Friday, March 20, 2020
Free Essays on Black Panthers
"We will not fightand kill other people of color in the world who, like black   people, are being victimized by the white racist goverment of america."    Huey P. Newton    				 If you haven't already guessed it my essay is on a Civil Right's leader who's  legacy has alternately been neglected, distorted, and discounted. For example  in my research I found in one wide ranging account of the "African American   freedom strugle" by historian Robert Weisbrot, that only one page out of  317   was devoted to the activities of the Black Panther Party. Another account would  be in this class, where there was only a passing refrence to the presence of the   party, that was established in our college. The most important person to have   made a  significant change in the rights of Blacks was Huey P. Newton. He had   great courage and passion to defeat injustices and racism that existed in the   United States towards blacks and other minority groups, and it was his influence   to all the Blacks to defy white supremacy and his belief in arming themselves   for self-defense that helped lead to the success of the Civil Rights movement.         Huey P. Newton was born on Febuary 17, 1941 in Louisiana, the youngest  of seven children. When Huey Newton was three, his family moved to Oakland.  Where Walter Newton, a handyman and longshoreman, found work. The Newton's  were part of the surge of 50,000 black migrants who headed to the West Coast  to work in the shipyards and other war industries in the area. During World War II.  After the war, however, many blacks and women were forced to give up their   jobs to returning white soldiers. The black population of the area rose again   as black GIs came back from the war fronts and brought their families.   Black unemployment soared, as did antiblack sentiment. Although segregation   was supposedly illegal, black residents of Oakland found themselves restricted   to the neighborhoods around the East Bay. And...  Free Essays on Black Panthers  Free Essays on Black Panthers    "We will not fightand kill other people of color in the world who, like black   people, are being victimized by the white racist goverment of america."    Huey P. Newton    				 If you haven't already guessed it my essay is on a Civil Right's leader who's  legacy has alternately been neglected, distorted, and discounted. For example  in my research I found in one wide ranging account of the "African American   freedom strugle" by historian Robert Weisbrot, that only one page out of  317   was devoted to the activities of the Black Panther Party. Another account would  be in this class, where there was only a passing refrence to the presence of the   party, that was established in our college. The most important person to have   made a  significant change in the rights of Blacks was Huey P. Newton. He had   great courage and passion to defeat injustices and racism that existed in the   United States towards blacks and other minority groups, and it was his influence   to all the Blacks to defy white supremacy and his belief in arming themselves   for self-defense that helped lead to the success of the Civil Rights movement.         Huey P. Newton was born on Febuary 17, 1941 in Louisiana, the youngest  of seven children. When Huey Newton was three, his family moved to Oakland.  Where Walter Newton, a handyman and longshoreman, found work. The Newton's  were part of the surge of 50,000 black migrants who headed to the West Coast  to work in the shipyards and other war industries in the area. During World War II.  After the war, however, many blacks and women were forced to give up their   jobs to returning white soldiers. The black population of the area rose again   as black GIs came back from the war fronts and brought their families.   Black unemployment soared, as did antiblack sentiment. Although segregation   was supposedly illegal, black residents of Oakland found themselves restricted   to the neighborhoods around the East Bay. And...    
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