Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Hubert Henry Harrison - Tribune of the People
Sean I. Ahern
08 Jun 2022
Hubert Henry Harrison - Tribune of the People

Hubert Henry Harrison was one of the foremost Black socialist and nationalist thinkers of the early 20th century. He was known as "the father of Harlem radicalism." This is the first of a three-part commentary on works about Harrison beginning with A Hubert Harrison Reader, which will be followed by Hubert Harrison: The Voice of Harlem Radicalism, 1883-1918, and Hubert Harrison: The Struggle for Equality, 1918-1927.

Over the past two decades there has been an upsurge of interest in the life and work of Hubert H. Harrison. As a leading socialist and subsequent proponent of what he termed the mass based “Race First” approach to organizing, Harrison exercised a direct seminal influence on his contemporaries including A. Philip Randolph, W. A. Domingo, Marcus Garvey, Richard B Moore, Chandler Owen, Arturo Schomburg, Cyril Briggs, Claude McKay, James Weldon Johnson, Hodge Kirnon, J. A. Rogers and William Monroe Trotter. As W. A. Domingo, childhood friend of Garvey and first editor of the Negro World would later explain, “Garvey like the rest of us followed Hubert Harrison.”

Other literary figures, Harrison’s contemporaries, such as Eugene O’Neill, Henry Miller and Max Eastman, acknowledged his contributions. Radical socialists such as “Big Bill” Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn shared the podium with him at the Patterson Silk Strike rally in 1913. In 1922 when Claude McKay was commissioned by the Comintern in the Soviet Union to write an analysis of the condition of the Negro in the US, the Soviet leaders handed McKay Harrison’s books for reference. Of course, McKay was already a friend and comrade to Harrison prior to his visit to Moscow.  

Interest in Harrison has been spurred in large part by the release of A Harrison Reader (Wesleyan University Press, 2001) edited by Jeffrey B. Perry and the 2-volume biography, Hubert Harrison: The Voice of Harlem Radicalism, 1883-1918 (Columbia University Press 2009) and the recently released Hubert Harrison: The Struggle for Equality, 1918-1927 (Columbia University Press 2021).  Perry also assisted with the Diasporic Press reprint of Harrison’s When Africa Awakes: The “Inside Story” of the Stirrings and Strivings of the New Negro in the Western World first published by Porro Press in 1920.  These books bring to our attention important writings and organizing efforts undertaken by Harrison at a critical conjuncture of national and international events between 1910 and 1927. 

Perry has also traveled at his own expense around the country to give numerous free public talks on Harrison, many of which may be viewed online through his website: https://www.jeffreybperry.net/

Jeffrey Perry is the literary executor for Theodore W Allen (The Invention of The White Race, Verso, 1994, 1997) and a well-trained, independent scholar with degrees from Princeton and Columbia Universities. He has conducted his research for the Harrison volumes while living and working among the people, as an anti-white supremacist activist and labor union leader, husband, and father based in Northern New Jersey. 

A Hubert Harrison Reader

A Hubert Harrison Reader and the two-volume biography are the product of a 40-year research project based on primary sources including Harrison’s own papers which had been preserved by his family in Harlem apartments after his early death at 44 in 1927.  The Harrison Papers have now been archived in the Columbia Rare Books and Manuscripts Section available to the public:  http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_6134799/ 

A Hubert Harrison Reader and the 2 volume biographies provide a window for those interested in: the struggle against white supremacism; capitalism and Imperialism in the early 20th century; the rise of the New Negro Movement; the Garvey movement; early efforts to build mass based radical Black organization; questions of leadership arising in mass based radical organizations; and the signal importance of education and culture to the growth of social movements.  Labor and Black activists, students and educators interested in such topics such as Critical Race Theory and Black Marxism may find in Harrison an early, though heretofore unacknowledged, resource.

A Hubert Harrison Reader contains published and unpublished articles, book reviews, letters and diary entries organized thematically and preceded by brief contextual remarks by Perry. Harrison’s own words will readily engage the modern reader just as his talks and writings influenced a wide audience in the socialist and New Negro movements between 1911-1927. The iconoclastic author Henry Miller, reflecting 40 years later on his days as a young socialist in Manhattan, described Hubert Harrison as his “quondam idol.”  The noted historian J. A. Rogers described the program that Harrison espoused as the “sanest.” Harrison’s relationship with Marcus Garvey and the United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) are well documented and examined in detail in the most recently published second volume, Hubert Harrison: The Struggle for Equality,1918-1927.  

A cursory look at the “Contents” in A Hubert Harrison Reader brings to mind William Faulkner’s oft quoted phrase; “The past is never dead.  It’s not even past.”  Some titles included are: “The Duty of the Socialist Party” (1911); “The Negro and the Labor Unions” (1917); “The Liberty League’s Petition to the House of Representatives of the Unity States, July 4, 1917”; “The East St. Louis Horror”(1917); “The Women of Our Race” (1919), “Race Consciousness” (1924), “Lincoln and Liberty: Fact versus Fiction” (1921), “U-Need-A Biscuit” (1920), “Marcus Garvey At the Bar of United States Justice” (1923), “The White War and the Colored Races” (1917), “Wanted – A Colored International” (1921), “The Cracker in the Caribbean” (1920); “The Virgin Islands: A Colonial Problem” (1923);“A Cure for the Ku-Klux” (1919); “ ”Democracy” in America” (1921); “The Program and Principles of the International Colored Unity League” (1927).

The two-volume biographies are prodigious, scholarly tomes, chronological, thoroughly documented and richly evocative of Harrison’s struggles to juggle family and personal relationships with his political commitments often in the face of dire poverty.  They stand as a challenge to historians and serious students of US social history who have, with few exceptions, overlooked Harrison’s seminal contributions and leading roles in both the Socialist Party and the New Negro Movement. 

Sean I. Ahern is a retired NYC public school teacher, father, grandfather and husband. He was previously active in labor struggles in the Postal Service and NYC Transit Authority. 

Hubert Harrison
Black Socialists

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Dilemmas of Humanity Conference in the US Outlines Principle Task: Organize a Working Class Movement to Defeat the Empire
Natalia Marques
Dilemmas of Humanity Conference in the US Outlines Principle Task: Organize a Working Class Movement to Defeat the Empire
06 September 2023
Socialists, organizers, and working class leaders in the United States describe the challenges the movement faces, and what is to be done to ov
The White Socialist Left: Seeing a Bleak Future for ‘Black and White Unite and Fight’
Jon Jeter
The White Socialist Left: Seeing a Bleak Future for ‘Black and White Unite and Fight’
06 July 2022
White leftists have a history of using class reductionism to ignore racism and even of making common cause with white supremacy itself.
Hubert Harrison, Tribune of the People: Part Three, The Struggle for Equality
Sean I. Ahern
Hubert Harrison, Tribune of the People: Part Three, The Struggle for Equality
22 June 2022
Hubert Henry Harrison was one of the foremost Black socialist and nationalist thinkers of the early 20th century.
Hubert Harrison, Tribune of the People: Part Two, The Voice of Harlem Radicalism
Sean I. Ahern
Hubert Harrison, Tribune of the People: Part Two, The Voice of Harlem Radicalism
15 June 2022
Hubert Henry Harrison was one of the foremost Black socialist and nationalist thinkers of the early 20th century.
Book Review: The Prologue, The Prototype, The O.G. Hater
Todd Steven Burroughs
Book Review: The Prologue, The Prototype, The O.G. Hater
03 February 2021
Hubert Henry Harrison was a Black intellectual inferno, a warrior in the cause of a race- and class-based politics.
Black Bolsheviks and White Lies: Reflections on the Black Radical Tradition
Peta Lindsay
Black Bolsheviks and White Lies: Reflections on the Black Radical Tradition
08 November 2017
“American blacks needed no outsiders to awaken their sense of the tremendous contradiction between America's

More Stories


  • Black Alliance for Peace Africa Team
    Now is the Time for All Anti-Imperialists and All Justice Loving People to Stand Unequivocally in Defense of Burkina Faso
    07 May 2025
    The Black Alliance for Peace demands an end to U.S. and Western interference in Burkina Faso, the rejection of neocolonial policies in the Sahel, and a stance affirming Africans' rights to…
  • Maxwell Evans
    South Side Neighbors Want Housing Protections Before City OKs ‘Luxury’ Hotel Near Obama Center
    07 May 2025
    Community residents say that Chicago's City Council should pass a slate of housing protections centered on low-income renters instead of advancing plans for a hotel near the Obama Center site.
  • Allen Myers
    Vietnam: A Victory Never To Be Forgotten
    07 May 2025
    Vietnam’s defeat of U.S. forces stands as a landmark anti-colonial victory, proving that determined resistance can overcome even the world’s most powerful military—yet its legacy remains fiercely…
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio May 2, 2025
    02 May 2025
    In this week’s segment, we hear about an upcoming conference dedicated to Black, radical organizers in the U.S. But first, we have an update on the Congo and the principles of agreement between Congo…
  • congo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The Congo and Trump's Mineral Deal
    02 May 2025
    The Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Rwanda recently signed a Declaration of Principles in Washington. Is Rwanda ending its M23 group’s incursion into the DRC?
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us