Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T00:27:58.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Garvey Movement in British West Africa*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

R. L. Okonkwo
Affiliation:
University of Nigeria, Enugu

Extract

The paper seeks to present new information concerning the activities of the West African branches of Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. The author has included biographical profiles of the British West African Garveyites to integrate the Garvey movement into the history of West African nationalism and Pan-Africanism.

It is argued that Garveyism was welcomed in British West Africa by the older cultural nationalists who saw Garveyism as an extension of Blyden's ideas. Pan-African sentiments of racial unity and solidarity of African and American blacks, pride in the history of the race, and self-help projects had wide circulation in West Africa from the latter part of the nineteenth century, as a result of Blyden's influence. Joining the branches of the U.N.I.A. was a practical demonstration of a long-standing commitment to cultural and racial nationalism among the West African elite.

The Garvey movement also marked the beginning of a new era in West African nationalism. Garvey's radical pronouncements on freeing Africa from colonial rule were unacceptable to the older cultural nationalists who dominated the Garvey groups. They disavowed any interest in organizing a central nation for the race. However, Garvey's ideas may have had long-term effects. By the 1930s the idea of independence from colonial rule seemed more attractive to the West African nationalists. Garvey was one of the first to speak out boldly for freedom from colonialism.

The concrete achievements of the West African branches of the U.N.I.A. were small indeed. Nigeria had the most Garveyite activity in British West Africa. There was an agent for the Black Star Line in Lagos and a branch of the U.N.I.A. and A.C.L. The Gold Coast had the least Garveyite activity, probably because of their involvement in the National Congress of British West Africa and also because of their more critical attitude towards co-operation with American blacks. They believed that Africans were best qualified to lead any joint efforts for intra-racial co-operation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

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

1 Col. Young, Charles, Monrovia, 15 May 1920Google Scholar, letter to Dr C. S. Dewey, Washington, D.C., Container 10, Carter G. Woodson Papers, Library of Congress, Manuscript Division.

2 Langley, J. A., ‘Garveyism and African nationalism’, Race, xi, ii (1969), 157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Lynch, H. R., Edward Wilmot Blyden, Pan-Negro Patriot (London, 1967), 251.Google Scholar

4 ‘African brotherhood and the right spirit of approach’, Editorial, Times of Nigeria (1 March 1920), 4.Google Scholar

5 Martin, Tony, Race First: The Ideological and Organizational Struggles of Marcus Garvey and the U.N.I.A. (Westport, Conn., 1976), iii.Google Scholar

6 Hill, Robert, ‘The First England Years and After, 1912–1916’, in Marcus Garvey and the Vision of Africa, ed. Clarke, J. H. (New York, 1974), 51–2.Google Scholar

7 ‘The new Black Star liner’, Editorial, West African Mail and Trade Gazette (24 September 1921), 2.Google Scholar

8 ‘Africa and the Africans’, Editorial, Colonial and Provincial Reporter (20 March 1920), 10.Google Scholar

9 ‘Our present condition’, Editorial, Sierra Leone Weekly News (18 September 1920), 8.Google Scholar

10 ‘Marcus Garvey and his African problem’, Editorial, Sierra Leone Weekly News (13 November 1920).Google Scholar

11 Colonial and Provincial Reporter (13 March 1920), 5Google Scholar

12 Notice, Sierra Leone Weekly News (10 July 1920), 12.Google Scholar

13 Sierra Leone Weekly News (24 February 1912), p. 7.Google Scholar

14 Notice, Sierra Leone Weekly News (13 November 1920), 9.Google Scholar

15 ‘The Year 1920’, Editorial, Sierra Leone Weekly News (14 January 1922), 8.Google Scholar

16 Mashado, Ma, ‘The proposed technical and industrial school for girls’, Sierra Leone Weekly News (12 June 1920), 8Google Scholar; ‘Reply to Ma Mashado’, Sierra Leone Weekly News (19 June 1920), 9.Google Scholar

17 Marke, Charles, Africa and the Africans (Freetown, 1881).Google Scholar

18 Sierra Leone Weekly News (8 February 1908), 5.Google Scholar

19 Mrs Richards, , niece of George O. Marke, Wilberforce, Sierra Leone, personal interview with the author, 30 July 1977Google Scholar; Mr Bishop, Charles, nephew of George O. Marke, Brooklyn, New York, personal interview with the author, 11 August 1977Google Scholar; Martin, , Race First, 45.Google Scholar

20 Crichlow, Cyril A., special report to Marcus Garvey 24 June 1921Google Scholar, supplementary report 4 July 1921Google Scholar. In Records of the Department of State relating to internal affairs of Liberia (Record Group 59), U.S. National Archives Microfilm Publication M613 Roll 6.

21 ‘Our Debut’, Editorial, Liberian Patriot, I (21 May 1921), i.Google Scholar

22 Mrs Richards, personal interview.

23 Cronon, E. D., Black Moses: The Story of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association (Madison, 1955), 154.Google Scholar

24 Faduma, O., ‘Death of G.O. Marke’, Sierra Leone Weekly News (21 December 1929), 7.Google Scholar

25 ‘Minutes of the First Meeting’, Dakar, 7 May 1922Google Scholar, 21G 126 (108), National Archives of Senegal, Dakar.

26 Rambler, , ‘Rambling Talks’, Sierra Leone Weekly News (23 May 1936), 9.Google Scholar

27 Kimble, David, Political History of Ghana (Oxford, 1963), 538.Google Scholar

28 ‘Pan-African Congress’, Editorial, Gold Coast Leader (12 July 1919), 3.Google Scholar

29 ‘Racial Unity’, Editorial, Gold Coast Leader (24–31 July 1920), 45.Google Scholar

30 ‘The Marcus Garvey scheme’, Editorial, Gold Coast Leader (18 December 1920), 4.Google Scholar

31 ‘The trial of Marcus Garvey’, Editorial, Gold Coast Leader (18 August 1923), 4.Google Scholar

32 Agbebi, Adeotan, Lagos, 15 November 1919Google Scholar, letter to John E. Bruce, New York, MS 190, John E. Bruce Papers, Schomburg Collection, New York.

33 Agbebi, Akinbami, Letter, Lagos Weekly Record (7 February 1920), 8.Google Scholar

34 Announcement, Black Star Steamship Line, March 1921Google Scholar, 21G 126 (108), National Archives of Senegal, Dakar.

35 Akinbami Agbebi, Lagos, 27 May 1921Google Scholar, to Governor of Nigeria, Lagos, CSo 26 09588, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan.

36 Deputy Inspector General of Police, Lagos, ‘The U.N.I.A.’, 28 March 1922Google Scholar, CSO 26/06069, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan.

37 Agbebi, Akinbami, Lagos, 5 May 1920Google Scholar, letter to John E. Bruce, New York, MS 267, John E. Bruce Papers, Schomburg Collection.

38 Agbebi, Akinbami, Lagos, 15 May 1920Google Scholar, letter to Marcus Garvey, MS 258, John E. Bruce Papers.

39 Agbebi, Adeotan, Lagos, 25 June 1920,Google Scholar letter to John E. Bruce, New York, MS A 7, John E. Bruce Papers.

40 Agbebi, Akinbami to Marcus Garvey, 15 May 1920.Google Scholar

41 Campbell, Patriarch J. G., Letter, Times of Nigeria (24 May 1920), 4.Google Scholar

42 Coleman, Jases, Nigeria Backg}round to Nationalism (Berkeley, 1963), 191.Google Scholar

43 Campbell, J. G., ‘Something we must take note of’, Times of Nigeria (8 November 1920, 22 November 1920), 4.Google Scholar

44 Who's Who in Jamaica, 1941–6; Lagos Daily News (18 June 1931), 2Google Scholar; Cecil Wynter-Shackleford, O. A. (son) to Shackleford, A. S. W., Lagos, 31 May 1978Google Scholar, letter to the author; personal interview with the author, 18 July 1978.Google Scholar

45 Kilby, Peter, African Enterprise: The Nigerian Bread Industry (Stanford, 1965), 78.Google Scholar

46 Ayandele, E. A., A Visionary of the African Church, Mojola Agbebi (Nairobi, 1971), 25.Google Scholar

47 Right O, Lagos, 1 November 1920Google Scholar, letter to John E. Bruce, New York, MS 188, John E. Bruce Papers, Schomburg Collection.

48 Cecil Wynter-Shackleford, O. A., Lagos, letter to the author, 2 February 1979.Google Scholar

49 Agence Consulaire de France, Lagos, 21 January 1921Google Scholar, to M. le Gouverneur de Dahomey, 21G 126 (108), National Archives, Senegal, Dakar.

50 Macmillan, Allister, ed., The Red Book of West Africa (reprinted London, 1968), 114.Google Scholar

51 ‘Doyen of Nigerian journalism dead’, West African Pilot (22 October 1960), iGoogle Scholar; Mrs Ikoli, E. A., daughter to Ikoli, Ernest and Spiff, Willy Mr, friend, personal interview with the author, Lagos, 18 December 1976.Google Scholar

52 Shackleford, A. S. W., Lagos, 25 February 1921Google Scholar, to Chief Secretary to Government, CSE 5/16/33C 511/21, Nigerian National Archives, Enugu.

53 ‘A retiring educationist’, Editorial, Lagos Standard (5 February 1896).Google Scholar

54 Euba, W. B., letter of resignation, 15 October 1912Google Scholar, Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society papers, 4/2/7, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan.

55 Lagos Daily News (6 January 1930), i.Google Scholar

56 Lagos Weekly Record (27 November 1920), 5.Google Scholar

57 African Messenger (14 July 1923), 7.Google Scholar

58 ‘The appointment of local solicitors’, Editorial, Lagos Weekly Record (3 May 1913).Google Scholar

59 Nigerian Chronicle (25 July 1913), 6.Google Scholar

60 ‘Mass Meeting of the British West African Congress’, Nigerian Pioneer (29 October 1920), 5.Google Scholar

61 Lagos Weekly Record (25 September 1920), 7.Google Scholar

62 Hill, Robert A., ‘The First England Years and After, 1912–1916’, 60, 69.Google Scholar

63 ‘Epitome of News’, Lagos Weekly Record (9 October 1920), 3.Google Scholar

64 U.N.I.A. Constitution and Book of Laws (New York, 1920), sec. 58.Google Scholar

65 Acting Lieutenant-Governor of the Southern Province, Gowers, W. F. G., 12 March 1921Google Scholar, to Secretary of the Southern Province, CSO 20/9, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan.

66 Ayiluka, , ‘Here and there’, African Messenger (15 09 1921), 4.Google Scholar

67 Secretary to the Colonies, London, June 1921Google Scholar, to Governor of the Gold Coast, Gold Coast Correspondence, CO 96/25, Public Record Office, London.

68 Sir Hugh Clifford, Report on the U.N.I.A. activities in Nigeria, 12 April 1922Google Scholar, CO 583/109/28194, Nigerian National Archives, Ibadan.

69 Agence Consulaire de France, Lagos, 21 January 1921Google Scholar, to M. le Gouverneur de Dahomey.

70 African Messenger (8 July 1928), 3.Google Scholar

71 Lagos Daily News (30 May 1931), 3.Google Scholar

72 Lagos Weekly Record (27 November 1920), 5.Google Scholar

73 ‘Ajax’, ‘Rambling notes and news’, Nigerian Pioneer (26 November 1920), 5.Google Scholar

74 ‘Ajax’, ‘Rambling notes and news’, Nigerian Pioneer (1 February 1923), 7.Google Scholar

75 Shepperson, George, ‘Notes on Negro American influences on the emergence of African nationalism’, J. Afr. Hist. i, ii (1960), 303.Google Scholar

76 Azikiwe, Nnamdi, My Odyssey (London, 1970) 32.Google Scholar

77 Nkrumah, Kwame, Ghana: The Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah (Edinburgh, 1957), 45.Google Scholar

78 ‘Marcus Garvey’, Editorial, Gold Coast Times (4 May 1929), 6.Google Scholar