American Series Jacket Text
Volume I: 1826--August 1919
Marcus Mosiah Garvey (1887--1940) led an extraordinary mass movement of black social protest. His Universal Negro Improvement Association and his
"back to Africa" program of racial nationalism introduced many ideas that emerged again during the Black Power years of the 1960s: pride in
black roots, pride in black physical features and African culture, and rejection of assimilation into white America. Yet the charismatic black
Jamaican who roared his credo before huge audiences on the street corners of Harlem remains an enigma. His image as an honest idealist urging blacks
to build their own nation has been clouded by accusations that he was a con man who, in the name of black pride, perpetrated one of history's
greatest swindles.
The Marcus Garvey And Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers clarifies the Garvey phenomenon. This is the first volume in a
monumental twelve-volume survey of thirty thousand archival documents and original manuscripts from widely separated sources, brought together by
editor Robert A. Hill to provide a compelling picture of the evolution, spread, and influence of the UNIA. Letters, pamphlets, vital
records, intelligence reports, newspaper articles, speeches, legal records, and diplomatic dispatches are enhanced by Hill's descriptive source
notes, explanatory footnotes, and comprehensive introduction. Of the over three hundred items included in Volume I, only very few have ever been
published or reprinted before.
Volume I begins in 1826 with the earliest mentions of the Garvey family in Jamaica's slave records, and closes with Garvey's triumphant
address at Carnegie Hall on August 25, 1919. The information is fascinating and often startling, tracing Garvey's early career in Jamaica,
Central America, Europe, and the United States, and detailing the first stirrings of what was to become an international mass movement. Hill presents
complete documentation of the first official surveillance of the UNIA, which prepared the way for the beginning of the criminal and civil litigation
that engulfed Garvey and his movement, as American and European governments reacted to the perceived threat with repressive policies.
The documents also record the internal structure and political splits during the early years of the UNIA, and provide the financial history of
Garvey's controversial Black Star Line steamship venture, one of the schemes that ultimately led to the financial collapse of his movement.
The first volume and the following six focus on America, the eighth, ninth and tenth on Africa, and the last two on the Caribbean. The information
Hill has compiled goes far beyond preoccupation with a single intriguing historical figure to document the growth and demise of a mass social
phenomenon, an African-American protest movement with strong links to African and Caribbean nationalism in the first decades of the twentieth
century.