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1967 BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVIST HENRY WINSTON Pamphlet NEGR0 WHITE UNITY Racial

$ 23.76

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Condition: Used
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)

    Description

    Interesting 31-page 1967 pamphlet on 1960s RACISM and black activism from one of the leading Civil Rights and Communist
    activists of the 20th century, Henry Winston
    "NEGR0-WHITE UNITY
    Key to -
    Full Equality
    NEGR0 Representation
    Economic Advance of Labor, Black and White"
    -
    #fb1714
    Please
    visit our ebay store for printed on the front page other FANTASTIC Americana, Antiquarian Books and Ephemera.
    SEE PHOTO-----COMPLETE, ORIGINAL 1967 staple-bound pamphlet, with minimal wear.
    Henry M. Winston (2 April 1911
    – 13 December 1986) was an African-American political leader and Marxist civil rights activist.
    Winston, committed to equal rights and communism, was an advocate of civil rights for African Americans decades before the idea of racial equality emerged as a mainstream current of American political thought.
    An early member of the American Communist Party, Winston was elected to the party's National Board in 1936, serving as Chairman of the CPUSA from 1966 to 1986.
    He was born on 2 April 1911 to Joseph and Lucille Winston in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
    Henry grew up there and in Kansas City, Missouri. The economic situation of the poor Winston family was troubling enough to force Henry to leave high school early. Though once again unemployed after the start of the Great Depression, Winston's organizational skills and intellect came to the fore when he took a position with the Kansas City Unemployed Council at 19.
    By 1936, Winston was serving the Communist Party USA as both the national organizational secretary of the Young Communist League and a member of the Communist Party National Board.
    As a high-ranking member of the Communist Party organization, Winston encouraged members of the party to sign up for military service to fight Fascism and Nazism in the Second World War. Winston himself served in the Army, participating in the liberation of France from Nazi occupation. He marked the war's end with an honorable discharge from the military.
    Back to political activity after his World War II discharge and the reorganization of the Party in 1946, Winston, along with the rest of the CPUSA leadership, was a victim of an early Cold War attempt by the American government to "decapitate" the Communists' leading ranks. In 1948, Winston, together with other notable leaders within the Communist movement, was brought to trial in the Foley Square trial on charges of violating the Smith Act for encouraging the overthrowing of the American government.
    Unable to produce evidence that any of the leading party members had actually called for the armed overthrow of the American government, the prosecution, boosted by the American public's antipathy toward radical activists during the opening years of the Cold War, based its case on selective interpretation of quotations from the works of Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin and other revolutionary figures of Marxism-Leninism. They also relied on the testimony of "witnesses" hired by the FBI.
    During the course of the trial the judge held several of the defendants and all of their counsel in contempt of court.
    Convicted of revolutionary insurrection alongside the rest of the defendants for advocating the ideas of Marxism, Winston escaped while on bail. In disguise, traveling around the country under a false name, Winston was sheltered by people sympathetic to Marxism and leftist political work. Undeterred from maintaining his links with the party above-ground, Winston continued his activities from within the party's underground organization: his 1951 pamphlet on party organization, "What it Means to be a Communist," was produced by the Communist Party while Winston was still underground.
    Very Good condition.
    This listing includes the complete entire original pamphlet.
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