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AP While there is some ambiguity about whether Angela Davis was ever an official member of the Panthers, she was undeniably closely associated with the group. A philosophy lecturer at the University of California, Los Angeles, she taught political education classes for the party and supported its militarism. In the 1960s she became an advocate for Black prisoners, which led her to become involved in the case of three African American inmates at Soledad Prison who had been accused of murdering a guard. She was particularly close to one of the prisoners, George Jackson, whose younger brother Jonathan attempted to free him. On August 7, 1970, Jonathan took hostages in the Marin county courthouse, and four deaths resulted, including his own. Davis was accused of being complicit in the failed escape, and she went underground, entering the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list and becoming a cause célèbre for the radical left. Some eight weeks later Davis was captured, though she was ultimately acquitted of all the charges. She later returned to teaching and also wrote a number of books.
Marion S. Trikosko/Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (LC-DIG-ppmsc-01265) Much of Eldridge Cleaver’s early life was spent in California reform schools and prisons on charges ranging from theft and marijuana possession to assault and rape. He later admitted to committing numerous rapes, which he called “an insurrectionary act” that made him feel like he “was getting revenge.” He was imprisoned in 1958, and during this time he came to express remorse for his crimes. He chronicled such misgivings along with his views on Black alienation in a series of essays that would later be published in the memoir Soul on Ice (1968). The influential work included the famous slogan “You’re either part of the problem or part of the solution.” Paroled from prison in 1966, he soon joined the Black Panthers, becoming their minister of information. With his vocal support of armed rebellion, Cleaver drew condemnation from various public figures, including California Gov. Ronald Reagan. Cleaver responded by calling him a pig and a clown. In 1968 Cleaver ran for president, receiving some 30,000 votes. Later that year, however, he fled the country after facing a parole violation following a shoot-out between the Black Panthers and police. He remained in contact with the Black Panthers, but his push for a more militant approach led to his expulsion from the group in 1971. While visiting various foreign countries, Cleaver came to believe that “the American political system is the freest and most democratic in the world.” In 1975 he returned to the United States as a born-again Christian, and he later became a Republican. In 1984 he supported Reagan’s reelection as U.S. president.
Elaine Brown
By her late teens, the Pennsylvania-born Elaine Brown was living in Los Angeles. An accomplished pianist, she began giving piano lessons in the Watts district in 1967. Working in the predominantly black area reportedly sparked her activism, and in 1968 she attended her first Black Panther meeting. Brown quickly gained prominence within the party. She helped found its free legal-aid program and served as editor of The Black Panther newspaper. In 1971 she was elected to the Panther Central Committee, becoming its first female member. After Seale’s departure and Newton’s exile, Brown was made chairman of the Black Panthers in 1974, the only woman to hold the position. However, opposition to her leadership within the largely male party led her to leave the Black Panthers in 1977. She continued to be involved in various causes, and her memoir, A Taste of Power, was published in 1992. In 2008 she unsuccessfully ran for president as the Green Party candidate.
CSU Archive/age fotostock In the 1960s Stokely Carmichael was considered a leader of Black nationalism in the United States, and he notably coined its rallying slogan: Black Power. Carmichael initially favored nonviolence, and he was a prominent figure in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). In 1964 he helped found a political party in Alabama, choosing a black panther as its emblem. This image was later adopted by the Black Panther Party, which made Carmichael its honorary prime minister in 1968. By this time he had adopted more militant views, and he became increasingly provocative. During one speech he referenced urban guerrillas who were going to “fight to the death.” In 1969 he moved to Guinea and resigned from the Panthers, opposed to their attempt to build “alliances with white radicals.” Carmichael later changed his name to Kwame Ture to honor two earlier proponents of Pan-Africanism, Ghanaian Kwame Nkrumah and Guinean Sékou Touré.
Esk—AP/Shutterstock.comWhile the charismatic Fred Hampton seemed destined to play a key role in the Panthers, it was his death that attracted the most attention. The Illinois native was involved with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) before joining the Black Panthers in 1968. He soon became deputy chairman of the party’s Chicago chapter, developing a reputation for unifying diverse groups. In the early morning hours of December 4, 1969, however, the 21-year-old Hampton was shot and killed during a police raid; another Panther, Mark Clark, was also killed. While law enforcement claimed that they had come under attack while serving a search warrant, it was later revealed that, of the nearly 100 shots fired during the raid, all except perhaps one were fired by the police. Hampton’s death caused public outrage, and the ensuing investigations brought greater scrutiny on J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI’s attempts to dismantle the Panthers as well as other Black organizations. These measures, most of which were conducted through the counterintelligence program COINTELPRO, were so extreme that, years later when they were revealed, the director of the FBI publicly apologized for “wrongful uses of power.”
Fred Hampton was an American civil rights leader and deputy chairman of the Black Panther Party’s Illinois chapter who formed the city of Chicago’s first “Rainbow Coalition.” Hampton was killed during a raid on his residence by Chicago police officers. The youngest child of Francis and Iberia