Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T21:41:27.191Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Wallace-Johnson and the Sierra Leone Labor Crisis of 1939

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

During 1939 a political crisis developed in Sierra Leone which had far reaching implications for colonial policy in British Africa. At the end of January workers struck the War Department defense works and the Mabella Coaling Company. Simultaneously some gunners in the West African Frontier Force (WAFF) stationed in Murray Town refused to go on parade, in army eyes an act of mutiny. In the midst of these events an intense campaign to rouse working-class consciousness began in the African Standard, the newly founded weekly published by the West African Youth Leagus (WAYL). This campaign focused on the wage-earning sector of Freetown, particularly the police and laborers engaged in essential works like defense construction. Editorial warnings published at the same times that Sierra Leoneans should not support the coming world war sounded a more ominous note as far as the authorities were concerned.

The colonial administration responded to these developments by initiating legislation, six bills in all, designed to suppress anticolonial opposition and contain the labor movement. While these bills were still under preparation, miners in the Marampa iron mines conducted the largest and best organized strike to occur before 1940, thus increasing the urgency of the situation. The administration hastened the drafting of its repressive ordinances and presenting them to the Legislative Council for enactment. In the meantime the Sierra Leonean community combined in a massive effort to oppose the bills, culminating in the largest mass demonstration against the government to occur in Freetown up to that time.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

ARCHIVES AND PRIVATE PAPERS

F. A. Bruce Papers, Koforidua, Ghana.Google Scholar
Colonial Office [abbreviated CO], 96 series, 19341936.Google Scholar
Colonial Office 267 series, 19381939.Google Scholar
Colonial Office 583 series, 1933-34.Google Scholar
Gambia National Archives, 4/73.Google Scholar
Institute of African Studies Library, Legon, Ghana: Wallace-Johnson Notes.Google Scholar
Malawi National Archives: Nyasaland No. 192.Google Scholar
Rhodes House [abbreviated RH], Oxford: Arthur Creech Jones Papers [abbreviated CJP], Box 18, File 7A.Google Scholar
Sierra Leone National Archives [abbreviated SLNA], Freetown: Colonial Secretary's Office Minute Papers [abbreviated CSO], 19141915; 19191920; 19381939.Google Scholar
Bamin, Perindo [son of Elias Bamin]. Freetown: December 12, 1972.Google Scholar
Bowles, Minnie [private secretary to Reginald Bridgeman in 1930s]. London: September 8, 1980.Google Scholar
Boyle, Sydney Maurice Oluwole [secretary of Freetown branch, WAYL; member of WAYL executive, 1938-43]. Birmingham: July 1973; December 7, 1975; January 19, 25 & 29, 1976.Google Scholar
MrsCollier, Eudora. [first wife of Wallace-Johnson]. Freetown: January 2, 1977.Google Scholar
MrsCummings-John, Constance A. [member of WAYL executive, 1938-40; Freetown city councillor, 1938-42]. London: September, 1973; September, 1975 & March 22, 1976.Google Scholar
Grant, Marcus [secretary of All Seamen's Union, 1938-1940]. Freetown, December 15, 1976.Google Scholar
Hotobah-During, I. C. [eldest son of C. D. Hotobah-During, legal adviser to and member of executive of WAYL]. December 18, 20, 22 & 28, 1976.Google Scholar
Woddis, Jack [international secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain]. London, September 3, 1980.Google Scholar
Wuta-Ofei, R. B. [editor of the Gold Coast Spectater].A. Accra; August, 1967.Google Scholar
African Morning Post (Accra), 1936.Google Scholar
African Sentinel (London), 19371938.Google Scholar
African Standard (Freetown), 1939.Google Scholar
Awoonor-Renner, B. (1943) This Africa. London: New Era.Google Scholar
Awoonor-Renner, B. (1946) West African Soviet Union. London: West African National Secretariat Press.Google Scholar
Azikiwe, N. (1970) My Odyssey. London: C. Hurst.Google Scholar
Boyle, S. M. O. Prelude to Freedom. Typescript.Google Scholar
Buell, R. L. (1927) The Native Problem in Africa, volume 1. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Carr, E. H. (1953) The Bolshevik Revolution, volume 3. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Carter, D. (1969) Scottsboro: The Tragedy of the American South. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press.Google Scholar
Coleman, J. S. (1958) Nigeria: Background to Nationalism. Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colonial Office, Great Britain. (1938) Cmd. 5641. Trinidad and Tobago Disturbances, 1937. Report of the Commission. [Chairman: John Forster] London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, (referred to in text as Forster report).Google Scholar
Conway, H. E. (1968) “Labour Protest Activity in Sierra Leone during the Early Party of the Twentieth Century,” Labour History (Canberra), volume 15: 4963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cummings-John, C. A. and Denzer, L.. The Autobiography of Constance A. Cummings-John. Manuscript.Google Scholar
Daily Mail (Freetown), 1939.Google Scholar
Daily Worker (London), 19311933.Google Scholar
Danquah, J. B. (1943) “A Biographical Note” in Awoonor-Renner, B., This Africa. London: New Era.Google Scholar
Davidson, B. (1973) Black Star. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Davies, I. (1966) African Trade Unions. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Denzer, L. (1977) “I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson and the West African Youth League: A Case Study in West African Nationalism.” University of Birmingham: Ph.D. Dissertation.Google Scholar
Denzer, L. (1981) “Constance A. Cummings-John of Sierra Leone: Her Early Political Career,” Tarikh, volume 7, number 1: 2032.Google Scholar
Denzer, L. (1982) “The Pan-Africanism of Constance A. Cummings-John,” Paper given in the inter-disciplinary colloquium, “Pan-African Biography: Its Relevance to the Study of African History,” sponsored by African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Foray, C. P. (1979) “I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson” in The Encyclopaedia Africana Dictionary of African Biography, Volume 2: Sierra Leone and Zaire. Algonac, Michigan: Reference Publications, Inc.Google Scholar
Ford, J. W. (1930) “The First International Conference of Negro Workers: Its Accomplishments and Its Future Tasks,” RILU Magazine, August & September: 211–16.Google Scholar
Forster, J. (1938) See Colonial Office above.Google Scholar
Forty Years for NCCL” (1978) Rights. June/July.Google Scholar
Fyfe, C. (1972) A History of Sierra Leone. London: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gold Coast Independent (Accra), 1930.Google Scholar
Gupta, P. S. (1975) Imperialism and the British Labour Movement 1914-1964. New York: Holmes and Meier.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haywood, H. (1978) Black Bolshevik. Chicago: Liberator Press.Google Scholar
Hodgkin, T. (edited by Denzer, L.). “A Memoir of Reginald Bridgeman.” Manuscript.Google Scholar
Holmes, A. B. IV. (1972) “Economic and Political Organizations in the Gold Coast, 1920-1945.” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Hooker, J. R. (1967) Black Revolutionary. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hughes, A. and Cohen, R.. (1978) “An Emerging Nigerian Working Class: The Lagos Experience, 1897-1939” in Cohen, R., Copans, J. and Gutkind, P. C. W., eds., African Labor History. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
International African Service Bureau (1937) “Aims and Objects.” Broadsheet.Google Scholar
International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers (1930) Report of Proceedings and Decisions of the First International Conference of Negro Workers. Hamburg: ITUC-NW.Google Scholar
Jackson, T. (1933) “The International Labour Defense and the Negro Peoples,” Negro Worker, volume 3, numbers 2-3: February-March: 912.Google Scholar
James, C. L. R. (1937) World Revolution. London: Seeker an Warburg.Google Scholar
James, C. L. R. (1963) Black Jacobins. 2nd edition. New York: Vintage Press.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. (1977) “Nigerian Women and British Colonialism: The Yoruba Example with Selected Biographies.” Ph.D. Dissertation, Northwestern University.Google Scholar
July, R. (1968) The Origins of Modern African Thought. London: Faber and Faber.Google Scholar
Kaniki, M. H. Y. (1973) “Economic Change in Sierra Leone during the 1920s,” Transafrican Journal of History (Nairobi), volume 3, number 1/2: 7295.Google Scholar
Kimble, D. (1963) A Political History of Ghana. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Langley, J. A. (1973) Pan-Africanism and Nationalism In West Africa, 1900-1945. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lewis, W. A. (1939) Labour in the West Indies: The Birth of a Workers' Movement. London: Victor Gollancz for the Fabian Society, Research Series No. 44.Google Scholar
Makonnen, T. R. (1973) Pan Africanism From Within. London, New York & Nairobi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Negro Worker (Hamburg, Copenhagen), 19301937.Google Scholar
Newman, R. “Laura Adorkor Kofey and the African Universal Church,” Manuscript.Google Scholar
Olusanya, G. O. (1973) The Second World War and Politics in Nigeria, 1939-1953. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Orde Browne, G. J. St. (1941) Labour Conditions in West Africa. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Padmore, G. (1933) “Negro Toilers Speak at the World Congress of I. L. D.,” Negro Worker, volume 3, number 2/3, February-March: 16.Google Scholar
Padmore, G. (1956) Pan-Africanism or Communism? London: Dennis Dobson.Google Scholar
Pelling, H. (1958) The British Communist Party: A Historical Profile. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Peterson, J. (1969) Province of Freedom. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Post, K. (1970) “The Bible as Ideology: Ethiopianism in Jamaica, 1930-38,” in Allen, C. and Johnson, R. W., eds., African Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rennie, B. (1973) The History of the Working-class in the 20th Century (1919:1956)-The Trinidad and Tobago Experience. Trinidad and Tobago: New Beginning Movement.Google Scholar
SirRoberts-Wray, Kenneth (1966) Commonwealth and Colonial Law. London: Stevens and Son.Google Scholar
Rogers, J. A. (1946) World's Great Men of Color. New York: H. M. Rogers.Google Scholar
Shaloff, S. (1972) “Press Controls and Sedition Proceedings in the Gold Coast, 1933-39,” African Affairs, volume LXXI: 207–21.Google Scholar
Shaloff, S. (1973) “The Gold Coast Water Rate Controversy: 1909-1938,” Research Review (Legon), 2121.Google Scholar
Shepperson, G. (1953) “Ethiopianism and African Nationalism,” Phyton, volume XIV, number 1: 918.Google Scholar
Sierra Leone Weekly News [abbreviated SLWN in text] (Freetown), 1938.Google Scholar
Spitzer, L. L. Denzer. (1973) “I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson and the West African Youth League,” International Journal of African Historical Studies, volume VI, numbers 3 & 4: 413-53 & 565601.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spitzer, L. (1974) The Creoles of Sierra Leone. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Sundker, B. (1948) Bantu Prophets in South Africa. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Twumasi, E. Y. (1971) “Aspects of Politics in Ghana 1929-1939: A Study of the Relationship Between Discontent and the Development of Nationalism.” D.Phil. Dissertation, Oxford University.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1930) “Education: The How and Why,” Gold Coast Independent, Aug. 2 & 23, Sept. 20 & 27, Oct. 11.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1931) “British Oppression in West Africa,” Negro Worker, December.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1936) “Has the African a God?African Morning Post, May 15.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1937a) “The West African Youth League: Its Origin, Aims and Objects,” Negro Worker, May.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1937b( “Marcus Garvey and the International African Service Bureau,” West Indian Crusader (St. Lucia), Nov. 27.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1938) Lecture Delivered by Wallace-Johnson … to the Officers and Members of the Preston Literary Club, Freetown, on Friday, May 6, 1938 at 4:30 p.m. Freetown.Google Scholar
Wallace-Johnson, I. T. A. (1946) Trade Unionism in Colonial Dependent Territories. London.Google Scholar
Wilson, E. T. (1974) Russia and Black Africa Before World War II. New York: Holmes and Meiers.Google Scholar