UNIA Meeting in Oakland, 1924
Image Courtesy of African American Museum of Oakland
In the article below historian Robin Dearmon Muhammad discusses the
growth of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) or the
Garvey Movement in the American West, with particular emphasis on its
influence in black working-class organizing in the San Francisco Bay
Area after World War I.
Garveyism found an unlikely frontier in the American West. Marcus
Garvey, founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
visited the American West only a few times but the work of the UNIA had a
lasting impact on the black experience in the region. Promoting black
self-help, black pride, and African liberation, UNIA members in the west
tied international developments in Latin America, Asia, and Africa to
their own aspirations for black advancement. As they observed the
expansion of American influence across the Pacific, the western African
Americans local UNIA divisions demonstrated an international perspective
that assisted them in defining their place in the west and the larger
Pacific economy.
Black workers formed the backbone of the UNIA in the west and set the
agenda for expanding black political and economic activity. Getting the
word out about the UNIA took many forms. The UNIA newspaper, the
Negro World challenged
the rising tide of racial hostility toward people of color throughout
the west. Covering stories of African American achievement in the
region that might not otherwise be reported in the mainstream press, the
Negro World chronicled the progress of black labor and civil rights organizations as well as black businesses. The
Negro World also
reported on uprisings and revolutions in Latin America and Asia that
mirrored the aspirations of the Garveyites’ own fight for black freedom.
In that way, the newspaper tied these relatively small western
communities to ongoing global struggles for racial justice.
Mass rallies, regularly described in
Negro World were another
common organizing method of black workers in the west. Such organizing
paralleled the efforts of Garveyites in the region and those engaged in
organizing for black railroad and dock workers were often members of the
UNIA. Their presence in both camps forged a powerful alliance. Black
western dock workers, for example, were inspired by Garvey’s call for
African unity but they also represented a decades-long tradition of
efforts by black fraternal and benevolent organizations to improve black
life in the region's cities.
By the end of the 1920s, 1,228,592 African Americans lived in the
western United States, representing 5 % of the region’s total
population. They resided in every state and in every major city between
the 98th meridian and the Pacific Ocean. The first major wave of black
pioneers arrived in the west after the Civil War mostly as
homesteaders, Buffalo soldiers, and ranch hands. By the eve of World
War I, however, more than 100,000 blacks lived in the West's ten largest
cities where they were employed mainly in passenger rail service,
waterfront work, and domestic service. Garveyism thrived in major urban
areas like New York and Chicago and flourished in numerous small towns
across the south. Less well known is its influence among western black
urban populations. By 1924 there were divisions (chapters) in Omaha,
Seattle, San Diego and Dallas and almost every city between them. In
many ways Garvey’s ideology fit in well with the American West’s
reputation for reinvention and life-changing opportunities. Self-help,
including supporting black businesses, and sustaining black consumer
cooperatives, was crucial to African Americans living far from large
black communities back East.
The UNIA as a global organization also linked the political movements of
black people to other groups struggling against racism and imperialism.
Locally, the internationalist discussions among Garveyites were
presented through lectures and debates at each UNIA’s Liberty Hall in
Oakland, Seattle or Los Angeles. Public lectures on the history of the
struggles among people of color all over the world were common at these
meeting sites. Black workers in these cities and particularly those who
worked on the ships as cooks and stewards, or along the waterfront also
drew strength from a general political and economic orientation of
maritime trade and international politics. They, perhaps more than other
black workers across the nation, recognized the connection between
their struggles for economic stability and the growing role of U.S.
trade connections with Latin America and Asia.
UNIA divisions dotted the western landscape. Since the UNIA required
only seven prospective members to establish a division, small black
western communities in places like Mesa, Arizona, Coffeyville, Kansas,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Wasco and Victorville, California soon
emerged by 1921. With a scattered black population in the west, the
UNIA appealed to those in isolated communities who saw themselves as
part of a wider black economic and political world. Perhaps it was even
more important for a black woman or man in Wasco or Mesa to become a
UNIA member than someone in a much larger community. In fact, many of
these divisions predated those in the region's largest cities. Moreover,
because western Garveyism did not rely on direct control from New York
headquarters of the UNIA, the Association's decentralized structure
allowed its local divisions a great deal of autonomy. Thus, western
UNIA divisions offered global connections simultaneously with local
control.
The visits of Marcus Garvey also tied black westerners to the UNIA.
Local UNIA leaders made elaborate arrangements for Garvey and his wife,
Amy Jacques Garvey, to visit the west between 1920 and 1922. During one
tour of Los Angeles in June 1922 Mayor George Cryer’s representative
introduced Garvey, in an attempt to appeal to a growing black
constituency in that city. It is estimated that 10,000 people came to
see Garvey's speech. According to historian Emery Tolbert, that total
represented 50 % of all blacks then living in Southern California.
Garvey spoke to smaller if no less enthusiastic crowds in Oakland,
Seattle and other western cities, as well as on that tour. Despite such
a vigorous showing of Garveyism in Los Angeles, disagreements with the
national office over financial disclosure and the management of the
Black Star Line led to a splintering of the Los Angeles UNIA long before
Garvey’s deportation.
Going to Liberty Hall was a family affair for African Americans in the
West. At regular Sunday meetings, “Garvey children,” as they were
called, received instruction in black history and literature. Playing
with dolls and illustrated books depicting black heroes, black angels,
and black soldiers, these African American children were encouraged to
think of themselves as intelligent, capable, and promising members of
the community. As they grew older, young African Americans could join
the African Legion for men or the UNIA Motor Corps for women. Each of
these auxiliary groups put men and women in uniform and prepared them
for military involvement in the ultimate liberation of Africa or local
resistance against the Ku Klux Klan (KKK).
Black Cross nurses, another UNIA women’s group, provided basic medical
training and health care to community members. Although UNIA men were
most often in leadership positions, the Garvey philosophy enabled
Association women to link their church and community activism, including
consumer cooperatives, with a growing national and international
movement. Liberty Halls throughout the west remained one of the most
lasting physical legacies of Garveyism even after Garvey was gone.
As Garveyism waned in the late 1920s many organizing techniques of the
UNIA, such as mass meetings and rallies, assisted black workers’ direct
action against white union racism. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters (BSCP) emerged as the strongest black labor union in the west,
and attracted many Garveyites. Despite friction between Marcus Garvey
and A. Philip Randolph, the President of the national BSCP union, local
labor-UNIA coalitions propelled black workers in Oakland, San Francisco,
Seattle, Los Angeles and other cities into a mass movement demanding
labor rights and civil rights.
When Marcus Garvey was deported to Jamaica in 1927, class and other
fractures erupted in UNIA divisions in the west, as well as throughout
the country. While some divisions remained loyal to Garvey and the
original UNIA, others pushed for a more mainstream approach and greater
alliance with other civil rights organizations, such as the NAACP. Some
divisions split in two, as happened in Oakland and Seattle, while
others held together for another decade. Garveyism in the American West
faded rapidly during the Great Depression but it had laid the
foundation for future generations to pursue racial pride, economic
self-sufficiency, and international solidarity in years to come.