This book puts Huey P. Newton's experiences and those of his family into historical context. It starts with Walter Newton's heritage and his wife Armelia Johnson Newton's family background from their primarily African roots: to their Caucasian ancestors; to the slavery of their African-American ancestors; to their upbringing in the segregated South; their hard-scrabble adult lives in Arkansas and Louisiana in the early 20th century; their move West to Oakland as part of the Great Migration; the racism they faced in California; Huey and Melvin Newton's disparate school experiences; Huey's teenage years: his involvement in the Afro-American Association's informal studies of Black authors; Melvin's role in creating a pioneering ethnic studies program at Oakland's Merritt College; the formation of the Black Panther Party; the shootout with two Oakland police officers for which the Panther leader was arrested and that became the focus of international attention to the treatment of Black men by the American justice system; Huey Newton's historic 1968 death penalty trial; his Mafia phase; his subsequent Cuban exile; his frayed and reestablished family relationships: his death; the murder trial of his assailant; and Huey Newton's extraordinary lasting impact.
SUBJECTS COVERED:
Newton family history within the fabric of African-American history; the Great Migration; Alabama race history; Black Baptist churches; Louisiana race history; California race history; Oakland, CA race history; the 1968 death penalty trial of Huey Newton; Vietnam War protests; the murder trial of Tyron Robinson for the death of Huey Newton; Huey Newton's legacy.
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