Marcus Garvey descendants press for name to be cleared
African American leader was convicted of mail fraud in 1923
Descendants of the Black revolutionary leader Marcus Mosiah Garvey are pressing President Joe Biden’s administration to grant a posthumous presidential pardon to Garvey, who they say was targeted by the U.S. government and persecuted for his work to uphold racial justice for Black people in the African diaspora.
The request by Garvey’s family comes as the Biden administration confronts increasing pressure to grant presidential pardons to correct historic racial injustices and counter former presidents’ issuances of presidential pardons and sentence commutations to wealthy allies and political supporters.
White House officials did not respond to requests for comment on a potential pardon of Garvey for his 1923 conviction for mail fraud.
“President Biden has made statements in his inaugural address about the dream for justice not to be delayed any longer,” said one of Garvey’s sons, Julius Garvey, 88, a vascular surgeon who lives in New York. “We will take him at his word. Racial injustice was done to my father more than 100 years ago. He committed no crime. What he was trying to do was elevate the status of African Americans and Africans across the world.”
Marcus Garvey, a revered human rights activist, newspaper owner, Black nationalist leader and orator, was known worldwide as a leader of the “back to Africa” movement, seeking to create a self-governing Black nation. Garvey founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), which advocated for the “general uplift of the Negro peoples of the world.”
Its members adopted the “Declaration of the Rights of Negro Peoples of the World,” a bill of rights for Black people, which would later inspire leaders such as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.; Malcolm X; Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y.; Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya; Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Nelson Mandela of South Africa, according to Tony Martin, chair of the Department of Black Studies at Wellesley College, in testimony at a 1987 congressional hearing on Garvey’s conviction.
Garvey was born on Aug. 17, 1887, in St. Ann’s Bay, Jamaica. He studied law and philosophy at the University of London’s Birkbeck College. In 1914, after returning to Jamaica, he founded the UNIA.
Two years later, Garvey migrated to the United States. His speeches, highlighting Black beauty and advocating self-determination, were electrifying. Membership in the UNIA grew exponentially, and Garvey’s followers, who became known as “Garveyites,” pledged allegiance to the red, black and green Pan-African flag, designed by Garvey.
In 1919, Garvey founded the Negro World newspaper, whose contributors included Zora Neale Hurston, Arthur Schomburg, William H. Ferris and Norton G.G. Thomas. The paper was translated into Spanish and French and distributed worldwide, with front-page editorials by Garvey advocating for Black liberation from racial injustice.
The Negro World was banned by colonial powers in some of the African territories they occupied. According to the documentary “The Story of Marcus Garvey,” the Negro World was smuggled into British-occupied Kenya by Black seamen. The paper was read aloud, and children were instructed to memorize Garvey’s editorial. They then went into villages to recite Garvey’s message.
In the 1920s, people in the Belgian Congo could receive the death penalty for reading the Negro World, according to testimony at the 1987 congressional hearing.
In 1920, the UNIA elected Garvey as the provisional president of Africa. By 1923, Garvey’s movement had more than 6 million followers throughout the United States, the Caribbean, Central America and Africa.
The parents of Malcolm X — Earl Little and Louise Little — were Garveyites, according to “The Autobiography of Malcolm X.” Malcolm X wrote that he attended meetings with his father: “I remember how the meetings always closed with my father saying, several times, and the people chanting after him, ‘Up, you mighty race, you can accomplish what you will.’”
In 1919, Garvey purchased an auditorium in Harlem, which he called Liberty Hall, where he delivered passionate speeches calling on Black people to build an independent nation in Africa.
Garvey preached to Black Americans that their history did not begin with enslavement and that they came from a great civilization. “I am the equal of every white man,” Garvey said. “Always think of yourself as a perfect being.”
Garvey’s slogan became “Africa for Africans,” a call for the continent to oust colonizers. “We are organizing to drive every pale face out of Africa,” he said.
His growing movement made him a target of the U.S. government’s Bureau of Investigation, which would later become the FBI.
Garvey caught the attention of J. Edgar Hoover, a lawyer in the Department of Justice, who would quickly rise to director of the FBI, a role in which he became known for his racist pursuit of Black civil rights leaders. The first Black undercover agent hired by the FBI was assigned to spy on Garvey.
“Mr. Hoover, in his role as director of investigations on ‘Negro Activities,’ became obsessed with extinguishing the flames of the man who had become known as the ‘Negro Moses,’” then-Rep. Charles B. Rangel, D-N.Y., testified at the 1987 hearing.
The FBI acknowledged later that it began probing Garvey to find reasons to “deport him as an undesirable alien.”
Hoover pursued Garvey with a vengeance, as Garvey delivered fiery speeches against the backdrop of race massacres in East St. Louis and Houston. During his travels, the UNIAACL established more than 700 branches in cities across the country.
As Garvey preached about the importance of Black economic independence, he opened several businesses, including the Black Star Line shipping and passenger company, which he said would help facilitate the travel of Black people to Africa. It was one of the first Black-owned shipping companies in the world.
“The company was incorporated with capital stock equivalent to $5 million today,” said Anthony Pierce, a partner at the law firm Akin Gump, which is representing Garvey’s family in the request for a presidential pardon. “It was the audacity of founding the Black Star Line that drew the attention of federal investigators. And ultimately, the company’s financial downfall led to Garvey’s prosecution for mail fraud in a trial replete with reversible errors and questionable evidence.”
When, in 1921, Garvey’s company announced to stockholders it would buy two more ships, a newspaper that competed with the Negro World published an investigation claiming the U.S. Department of Commerce had no record of those ships.
In 1922, Garvey and three business associates were indicted on charges of “conspiracy to use the mails in furtherance of a scheme to defraud,” according to congressional records. Garvey and his associates were charged with sending promotional circulars through the mail “with intent to defraud their recipients by selling stock in what had become a worthless corporation.”