Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansan integral in Black nationalis­m

- NINFA BARNARD

William LeVan Sherrill, a human-rights activist from Altheimer, is credited with leading and linking the Black nationalis­t movement of the 1920s, 1950s and 1960s.

The Universal Negro Improvemen­t Associatio­n (UNIA) was an organizati­on aimed at promoting the racial, economic and educationa­l uplift of members of the African diaspora. Though initially founded in Kingston, Jamaica, by Marcus Garvey in 1914, the UNIA struggled until Garvey moved to New York in 1916, making Harlem the organizati­on’s new headquarte­rs.

By 1918, the UNIA began to grow quickly as Garvey took advantage of the racial discontent of African American veterans who had anticipate­d being treated more kindly by a white American society after serving in World War I, but instead faced increased racial violence.

During this time, Garvey changed his aim and message from Booker T. Washington’s message of self-help to his own message of Black nationalis­t pride and racial solidarity.

He advocated racial pride, cultural awareness, black economic developmen­t and emigration to the country of Liberia.

His focus distinguis­hed the UNIA from other civil-rights organizati­ons at the time, like the National Associatio­n for the

Advancemen­t of Colored People (NAACP) whose aim was to integrate blacks into the American mainstream.

As a result of this new stance, Garvey became very popular with African Americans living in urban ghettos and in rural Southern states like Arkansas, where the effects of racism and segregatio­n were sometimes deeply evident.

Even though many believed that the UNIA chapters were mainly concentrat­ed in the North, the UNIA newspaper the Negro World was popular throughout Arkansas as early as 1919.

The organizati­on’s popularity was so widespread that it is estimated to have had between 2 million to 4 million members, making it the largest mass organizati­on of African people in history.

In 1921, Sherrill saw Garvey give a speech in Baltimore. Sherrill, who was from the predominan­tly black Jefferson County, which was active during the Back-to-Africa movement of the

late 1800s and early 1900s, was so entranced by Garvey’s speech that he joined the UNIA and became one of Garvey’s most fervent supporters. Sherrill moved up the ranks of the UNIA quickly, becoming the national vice president in 1922.

Later in 1922, Garvey was convicted of mail fraud and sentenced to five years in prison, a charge which has long been disputed by scholars and researcher­s aware of Herbert Hoover’s penchant for targeting outspoken African American leaders. Sherrill became the UNIA’s interim president to help guide the organizati­on in this turbulent time.

During his trial, many of the UNIA’s Arkansas divisions sent hundreds of dollars in donations to New York for Garvey’s legal defense. By 1924, when Garvey called for contributi­ons for the colonizati­on through the African Redemption Fund, he received $15 donations from each UNIA divisions in Arkansas.

In 1925, the UNIA began to struggle financiall­y, so Sherrill decided to sell some of the UNIA’s property in Harlem to settle their debts.

Garvey and the rest of the UNIA organizati­on were displeased with this decision, and in 1926 Sherrill was voted out of office.

By 1936, Sherrill and his family had relocated to Detroit, where he served as associate editor for the Michigan Chronicle, never relenting in his Black nationalis­t ideals. Ironically, after Garvey’s death in 1940, Sherrill reformed the UNIA and again became its president.

Using his platform, he continued advocating in speeches and writings for African nations to rise up against European colonialis­m and for African freedom movements worldwide to be linked to those of African Americans.

In 1956, he traveled to Kingston, Jamaica, to unveil a memorial statue in honor of Marcus Garvey. Sherrill died on March 7, 1959.

Ultimately, he is credited as a vital link between Black nationalis­m of the 1920s and its transforma­tion in the 1950s and 1960s.

This article is among features at explorepin­ebluff. com, a program of the Pine Bluff Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission. Sources: www.Encycloped­iaofArkans­as.net - William LeVan Sherrill (1894–1959); www. Encycloped­iaofArkans­as. net - Universal Negro Improvemen­t Associatio­n (UNIA); www.ExplorePin­eBluff.com - Delta Civil Rights Legacy Trail - William LeVan Sherrill; www. PBS.org - Universal Negro Improvemen­t Associatio­n. Image Credit: AngelFire. com.

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