Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs

Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs

Jacob Miller - September 21, 2017

The Black Panther Party, originally the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, was a revolutionary black nationalist and socialist organization founded by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton in October 1966.

The Black Panthers’ engaged in armed para-militant patrolling and monitoring of the behavior of the Oakland Police Department, challenging police brutality. Starting in 1969, community social programs became a predominant activity of the party. One of the largest programs the Black Panthers engaged in was the Free Breakfast for Children Program, providing breakfast for impoverished children so they could do their best in school.

The FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, however, called the party “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” The FBI lead a counterintelligence program (COINTELPRO) of surveillance and infiltration in attempts to incriminate party members to discredit the organization.

On October 28, 1967, Huey Newton killed Oakland police officer John Frey during a traffic stop. In the encounter Newton and backup officer Herbert Heanes also suffered gunshot wounds. The Black Panther party’s “Free Huey” campaign, in the wake of Newton’s death, garnered a lot of support from the African American community and Leftist groups.

On April 7, 1968, in the wake of the Martin Luther King Jr. assassination, Black Panther Party members planned a deliberate ambush of police officers. This encounter led to the death of 17-year-old Bobby Hutton. His death became a rallying issue for Panther supporters.

The impact the Black Panther Party had on society, or even on their local environment, has been a subject of debate.

Author Jama Lazerow writes:

As inheritors of the discipline, pride, and calm self-assurance preached by Malcolm X, the Panthers became national heroes in black communities by infusing abstract nationalism with street toughness—by joining the rhythms of black working-class youth culture to the interracial élan and effervescence of Bay Area New Left politics … In 1966, the Panthers defined Oakland’s ghetto as a territory, the police as interlopers, and the Panther mission as the defense of community. The Panthers’ famous “policing the police” drew attention to the spatial remove that White Americans enjoyed from the police brutality that had come to characterize life in black urban communities.”

Journalist Hugh Pearson, in his book Shadow of the Panther: Huey Newton and the Price of Black Power in America, links Panther criminality and violence to worsening conditions in America’s black ghettos as their influence spread nationwide.

The Black Panthers Ten-Point Program:

  1. We want freedom. We want power to determine the destiny of our Black Community.
  2. We want full employment for our people.
  3. We want an end to the robbery by the white men of our Black Community. [Later changed to “We want an end to the robbery by the capitalists of our Black and oppressed communities.”)
  4. We want decent housing, fit for shelter of human beings.
  5. We want education for our people that exposes the true nature of this decadent American society. We want education that teaches us our true history and our role in the present-day society.
  6. We want all Black men to be exempt from military service.
  7. We want an immediate end to POLICE BRUTALITY and MURDER of Black people.
  8. We want freedom for all Black men held in federal, state, county and city prisons and jails.
  9. We want all Black people when brought to trial to be tried in court by a jury of their peer group or people from their Black Communities, as defined by the Constitution of the United States.
  10. We want land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice, and peace.
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
A boy giving a raised fist salute as he and a friend sat on a statue in front of the New Haven County Courthouse at a demonstration of 15,000 people during the trial of Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins. Both were acquitted. May 1, 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
A boy posing with a gun. Boston. 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
A party member preparing bags of food for distribution at the Black Panther Community Survival Conference in Oakland. 1972. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panther children in a classroom at the Intercommunal Youth Institute, the Black Panther school. Oakland. 1971. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panthers, including Khalid Raheem in front, marching through West Philadelphia. 1971. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Bobby Seale, co-founder, and chairman of the Black Panther Party, selling Mao’s Red Book to raise money at the first San Francisco peace march against the Vietnam War. April 15, 1967. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Emory Douglas, Panther artist and minister of information for the party, designing The Black Panther newspaper. His graphic art was featured in most issues of the newspaper. Oakland. 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Huey Newton, co-founder, and minister of defense of the Black Panther Party, listening to Bob Dylan’s record “Highway 61 Revisited” in his house in Berkeley, Calif., shortly after his release from prison. August 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Leonard Colar helping a woman with her shopping as part of the Black Panther Senior Escort program in Oakland. 1973. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Sickle cell anemia testing during Bobby Seale’s campaign for mayor of Oakland, California, 1972. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
The Black Panther Gloria Abernethy selling papers at the Mayfair supermarket boycott in Oakland. Tamara Lacey was in the background holding a poster. 1971. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
The Black Panther office in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
The Breakfast for Children Program was run by the Black Panther Party so children could eat before going to school. Oakland. 1972. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Two women with bags of food at the People’s Free Food Program, one of the Black Panther survival programs. Palo Alto, Calif. 1972.Credit Stephen Shames: Courtesy of Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
The Lumpen, the Panthers’ singing group, performing at the boycott of Bill’s Liquors in Oakland. Clark Bailey, known as Santa Rita, was dancing. Michael Torrence, front right and James Mott were drumming. 1971. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Children at a Free Huey, Free Bobby rally in front of the Federal Building in San Francisco California, USA February 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panther chairman and founder Bobby Seale speaks at a Free Huey rally in Defermy Park in West Oakland. July 28, 1968. Steven Kasher Gallery

Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Sandbags line the walls of the New Haven Panther office to protect against a suspected police raid during the Bobby Seale trial, New Haven, Connecticut, May 1, 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Memorial mural for Jonathan Jackson, who was killed on August 7, 1970, during an attempt to kidnap California Superior Court Judge Harold Haley and three others to exchange for the freedom of his brother, George Jackson. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panther sells The Black Panther, the party’s newspaper in the Roxbury section of Boston, Massachusetts, USA 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Kathleen Cleaver, communications secretary and the first female member of the Party’s decision-making Central Committee, talks with Black Panthers from Los Angeles, in West Oakland, California, July 28, 1968. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Panthers March at Defermery Path, Oakland, Rally to Free Huey, 1969. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panthers carry George Jackson’s coffin into St. Augustine’s Church for his funeral service as a huge crowd watches. Oakland, California, USA, August 28, 1971
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Free Huey Rally in front of the Alameda County Courthouse, Oakland, California, September 1968. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Free Breakfast Program, Chicago, Illinois, 1970. Steven Kasher Gallery
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
August 28, 1971, Oakland, California: During George Jackson’s funeral, two Panthers look out at the enormous crowd gathered in the parking lot of a Safeway across the street from Augustine’s Church. On the left is Clark Bailey, known as Santa Rita, a member of The Lumpen, the Panther singing group. Clark is a bus driver and union leader. He is a co-founder of It’s About Time, the Black Panther alumni committee. © Stephen Shames/Polaris
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
May 1, 1970, New Haven, Connecticut: Yale students and community residents camp out in front of the Panther office to prevent a rumored police raid during the Bobby Seale / Ericka Huggins trial. Bobby Seale—Chairman of the Black Panther Party—and Ericka Huggins were on trial for murder. Both were acquitted. © Stephen Shames/Polaris
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
1st May 1969: Members of the Black Panther party demonstrate outside the Criminal Courts Building one month after 21 Panthers were charged with plotting to dynamite city stores, a police station and a railroad right-of-way, New York City. Jack Manning/New York Times Co./Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Demonstrators march with a ‘Free Huey’ banner in support of the Black Panther Party, New York, New York, April 4, 1970. The banner refers to imprisoned Panther co-founder Huey Newton. In 1967, Newton was charged in the fatal shooting of a 23-year-old police officer, John Frey, during a traffic stop. Photo by David Fenton/Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
UNITED STATES – MAY 12: Marlon Brando attending the Black Panther Party rally held as a memorial for Bobby Hutton, a young Panther killed by police during a planned ambush on the police. Dan Cronin/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
A Black Panther funeral, Oakland, California, the late 1960s or early 1970s. Harold Adler/Underwood Archives/Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Los Angeles, CA: Police officers stand outside the Black Panthers stand outside the Black Panthers Party headquarters after they secured the premises after a pre-dawn raid on the building in which members of the party met the officers by firing automatic weapons. Three police officers and two members of the Black Panthers were reported wounded. Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Two members of the Black Panther Party are met on the steps of the State Capitol in Sacramento, May 2, 1967, by Police Lt. Ernest Holloway, who informs them they will be allowed to keep their weapons as long as they cause no trouble and do not disturb the peace. Earlier several members had invaded the Assembly chambers and had their guns taken away. Getty Images
Before the BLM Movement There Was the Black Panther Party: A Look Back in Photographs
Black Panther, teenagers, and children give the black power salute outside of their “Liberation School” in the Fillmore district of San Fransisco, December 20, 1969. UPI B/W.

 

Sources For Further Reading:

Encyclopedia Britannica – Black Panther Party

ThoughtCo – Biography of Huey Newton

National Geographic Channel – The Black Panthers: Revolutionaries, Free Breakfast Pioneers

Scholar Works – The Black Panther Party’s Free Breakfast Program (Pdf)

Black Perspective – The Black Panther Party and the Free Breakfast for Children Program

Open Edition Journal – ‘Free Huey or the Sky’s the Limit’: The Black Panther Party and the Campaign to Free Huey P. Newton

Connecticut History – “Free Bobby, Free Ericka”: The New Haven Black Panther Trials

NYTimes – Black Panthers Are Sent Back to Cells After Mistrial

The Washington Post – You Cannot Fight Racism with Racism. You Have to Fight It with Solidarity

KCRW – The Lumpen: Power to the People: Inside the Black Panthers’ R&B Band

The Heroine Collective – Kathleen Neal Cleaver – Black Power and The Black Panther Party

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