incomplet: a podcast about design history

a podcast about design history

Black Panther Newsletter

    The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded in 1966 in Oakland, California by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. The Black Panther Party was founded during the turbulent times of the sixties that saw many changes in America. Newton at first led the party with an ideology called their Ten Point Program, and with the idea that arming Black communities was essential for their protection and survival. Through community assistance programs and armed community patrols to prevent police brutality, the Black Panther Party sought to protect and uplift their communities, stepping in where the government had failed them.  In order to promote their party’s ideals, generate revenue, and recruit new members, the Party began publishing the Black Panther newspaper. It grew from 4 pages to 32, adding color and better design under the direction of Emory Douglas who was the Black Panthers’ Minister of Culture and the paper’s editor. Douglas’s skills as a graphic designer and illustrator produced the imagery that would define not only the Black Panther Party but the entire Black Power movement. The success of the paper grew, had distribution across the United States, and later reached other countries as well. Internal strife among leadership and members, as well as extensive government interference, led to the crumbling of the Black Panther Party. With it went their iconic newspaper that for over a decade was a visual record of the Black Panther Party, the Black Power movement, and the struggle for civil rights.

    TIMELINE

    1827 – Freedom’s Journal first published
    1936 – Robert George Seale was born in Liberty, Texas
    1942 – Huey Percy Newton is born in Monroe, Louisiana 
    1943 – Emory Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan
    1960 – Emory Douglas started studying Graphic Design at City College of San Francisco 
    1963 – Martin Luther King Jr delivers “I Have A Dream” speech
    1965 – Lowndes County Freedom Organization was founded by Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama
    1966 – Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale met in Oakland, CA, and founded The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense
    1966 – BPP developed survival programs 
    1967 – California Governor Ronald Regan signed Mulford Act 
    1967 – Sale and Newton established the BPP first headquarters in Oakland, CA
    1967 – Black Panther Intercommunal News Service
    1967 – Newton was shot and jailed after a standoff with a police officer
    1967 – Emory Douglas met Newton and Seale and joins the BPP
    1967 – David Hilliard, BPP chief of staff, first arrested for selling the Newspaper
    1968 – Kerner Commission publishes findings on potential race war; faults white institutions
    1968 – Martin Luther King Jr assassinated, race riots erupt across USA 
    1968 – Newton was convicted of manslaughter for killing a police officer 
    1970 – FBI memo says circulation for BPP Newspaper was 139,000 a week
    1970 – Newton was released due to his conviction being overturned on appeal
    1971 – Newton shifts BPP focus to community programs, leadership is challenged by other part members 
    1971 – Newton expels 21 members, the “panther 21” over rumors of kidnapping and fratricide; also expels Eldridge Cleaver over suspicions of assassination through letters
    1971 – Cleaver’s followers tied up Sam Napier in NY distribution office for the BPP newspaper and shot him, set fire to office
    1974 – Netwon fled to Cuba on accusations of murdering a prostitute, Elaine Brown takes over as leader of BPP
    1974 – End of BPP
    1977 – Newton returns to California to stand trial for the murder of a prostitute
    1978 – Jonina Abron takes over as editor of BPP Newspaper 
    1980 – Last year BPP Newspaper is published 

    REFERENCES

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    Berry, A. H., Collie, K., Laker, P. A., Noel, L.-A., Rittner, J., & Walters, K. (2022). The black experience in design: Identity, Expression & Reflection. Allworth Press. 

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    Carroll, F. (2017). Race News: Black journalists and the fight for racial justice in the Twentieth Century. University of Illinois Press. 

    Carroll, F. J. (2011). Race News: How black reporters and readers shaped the fight for racial justice, 1877-1978 (thesis). Fred Carroll, Ann Arbor, MI. 

    Duncan, M. (2016). Emory Douglas and the art of the black panther party. Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men, 5(1), 117–135. https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06

    Fagan, B. (2018). The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation. The University of Georgia Press. 

    FEARNLEY, A. M. (2018). The Black Panther Party's publishing strategies and the financial underpinnings of activism, 1968–1975. The Historical Journal, 62(1), 195–217. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201

    Freedom Archives (n.d.). Black Panther Party Community News Service. Freedom Archives Search Engine. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view\_collection=90&page=1

    G., L. B. H. (1974). Perspectives of the Black Press, 1974. Mercer House Press. 

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    Hilliard, D. (2008). The Black Panther Party: Service to the people programs. University of New Mexico Press. 

    Hilliard, D. (2007). The black panther: Intercommunal News Service. Atria Books. 

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    Jennings, B. X. (2019, May 22). Remembering the Black Panther Party newspaper, April 25, 1967- September 1980. San Francisco Bay View. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/

    Kifner, J. (1998, May 2). Eldridge Cleaver, Black Panther Who Became G.O.P. Conservative, Is Dead at 62. New York Times, pp. 8–8. 

    Michaeli, E. (2018). The defender how the legendary Black Newspaper Changed America: From the age of the pullman porters to the age of obama. Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 

    Morgan, J.-A. (2020). The Black Arts Movement and the Black Panther Party in American Visual culture. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 

    Ng, D. (2007, October 18). Art; So you want a revolution? Check out Emory Douglas' art for the Black Panthers. LA Times.

    Ongiri, A. A. (2010). Spectacular blackness the cultural politics of the Black Power movement and the search for a black aesthetic. University of Virginia Press. 

    Psaltis, A.-A. (2018). ARTPOLITICAL environment: Richard Bell and Emory Douglas’s Burnett Lane mural. Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, (10). https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1

    Scott, V. H. F. (2021). Art, global maoism and the Chinese Cultural Revolution. (J. Galimberti & N. De Haro Garcia, Eds.). MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS. 

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