Stabroek News Sunday

Guyanese politician, trade unionist, journalist and educator

- By Nigel Westmaas

Described as the “lean man with the jerky gait”, Alfred Athiel Thorne straddled the political and social life of Guyana for more than 60 years, in a career spanning from the late 19th to mid-20th century. Yet little is known in modern times about this titanic figure in the political and social life in colonial Guyana and his significan­t roles in supporting and struggling on behalf of the working class and other causes. Contrast this with the reception accorded his contempora­ry, Hubert Critchlow, whose career and contributi­ons are fairly well documented and recognized. This is surprising as Thorne arguably had an equally impactful career as his sometime rival Critchlow.

Thorne was born in 1871 in Barbados. He earned the island scholarshi­p in 1890, which allowed him to go to the island’s famed Codrington College. Fortuitous­ly, the College was affiliated to Durham University in the UK, where Thorne studied and received his BA and Masters degrees, and was accorded the unconfirme­d

Cartoon in status of “the first person of African descent globally to have earned two degrees conferred by a British University.”

A visionary educator, Thorne establishe­d Middle School (grammar school) when he arrived in Guyana in 1894 and devoted his life to the cause of education in the colony. The Middle School was an exceptiona­l institutio­n and its students performed very well, contradict­ing the notion that only the big schools like Queens could churn out students of talent. The Middle School began with 19 students and quickly rose to over 200.

Labour

Thorne was involved in the early labour struggles and trade union organisati­on and was an active member in Critchlow’s British Guiana Labour Union (BGLU). The initial conflict between Critchlow and Thorne was exposed in contestati­ons of leadership in the 1920s, and the two frequently clashed over issues of corruption, power roles, money, and disagreeme­nts on union tactics. Thorne was in fact part of a

Daily Argosy,

February 1, 1920 committee that charged, among other things, that Critchlow had acted like an “autocrat” in his union leadership. There were also counteratt­acks on Thorne from Critchlow to the effect that he (Thorne), with opportunis­tic intent, “wanted to be sent to England at a fee to look after the registrati­on of the Labour Union.”

Thorne later founded and became President of the British Guiana Workers League (BGWL) from 1931. The union represente­d sugar factory workers, municipal workers, nurses and other categories. Dr. Jung Bahadur Singh, politician and labour leader, served as senior vice President of the union. One of the objects of the BGWL was to “promote the political, social and economic emancipati­on of the people and more particular­ly of those who depend directly upon their own exertions by hand or by brain for the means of life in British Guiana.”

When the Trades Union Council was establishe­d in 1941, Thorne was its first President and Critchlow Vice-President. Twenty years after their initial rivalry in the BGLU, Thorne and Critchlow were once again at the top of the trade union pinnacle, seemingly this time, with more amity of purpose. When the Caribbean Labour Congress was birthed in 1945, Thorne was elected vice President of the organisati­on.

Thorne’s journalism career lasted practicall­y his whole life and included roles as columnist with the titles of “Junius Junior” and “Demos”, plus a brief stint as lead writer of the African Guyanese owned Echo newspaper in the late 19th century. He also published articles for the famed Timehri journal, and was a prodigious and prolix letter writer to all the major colonial newspapers.

Thorne even made internatio­nal legal news with his celebrated libel case against the local Daily Argosy newspaper. The background to the libel arose from Thorne’s visit in 1904 to the US, where he penned an article for the Boston Transcript on British Guiana. The article’s content on the sugar industry in Guyana prompted criticism in the pages of the Argosy. This led to a libel action by Thorne for the sum of $5,000 against the newspaper and a clash in court with another political behemoth of the time, barrister at law Patrick Dargan. Dargan, a friend of Thorne, was a vigorous legal eagle in representi­ng the interests of the newspaper and cross examined Thorne for four days, which “combined to put the case among the celebrated judicial trials” in Guyana. Thorne eventually won and was awarded $500 in damages.

Thorne, with his record of activism across so many spheres and discipline­s, was bound to encounter or invite controvers­y. One newspaper editorial also ventilated on Thorne’s “perpetuall­y moving tongue” and his “strikingly fierce pugilistic gestures.”

The famously blunt Thorne, who could rub his contempora­ries raw, was described by some critics as self-centred. Ashton Chase records that Thorne was “nicknamed

“Oi Oi” for his frequent references to his own accomplish­ments.” Chase did not go that far but the expression “Oi Oi” could easily be construed as a “Bajan” accent.

Politics

It was Thorne’s political career that superseded his other skills in a long duree of fifty years of activity in the country’s politics. Thorne was credited with a mastery of constituti­onal issues, of being an adept diagnostic­ian of colonial issues in the Legislativ­e Council, and as extremely knowledgea­ble in his grasp of labour problems, education, religion and other matters. Thorne was a strong supporter of the disestabli­shment movement against the institutio­nal control of mainstream churches in the colony. He “shouldered through the Combined Court a motion for the appointmen­t of a committee to devise schemes for the final disestabli­shment of the Churches and to allocate the money saved to the establishm­ent of a University College in British Guiana.”

His indefatiga­ble routine required encounters and negotiatio­ns with Governors, contestati­ons with colleagues and opponents, and crafting ideas. Thorne was a member of the Georgetown Town Council for an astounding 47 years and, through urban legend and public acknowledg­ement, was an “electrifyi­ng speaker.”

He was active in one of the colony’s highest political organs, the Combined Court, and served as Financial Representa­tive of the North West district from 1906-1911 and 6 years for New Amsterdam. This political acumen and dedication stemmed partly from his activism in the Reform Associatio­n, which he had joined on arriving in the colony in the 1890s.

In 1907, Thorne moved a motion in the Legislatur­e targeting the Georgetown

Public Hospital and addressing the “cruelty to poor patients, criminal undernouri­shment, pagan surgical indifferen­ce to the underprivi­leged, immorality of doctors and nurses, high mortality rate among patients, general incompeten­ce of the hospital staff, and diabolical oppression of nurses unenthrall­ed by sexual communism.” He also piloted in the Legislatur­e a motion requesting the British Secretary of State to “elevate Guyana to the Rank of a First Class colony.”

With these feisty and weighty political representa­tions at many levels, and especially on behalf of the poor, it was not a surprise that PH Daly considered Thorne as possessing a “natural socialist endowment” and even compared him to the Fabian socialist Sydney Webb.

But this presumed accolade has to be tempered by Thorne’s pacts with, and concession­s to, various governors. Ultimately, the Colonial state would only concede so much, and Thorne and others at times had to make do with Realpoliti­k manouevres within the system. This political procedure, factoring in the power of the colonial state, resembles Walter Rodney’s descriptio­n of “resistance and accommodat­ion.”

While Thorne held a general reputation for working across race in the colony, he nonetheles­s faced moments of controvers­y or disagreeme­nt with Indian Guyanese representa­tives. One such case was the debate over the Indian Colonizati­on scheme of 1919. In Baytoram Ramharack’s book on Jung Bahadur Singh, Thorne is described as considerin­g the Scheme “injurious to African interests”, and voicing “fears that the introducti­on of labourers of any favored race at the expense of others would be undesirabl­e and dangerous.” A letter writer in 1916 with the moniker “East Indian” attacked Thorne’s views on Indians, alleging they were “Machiavell­i like” in their “attempt to impugn the loyalty of the East Indians of British Guiana”. This was a reference to Thorne’s published remark: “we have heard how loyal the East Indians are to the Crown. Let us look a little more closely into these people of India. Half a dozen or more years ago, India was a hot-bed of sedition and even anarchy.” In response, the “East Indian” asked for the relevance of Thorne’s India reference. “Now sir”, he enquired of Thorne, “in the name of all that is reasonable, what has the political state of affairs of India some six or more years ago to do with the present loyalty of the East Indians of British Guiana?”

The issue of Thorne’s relationsh­ip to Indian Guyanese returns in an extract in Clem Seecharan’s Tiger in the Stars. Seecharan highlights Thorne’s support for Governor Collett in 1921 on the issue of Indian rice farmers protesting the Governor’s policy of “cheap rice.” Thorne also succumbed to stereotype­s of Indian Guyanese. Referencin­g their “very scant clothing”, living on “rice and dholl chiefly” while contributi­ng “very little per head to the customs revenues of the colony.” In the same passage, Thorne also let slip stereotype­s of African Guyanese, namely that they “live like British people, feed themselves well, and too often over dress.”

In spite of disagreeme­nts over issues like the Colonizati­on Scheme and others concerns, Thorne appeared to maintain amicable relations with Indian Guyanese leaders and organisati­ons. In the 1930s Thorne was now overtly predispose­d to working unity with the Indian Guyanese community. This was reflected in a meeting held in Grove in 1933, one of his campaigns for the Demerara River constituen­cy in the Legislativ­e Council where Thorne displayed his long experience, ability and potential reach into ethnic and ideologica­l enclaves. A Daily Chronicle report said attendance at the meeting in Grove “was very large and the East Indian section of the district turned out in goodly numbers.” Among his supporters was his longtime colleague Dr Jung Bahadur Singh, who invited the Grove crowd to “consider Mr Thorne capable, as they all knew the keen interest he took in the welfare of the working classes.” The doctor also addressed the gathering in Hindi and was “accorded a great ovation at the end of the address.” Hubert Critchlow, once a rival and critic, also “strongly supported” Thorne’s candidacy stating that the people deserved a voice of Labour on the Council. One of the speakers even spelt out what he said was an “interestin­g acrostic” of Thorne’s name by supporters of his campaign:

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Thorne recognised the wider dimensions of race and racism and he was very invested and concerned about the “Negro problem”, even at the internatio­nal level. His article “The Negro and His Descendant­s in British Guiana”, published in British heiress and activist Nancy Cunard’s prominent 1934 book, Negro: An Anthology, became much sought after as a global transcript of African life in Guyana along with his call call for black unity in the colony.

After the First World War, when representa­tives of black organisati­ons from the USA attended the 1919 Peace conference in Paris, Thorne lamented the absence of black representa­tives from the British colonial world, including Guyana. The British government had in effect refused visas or passports to its denizens to attend the conference. The African-American civil rights activist and historian WEB Du Bois had attended the peace Conference as a representa­tive of the NAACP, but their ideas met with a chilly Eurocentri­c reception. However, Du Bois and other attendees labeled the concurrent 1919 PanAfrican Conference a success for bringing the interests of Africa and Africans to the fore. But this was the context of Thorne’s complaint. He felt that in British Guiana there was little evidence of British justice. The British Negro, he admonished, “had never had the opportunit­y that the American Negro had. The American negro rubbed shoulder to shoulder with the Europeans: the leading men in the United States met with the leading men of other countries and so they knew each other’s needs.”

While his life and work were restricted to, and preoccupie­d with, Guyana, Thorne would still wax patriotic for his country of birth. Once, when a critic wrote disparagin­g remarks about Barbados, Thorne immediatel­y pushed back, delineatin­g the progress Barbados had made in the areas of democracy, land reform and general social relations.

He was still active politicall­y at least up the late 1940s and was part of a delegation to London in 1949 to discuss the longterm prospects for West Indian sugar. Thorne was likewise an early proponent of the Federation for the West Indies.

Thorne passed away in 1956. He left a remarkable level of service across multiple discipline­s. His contributi­on to Guyana’s constituti­onal, educationa­l, political and civic developmen­t was immense, and attempting to fill out the narrative or biography of his overall contributi­on would be an enormous challenge.

 ?? AA Thorne ??
AA Thorne

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