The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Emory acquires papers of a Panther

Documents highlight Kathleen Cleaver’s time as Black Panther Party leader and scholar.

- By Rosalind Bentley rosalind.bentley@ajc.com

A young Kathleen Cleaver looked at newspaper photograph­s of little Black girls singing protest songs in Albany, Georgia, as they were forced into police paddy wagons. She saw possibilit­y.

The movement to desegregat­e the town was in full flower in 1961. Arrests of the child protesters made headlines across the country. At the time, Cleaver was a 16-year-old student at the George School, a private Quaker boarding school outside Philadelph­ia. While the arresting officers treated the children’s protests as a threat to racial segregatio­n and white supremacy in Albany, Cleaver saw inspiratio­n in the girls’ faces.

“I wanted to be like them,” she told an interviewe­r for a 2011 Smithsonia­n oral history project recorded in her Atlanta home.

Not quite two years after the Albany Movement, Cleaver yearned to join the March on Washington. Her parents forbade it, believing the march could spiral into violence. But within five years, Cleaver’s desire to join the civil rights movement was more than fulfilled. She joined the Black Power vanguard and quickly rose to become one of the most iconic members of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense.

Now, amid political division and racial reckoning not seen since the 1960s, Cleaver’s legacy is in the spotlight. Emory University formally announced late Monday it has acquired the papers, photograph­s, manuscript­s and ephemera of Cleaver, who recently retired after being an attorney and senior lecturer at Emory’s law school since 1992. Her collection is one of the last obtained by Pellom McDaniels III, curator of African American collection­s at Emory’s Rose Library, before his death this spring.

The university declined to say what it paid for Cleaver’s papers but considers them to be one of the most significan­t acquisitio­ns in its African American collection­s. Because the library is closed to the general public because of COVID-19 concerns, the collection isn’t accessible in person.

Yet, when considerin­g the breadth of the African American collection­s, Cleaver’s papers join those of groups that used disparate tactics to achieve similar goals of justice: ending racial segregatio­n, Black voter disenfranc­hisement and police killings of Black people. Among the holdings are the papers of Elaine Brown, a fellow Panther member who became the first woman to lead the party; the archive of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and those of several members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinati­ng Committee (SNCC).

“When the civil rights movement took on Jim Crow head on, they had to strategize; they had to think through, ‘What are the strengths and weaknesses, and how do we hit those weaknesses to topple the system?’” said Carol Anderson, chair of African American Studies at Emory and author of the bestseller, “White Rage: the Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide.” “The Panthers were looking at a larger system, too, a system dealing with economic oppression as well as political oppression. What level of analysis did it take for them to say, ‘The self-defense of our community is not just self-defense against the police,’?”

How power is gained

Through the lens of now, Cleaver’s papers take on even greater weight.

“When you talk about Miss Cleaver’s papers, I can’t think of too many more that are relevant to what we’re going through right now as a country,” said Randy Gue, curator of political, cultural and social movements at the Rose Library.

Cleaver’s family declined an interview with Cleaver on her behalf, citing health concerns. Yet, the more than 2,000 photograph­s and the 100 boxes in her collection speak for her. They tell a story of family activism that begins a century before her involvemen­t in the Black Panther Party; of her birth in Texas and girlhood in Tuskegee; her adolescenc­e as the child of a foreign services officer stationed in the Philippine­s, India, Sierra Leone and Liberia; and her time in New York and Atlanta as a secretary for SNCC.

Common interest in her life is often confined to her years as chief communicat­ions officer for the Panthers, who emerged in 1966 as a collaborat­ion between Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton. The men met in college in Oakland, California. They formed the Panthers as a direct response to police violence against Black people in and around the city.

But before that, before Cleaver’s marriage to Eldridge Cleaver, one of the Panther’s most pivotal leaders, before the couple’s years in exile in Algiers after a shootout with police left an early Panther member dead, Cleaver spent her early life in the Jim Crow South. Given the time, she had advantages. Her parents had college degrees. Her father was a professor at Wiley College and later ran an outreach program for black farmers at then Tuskegee Institute.

In the Smithsonia­n interview, Cleaver said though she didn’t realize it as child that the expe

 ?? CLEAVER COURTESY OF KATHLEEN ?? As a member of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, Kathleen Cleaver was an in-demand speaker at a time when the nation was roiled by segregatio­n and opposition to the Vietnam War.
CLEAVER COURTESY OF KATHLEEN As a member of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, Kathleen Cleaver was an in-demand speaker at a time when the nation was roiled by segregatio­n and opposition to the Vietnam War.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON /CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Kathleen Cleaver poses for a portrait at the Emory Law School in November 2016 in Atlanta.
CURTIS COMPTON /CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Kathleen Cleaver poses for a portrait at the Emory Law School in November 2016 in Atlanta.

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