown," 58; Ernest Allen, letter
to Suzanna Tammimen, June 21, 1999, copy in possession of author; Horne,
BRC-Discuss, June 1, 2001; Portia James, letter to Suzanna Tammimen, c. June
1999, copy in possession of author.
52. AHHR, 182-200.
53. AHHR, 399-402; "Negroes Plan New American
State," Christian Science Monitor, June 7, 1924, 5B; "Separate Colored
State Urged by Harrison," New York News, August 2, 1924; and "Wants
Exclusive Negro Territory in U.S.," New York World, August 3, 1924.
54. Richard B. Moore, Caribbean Militant in Harlem:
Collected Writings 1920-1972, ed. by W. Burghardt and Joyce Moore Turner
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), 216. Cary D. Wintz, Black Culture
and the Harlem Renaissance (Houston: Rice University Press, 1988), 3, writes
that Harlem "symbolized the central experience of American blacks in the
early twentieth century the urbanization of black America."
55. Rogers, WGMC, 2:433, 437; AHHR, 9..
56. Tony Martin, Race First: The Ideological and
Organizational Struggles of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement
Association (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1976). Race First, 360, points out,
"for two decades or so after his death [in 1940] Garvey was all but
relegated to the position of an unperson." It was only with "the Black
Power revolution of the 1960s" that the race activist Garvey received
renewed recognition.
57. AHHR, 42-46, 175-77; Rogers, WGMC, 2:439.
58. Ralph Dumain of the C.L.R. James Institute writes that
Harrison had "very admirable traits." He was "A working class
autodidact, a street agitator, organizer, educator, critic, and ... closer to
the black working class than any other revolutionary intellectual of his
time." He was "relentlessly independent, ruthlessly objective,
intellectually rigorous" and devoted to "education, erudition,
scientific method, and the intellectual elevation of his constituency."
Ralph Dumain, to author, June 17, 2001, possession of author.
59. Theodore W. Allen discusses the origins of the system of
racial oppression and its centrality to class rule in the U.S. in Allen,
Invention of the White Race, 1:32-35, 133-35; 143-50 and 2:221-22 and 239-59.
Copyright 2003 Jeffrey B. Perry. Used by permission of the author.
|
|