fbpx
Wikipedia

George Jackson (activist)

George Lester Jackson (September 23, 1941 – August 21, 1971) was an American author, activist and convicted felon. While serving an indeterminate sentence for stealing $70 from a gas station in 1961, Jackson became involved in revolutionary activity and co-founded the prison gang Black Guerrilla Family.[3]

George Jackson
Born
George Lester Jackson

(1941-09-23)September 23, 1941
DiedAugust 21, 1971(1971-08-21) (aged 29)
Cause of deathGunshot wounds
Resting placeBethel Cemetery, Mount Vernon, Illinois[1]
NationalityAmerican
Known forPrison activist[2] and co-founder of the Black Guerrilla Family
Notable workSoledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson
Parent(s)Lester and Georgia Bea Jackson
RelativesJonathan P. Jackson (brother)

In 1970, he was charged, along with two other Soledad Brothers, with the murder of correctional officer John Vincent Mills in the aftermath of a prison fight. The same year, he published Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson, a combination of autobiography and manifesto addressed to an African-American audience. The book became a bestseller and earned Jackson personal fame. Jackson was killed in prison by prison guards in 1971, during an escape attempt in which three prison guards and two inmates were killed.

Biography edit

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Jackson was the second son of Lester and Georgia Bea Jackson's five children. He spent time in the California Youth Authority Corrections facility in Paso Robles due to several juvenile convictions including armed robbery, assault, and burglary.[4]

In 1961, he was convicted of armed robbery – for stealing $70 at gunpoint from a gas station – and sentenced to one year to life in prison.[5]

During his first years at San Quentin State Prison, Jackson became involved in revolutionary activity. He was described by prison officials as egocentric and anti-social.[6] In 1966, Jackson met and befriended W. L. Nolen, who introduced him to Marxist and Maoist ideology. The two founded the Black Guerrilla Family in 1966 based on Marxist and Maoist political thought.[7] In speaking of his ideological transformation, Jackson remarked: "I met Marx, Lenin, Trotsky, Engels, and Mao when I entered prison and they redeemed me."[8] In his 1972 book Blood in My Eye, Jackson describes himself as a "Marxist-Leninist-Maoist-Fanonist".[9]

As Jackson's disciplinary infractions grew he spent more time in solitary confinement, where he studied political economy and radical theory. He also wrote many letters to friends and supporters, which would later be edited and compiled into the books Soledad Brother and Blood in My Eye, bestsellers that brought him a great deal of attention from leftist organizers and intellectuals in the U.S. and Western Europe. He amassed a following of inmates, including whites and Latinos, and most enthusiastically with other black inmates.[10]

In January 1969, Jackson and Nolen were transferred from San Quentin to Soledad Prison.[11] On January 13, 1970, corrections officer Opie G. Miller shot Nolen and two other black prisoners (Cleveland Edwards and Alvin Miller) during a yard riot with members of the Aryan Brotherhood, killing all three. Following Nolen's death, Jackson became increasingly confrontational with corrections officials and spoke often about the need to protect fellow inmates and take revenge on correction officers, employing what Jackson called "selective retaliatory violence".[12]

On January 17, 1970, Jackson, Fleeta Drumgo, and John Clutchette were charged with murdering a corrections officer, John V. Mills, who was beaten and thrown from the third floor of Soledad's Y wing.[13] This was a capital offense and a successful conviction would have put Jackson in the gas chamber. Mills was purportedly killed in retaliation for the shooting deaths of three inmates by Miller the previous year. Miller had not been charged with any crime, as a grand jury ruled his actions during the prison fight justifiable homicide.[14]

In the aftermath Jackson, Drumgo, and Clutchette became known as the Soledad Brothers and activists worked to get the three acquitted whom they viewed as being political prisoners and accused based on their race. The activists also wanted to bring attention to the disproportionate rates at which people of color were being incarcerated compared to white people and to the socioeconomic factors that led to their imprisonment in the first place. The Soledad Brothers Defense Committee was formed by Fay Stender and had many famous activists, celebrities, and writers join and support the committee. Among these activists was Angela Davis. Davis while working with the committee would eventually become a leader of the committee and become a close friend of Jackson.[15][16] Jackson and Davis corresponded over letters frequently and Jackson had sent a manuscript of his book Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson, and asked her to read it and asked for her help in improving it.[17]

Marin County courthouse incident edit

On August 7, 1970, George Jackson's 17-year-old brother Jonathan P. Jackson burst into a Marin County courtroom with an automatic weapon, freed prisoners James McClain, William A. Christmas and Ruchell Magee, and took Judge Harold Haley, Deputy District Attorney Gary Thomas, and three jurors hostage to demand the release of the "Soledad Brothers". Police killed Haley, Jackson, Christmas and McClain as they attempted to drive away from the courthouse. Eyewitness testimony suggests Haley was hit by fire discharged from a sawed-off shotgun that had been fastened to his neck with adhesive tape by the abductors. Thomas, Magee and one of the jurors were wounded.[18] The case made national headlines.[19]

Angela Davis, who owned the weapons used in the hostage taking, was later acquitted of conspiracy, kidnapping, and murder. A possible explanation for the gun connection is that Jonathan Jackson was her bodyguard. Magee, the sole survivor among the attackers, eventually pleaded guilty to aggravated kidnapping and was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975.[20] Magee was imprisoned for over 60 years.[21] He was released in 2023 under California's compassionate release law passed that year.[22]

Prison escape and death edit

On August 21, 1971, Jackson met with attorney Stephen Bingham at San Quentin prison to discuss a civil lawsuit that Jackson had filed against the California Department of Corrections. After the meeting, Jackson was being escorted by officer Urbano Rubiaco back to his cell when Rubiaco noticed a metallic object in Jackson's hair, later revealed to be a wig, and ordered him to remove it. Jackson then pulled a Spanish Astra 9 mm pistol from beneath the wig and said: "Gentlemen, the dragon has come"—a reference to Ho Chi Minh.[23] It is not clear how Jackson obtained the gun. Bingham, who lived for 13 years as a fugitive before returning to the United States to face trial, was acquitted of charges that he smuggled a gun to Jackson.[24]

Jackson ordered Rubiaco to open all the cells and along with several other inmates, he overpowered the remaining correction officers and took them, along with two inmates, hostage. Five other hostages, officers Jere Graham, Frank DeLeon and Paul Krasnes, along with two white prisoners, were killed and found in Jackson's cell. Three other officers, Rubiaco, Kenneth McCray, and Charles Breckenridge, were also shot and stabbed, but survived.[25] After finding the keys for the Adjustment Center's exit, Jackson along with fellow inmate and close friend Johnny Spain escaped to the yard where Jackson was shot dead from a tower and Spain surrendered.[26][27]

Three inmates were acquitted and three (David Johnson, Johnny Spain and Hugo Pinell) were convicted for the murders.[28] The six became known as the "San Quentin Six".[29]

There is some evidence that Jackson and his supporters on the outside had planned the escape for several weeks. Three days before the escape attempt, Jackson rewrote his will, leaving all royalties as well as control of his legal defense fund to the Black Panther Party.[30]

Jackson's funeral was held at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in Oakland, California, on August 28, 1971.[31]

In popular culture edit

Several notable artists and entertainers have dedicated their work to Jackson's memory or created works based on his life. The avant-garde jazz group Art Ensemble of Chicago, affiliates of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, recorded and released the album A Jackson in Your House in Paris, France, in 1969. A non-album single was released by Bob Dylan, "George Jackson", about the life and death of Jackson. The song made the American charts peaking at No. 33 in January 1972. The ninth track of the 2011 Blue Scholars album Cinemetropolis is named for Jackson and references the Soledad Brothers.

Jackson and his attempted prison escape are the subjects of the first verse of the Joan Baez parody song, "Pull the Tregroes," on National Lampoon's 1972 album, Radio Dinner.

Steel Pulse, an English reggae band from Birmingham wrote a song named "Uncle George" that contains a chorus of "Soledad Brother". The song comes from the band's album Tribute To The Martyrs, which also honours other black civil rights activists including Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr. and Steve Biko.[32]

The 1994 song Jettin' by the hip-hop trio Digable Planets references George Jackson as one of their black revolutionary heroes who died in prison.[33]

Ja Rule named his 2003 album after Jackson's book Blood in My Eye. Saxophone player Archie Shepp dedicated most of his album Attica Blues (1972) to the story of George Jackson ("Blues for Brother George Jackson") and the Attica prison riots that followed. Stephen Jay Gould wrote, in his 1981 book The Mismeasure of Man, of George Jackson's death in context of "statistically supported" social Darwinism. Quoting Gould about the legacy of failed science which supported racial bigotry and physiognomy, "George Jackson ... died under Lombroso's legacy, trying to escape after eleven years (eight and a half in solitary) of an indeterminate one-year-to-life sentence for stealing seventy dollars from a gas station."[34]

Jackson's life, beliefs and ultimate fate were the topic of one of the many audio tapes recorded at the Jonestown commune in Guyana during 1978. In the tape in question, Jim Jones touches on several issues relating to Jackson, most notably Jones' firm belief that Jackson's death was a racist assassination. His admiration for the Black Panther activist on the tape is as clear as his disgust that one of his followers, Willie Malone, could think he was remotely in the same league as Jackson, and that "punks" like Malone had sold him out. [35]

Stanley Williams dedicated his 1998 book Life in Prison in part to George Jackson. In Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's response to Williams' appeal for clemency, the governor claimed that this dedication was "a significant indicator that Williams is not reformed and that he still sees violence and lawlessness as a legitimate means to address societal problems."[36]

"Soulja's Story" is a song by rapper 2Pac, released on the 1991 album 2pacalypse Now, which makes reference to the Marin County Civic Center attacks.

The 2007 film Black August is a retelling of the last 14 months of Jackson's life.[37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ouagadougou, Mbutu A. (May 12, 2022). The Black Guerrilla Family 1966 – 1971: The Violent History of California's Most Notorious Prison Gang. Plebiscite Publishing Company. p. 216. ISBN 979-8808864979.
  2. ^ Murrin, John; Paul E. Johnson; James M. McPherson (2008). Liberty, Equality, Power: A History of the American People, Compact. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth. p. 1136. ISBN 978-0-495-50243-2.
  3. ^ Cummins, Eric (1994). The Rise and Fall of California's Radical Prison Movement. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2231-5. OCLC 28112851.
  4. ^ Cummins, Eric (1994). The Rise and Fall of California's Radical Prison Movement. Stanford University Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0804722322.
  5. ^ "America's fortress of blood: The death of George Jackson and the birth of the prison-industrial complex". Salon. September 7, 2014. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  6. ^ Cummins, p. 156.
  7. ^ James, Joy (2003). Imprisoned Intellectuals: America's Political Prisoners Write on Life, Liberation, and Rebellion. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 85. ISBN 978-0742520271.
  8. ^ Jackson, George (1994). Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson. Chicago Review Press. p. 16. ISBN 1613742894.
  9. ^ Jackson, George (1990). Blood in my eye. Baltimore, MD. ISBN 978-0-933121-23-2. OCLC 21961314.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ Cummins, p. 157.
  11. ^ James, p. 85.
  12. ^ Cummins, p. 164.
  13. ^ Cummins, p. 165.
  14. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Day of the Gun: George Jackson". YouTube.
  15. ^ Davis, Angela (2023). Angela Davis: An Autobiography (3rd ed.). Haymarket Books. pp. 233–234.
  16. ^ Aptheker, B. (1997). The Morning Breaks: The Trial of Angela Davis (2nd ed.). Cornell University Press. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctt5hh0g9
  17. ^ Davis, Angela (2023). Angela Davis: An Autobiography (3rd ed.). Haymarket Books. p. 234.
  18. ^ . Time. August 17, 1970. Archived from the original on September 13, 2008. Retrieved August 8, 2010.
  19. ^ "George Jackson on his brother Jonathan". News footage from August 15, 1970, featuring an interview with Jackson in which he reflects on the death of his brother Jonathan.
  20. ^ Associated Press (January 23, 1975). "Magee Gets Life Term". The Milwaukee Journal. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  21. ^ Chimurenga, Thandisizwe (October 11, 2021). "Sirhan Sirhan murdered a Kennedy. He could spend less time in prison than this California man". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 15, 2023.
  22. ^ Marks, Claude (July 28, 2023). "Ruchell Cinque Magee was just released from prison after 67 years caged!". San Francisco Bay View. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
  23. ^ Andrews, Lori (1999). Black Power, White Blood: The Life and Times of Johnny Spain. Temple University Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-1566397506.
  24. ^ "San Quentin profile", Los Angeles Times, June 28, 1986.
  25. ^ Cummings, p. 209.
  26. ^ Andrews, pp. 162–163.
  27. ^ "Attempted Escape At San Quentin Leaves Six Dead". Bangor Daily News. Bangor, Maine. UPI. August 23, 1971. pp. 1, 3. Retrieved October 23, 2010.
  28. ^ "Costly San Quentin 6 Trial Ends With 3 Convictions", Milwaukee Journal, August 13, 1976.
  29. ^ Bernstein, Lee (2010). "The Age of Jackson: George Jackson and the Radical Critique of Incarceration". America is the Prison: Arts and Politics in Prison in the 1970s. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. p. 66. ISBN 9780807871171. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
  30. ^ Cummings, p. 158.
  31. ^ Newton, Huey (2009) [1973]. Revolutionary Suicide. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780143105329.
  32. ^ "Casey Kesem American Top 40". January 8, 1972. Retrieved August 23, 2010.
  33. ^ "Jettin' - Blowout Comb - Digable Planets". Genius. Retrieved January 13, 2023.
  34. ^ Gould, Stephen Jay (1981). The Mismeasure of Man: The definitive refutation to the argument of the Bell Curve, revised and expanded. New York: Norton. p. 172. ISBN 0-393-31425-1.
  35. ^ "Q734 Transcript". Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and People's Temple. "Jones: (Angry) Don’t you dirty the name of George Jackson– Don’t you–! Don’t you dirty the name of George Jackson. If George Jackson had had this movement, he’d be alive! Don’t you dirty his name. You’re not worthy of his goddamned name. Don’t you speak his name, you prick! Don’t you mention it, because this organization would’ve saved George Jackson! It’s pricks like you that sold him down the river that caused him to be dead! You’re not a George Jackson, you’re a punk!"
  36. ^ Schwarzenegger, Arnold. "Statement of Decision" (PDF). New York Times.
  37. ^ Finkelman, Paul (2009). Encyclopedia of African American History: 5-Volume Set. Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0195167795.

Further reading edit

  • Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson (1970); ISBN 1-55652-230-4
  • Blood In My Eye (1971); ISBN 0-933121-23-7
  • Min S Yee. The Melancholy History of Soledad Prison; In Which a Utopian Scheme Turns Bedlam (1973); ISBN 0-06-129800-X
  • Eric Mann. Comrade George; An Investigation into the Life, Political Thought, and Assassination of George Jackson (1974); ISBN 978-0-06-080318-6
  • P. Collier and D. Horowitz; Destructive Generation (1996); ISBN 978-0-684-82641-7
  • Jo Durden-Smith. Who Killed George Jackson? (1976); ISBN 0-394-48291-3
  • d. "Black Lives, White Imaginaries" (2021), C O M P: An Interdisciplinary Journal.

External links edit

  • FBI file on George Jackson

Writings, interviews and advocacy of his views edit

  • "Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson" – online text of Jackson's 1970 book
  • "Remembering the Real Dragon: An Interview with George Jackson" – by Karen Wald, May and June 1971
  • "George Jackson: Black Revolutionary" – pro-Jackson article by Walter Rodney, November 1971
  • A collection of George Jackson quotes

george, jackson, activist, other, people, named, george, jackson, george, jackson, disambiguation, george, lester, jackson, september, 1941, august, 1971, american, author, activist, convicted, felon, while, serving, indeterminate, sentence, stealing, from, st. For other people named George Jackson see George Jackson disambiguation George Lester Jackson September 23 1941 August 21 1971 was an American author activist and convicted felon While serving an indeterminate sentence for stealing 70 from a gas station in 1961 Jackson became involved in revolutionary activity and co founded the prison gang Black Guerrilla Family 3 George JacksonBornGeorge Lester Jackson 1941 09 23 September 23 1941Chicago Illinois U S DiedAugust 21 1971 1971 08 21 aged 29 San Quentin California U S Cause of deathGunshot woundsResting placeBethel Cemetery Mount Vernon Illinois 1 NationalityAmericanKnown forPrison activist 2 and co founder of the Black Guerrilla FamilyNotable workSoledad Brother The Prison Letters of George JacksonParent s Lester and Georgia Bea JacksonRelativesJonathan P Jackson brother In 1970 he was charged along with two other Soledad Brothers with the murder of correctional officer John Vincent Mills in the aftermath of a prison fight The same year he published Soledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson a combination of autobiography and manifesto addressed to an African American audience The book became a bestseller and earned Jackson personal fame Jackson was killed in prison by prison guards in 1971 during an escape attempt in which three prison guards and two inmates were killed Contents 1 Biography 2 Marin County courthouse incident 3 Prison escape and death 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 Writings interviews and advocacy of his viewsBiography editBorn in Chicago Illinois Jackson was the second son of Lester and Georgia Bea Jackson s five children He spent time in the California Youth Authority Corrections facility in Paso Robles due to several juvenile convictions including armed robbery assault and burglary 4 In 1961 he was convicted of armed robbery for stealing 70 at gunpoint from a gas station and sentenced to one year to life in prison 5 During his first years at San Quentin State Prison Jackson became involved in revolutionary activity He was described by prison officials as egocentric and anti social 6 In 1966 Jackson met and befriended W L Nolen who introduced him to Marxist and Maoist ideology The two founded the Black Guerrilla Family in 1966 based on Marxist and Maoist political thought 7 In speaking of his ideological transformation Jackson remarked I met Marx Lenin Trotsky Engels and Mao when I entered prison and they redeemed me 8 In his 1972 book Blood in My Eye Jackson describes himself as a Marxist Leninist Maoist Fanonist 9 As Jackson s disciplinary infractions grew he spent more time in solitary confinement where he studied political economy and radical theory He also wrote many letters to friends and supporters which would later be edited and compiled into the books Soledad Brother and Blood in My Eye bestsellers that brought him a great deal of attention from leftist organizers and intellectuals in the U S and Western Europe He amassed a following of inmates including whites and Latinos and most enthusiastically with other black inmates 10 In January 1969 Jackson and Nolen were transferred from San Quentin to Soledad Prison 11 On January 13 1970 corrections officer Opie G Miller shot Nolen and two other black prisoners Cleveland Edwards and Alvin Miller during a yard riot with members of the Aryan Brotherhood killing all three Following Nolen s death Jackson became increasingly confrontational with corrections officials and spoke often about the need to protect fellow inmates and take revenge on correction officers employing what Jackson called selective retaliatory violence 12 On January 17 1970 Jackson Fleeta Drumgo and John Clutchette were charged with murdering a corrections officer John V Mills who was beaten and thrown from the third floor of Soledad s Y wing 13 This was a capital offense and a successful conviction would have put Jackson in the gas chamber Mills was purportedly killed in retaliation for the shooting deaths of three inmates by Miller the previous year Miller had not been charged with any crime as a grand jury ruled his actions during the prison fight justifiable homicide 14 In the aftermath Jackson Drumgo and Clutchette became known as the Soledad Brothers and activists worked to get the three acquitted whom they viewed as being political prisoners and accused based on their race The activists also wanted to bring attention to the disproportionate rates at which people of color were being incarcerated compared to white people and to the socioeconomic factors that led to their imprisonment in the first place The Soledad Brothers Defense Committee was formed by Fay Stender and had many famous activists celebrities and writers join and support the committee Among these activists was Angela Davis Davis while working with the committee would eventually become a leader of the committee and become a close friend of Jackson 15 16 Jackson and Davis corresponded over letters frequently and Jackson had sent a manuscript of his book Soledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson and asked her to read it and asked for her help in improving it 17 Marin County courthouse incident editMain article Marin County courthouse incident On August 7 1970 George Jackson s 17 year old brother Jonathan P Jackson burst into a Marin County courtroom with an automatic weapon freed prisoners James McClain William A Christmas and Ruchell Magee and took Judge Harold Haley Deputy District Attorney Gary Thomas and three jurors hostage to demand the release of the Soledad Brothers Police killed Haley Jackson Christmas and McClain as they attempted to drive away from the courthouse Eyewitness testimony suggests Haley was hit by fire discharged from a sawed off shotgun that had been fastened to his neck with adhesive tape by the abductors Thomas Magee and one of the jurors were wounded 18 The case made national headlines 19 Angela Davis who owned the weapons used in the hostage taking was later acquitted of conspiracy kidnapping and murder A possible explanation for the gun connection is that Jonathan Jackson was her bodyguard Magee the sole survivor among the attackers eventually pleaded guilty to aggravated kidnapping and was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975 20 Magee was imprisoned for over 60 years 21 He was released in 2023 under California s compassionate release law passed that year 22 Prison escape and death editOn August 21 1971 Jackson met with attorney Stephen Bingham at San Quentin prison to discuss a civil lawsuit that Jackson had filed against the California Department of Corrections After the meeting Jackson was being escorted by officer Urbano Rubiaco back to his cell when Rubiaco noticed a metallic object in Jackson s hair later revealed to be a wig and ordered him to remove it Jackson then pulled a Spanish Astra 9 mm pistol from beneath the wig and said Gentlemen the dragon has come a reference to Ho Chi Minh 23 It is not clear how Jackson obtained the gun Bingham who lived for 13 years as a fugitive before returning to the United States to face trial was acquitted of charges that he smuggled a gun to Jackson 24 Jackson ordered Rubiaco to open all the cells and along with several other inmates he overpowered the remaining correction officers and took them along with two inmates hostage Five other hostages officers Jere Graham Frank DeLeon and Paul Krasnes along with two white prisoners were killed and found in Jackson s cell Three other officers Rubiaco Kenneth McCray and Charles Breckenridge were also shot and stabbed but survived 25 After finding the keys for the Adjustment Center s exit Jackson along with fellow inmate and close friend Johnny Spain escaped to the yard where Jackson was shot dead from a tower and Spain surrendered 26 27 Three inmates were acquitted and three David Johnson Johnny Spain and Hugo Pinell were convicted for the murders 28 The six became known as the San Quentin Six 29 There is some evidence that Jackson and his supporters on the outside had planned the escape for several weeks Three days before the escape attempt Jackson rewrote his will leaving all royalties as well as control of his legal defense fund to the Black Panther Party 30 Jackson s funeral was held at St Augustine s Episcopal Church in Oakland California on August 28 1971 31 In popular culture editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Several notable artists and entertainers have dedicated their work to Jackson s memory or created works based on his life The avant garde jazz group Art Ensemble of Chicago affiliates of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians recorded and released the album A Jackson in Your House in Paris France in 1969 A non album single was released by Bob Dylan George Jackson about the life and death of Jackson The song made the American charts peaking at No 33 in January 1972 The ninth track of the 2011 Blue Scholars album Cinemetropolis is named for Jackson and references the Soledad Brothers Jackson and his attempted prison escape are the subjects of the first verse of the Joan Baez parody song Pull the Tregroes on National Lampoon s 1972 album Radio Dinner Steel Pulse an English reggae band from Birmingham wrote a song named Uncle George that contains a chorus of Soledad Brother The song comes from the band s album Tribute To The Martyrs which also honours other black civil rights activists including Nelson Mandela Martin Luther King Jr and Steve Biko 32 The 1994 song Jettin by the hip hop trio Digable Planets references George Jackson as one of their black revolutionary heroes who died in prison 33 Ja Rule named his 2003 album after Jackson s book Blood in My Eye Saxophone player Archie Shepp dedicated most of his album Attica Blues 1972 to the story of George Jackson Blues for Brother George Jackson and the Attica prison riots that followed Stephen Jay Gould wrote in his 1981 book The Mismeasure of Man of George Jackson s death in context of statistically supported social Darwinism Quoting Gould about the legacy of failed science which supported racial bigotry and physiognomy George Jackson died under Lombroso s legacy trying to escape after eleven years eight and a half in solitary of an indeterminate one year to life sentence for stealing seventy dollars from a gas station 34 Jackson s life beliefs and ultimate fate were the topic of one of the many audio tapes recorded at the Jonestown commune in Guyana during 1978 In the tape in question Jim Jones touches on several issues relating to Jackson most notably Jones firm belief that Jackson s death was a racist assassination His admiration for the Black Panther activist on the tape is as clear as his disgust that one of his followers Willie Malone could think he was remotely in the same league as Jackson and that punks like Malone had sold him out 35 Stanley Williams dedicated his 1998 book Life in Prison in part to George Jackson In Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger s response to Williams appeal for clemency the governor claimed that this dedication was a significant indicator that Williams is not reformed and that he still sees violence and lawlessness as a legitimate means to address societal problems 36 Soulja s Story is a song by rapper 2Pac released on the 1991 album 2pacalypse Now which makes reference to the Marin County Civic Center attacks The 2007 film Black August is a retelling of the last 14 months of Jackson s life 37 See also editFrantz Fanon Fay StenderReferences edit Ouagadougou Mbutu A May 12 2022 The Black Guerrilla Family 1966 1971 The Violent History of California s Most Notorious Prison Gang Plebiscite Publishing Company p 216 ISBN 979 8808864979 Murrin John Paul E Johnson James M McPherson 2008 Liberty Equality Power A History of the American People Compact Boston MA Thomson Wadsworth p 1136 ISBN 978 0 495 50243 2 Cummins Eric 1994 The Rise and Fall of California s Radical Prison Movement Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2231 5 OCLC 28112851 Cummins Eric 1994 The Rise and Fall of California s Radical Prison Movement Stanford University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0804722322 America s fortress of blood The death of George Jackson and the birth of the prison industrial complex Salon September 7 2014 Retrieved September 7 2014 Cummins p 156 James Joy 2003 Imprisoned Intellectuals America s Political Prisoners Write on Life Liberation and Rebellion Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 85 ISBN 978 0742520271 Jackson George 1994 Soledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson Chicago Review Press p 16 ISBN 1613742894 Jackson George 1990 Blood in my eye Baltimore MD ISBN 978 0 933121 23 2 OCLC 21961314 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cummins p 157 James p 85 Cummins p 164 Cummins p 165 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Day of the Gun George Jackson YouTube Davis Angela 2023 Angela Davis An Autobiography 3rd ed Haymarket Books pp 233 234 Aptheker B 1997 The Morning Breaks The Trial of Angela Davis 2nd ed Cornell University Press http www jstor org stable 10 7591 j ctt5hh0g9 Davis Angela 2023 Angela Davis An Autobiography 3rd ed Haymarket Books p 234 Justice A Bad Week for the Good Guys Time August 17 1970 Archived from the original on September 13 2008 Retrieved August 8 2010 George Jackson on his brother Jonathan News footage from August 15 1970 featuring an interview with Jackson in which he reflects on the death of his brother Jonathan Associated Press January 23 1975 Magee Gets Life Term The Milwaukee Journal Retrieved August 11 2010 Chimurenga Thandisizwe October 11 2021 Sirhan Sirhan murdered a Kennedy He could spend less time in prison than this California man San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 15 2023 Marks Claude July 28 2023 Ruchell Cinque Magee was just released from prison after 67 years caged San Francisco Bay View Retrieved October 9 2023 Andrews Lori 1999 Black Power White Blood The Life and Times of Johnny Spain Temple University Press p 158 ISBN 978 1566397506 San Quentin profile Los Angeles Times June 28 1986 Cummings p 209 Andrews pp 162 163 Attempted Escape At San Quentin Leaves Six Dead Bangor Daily News Bangor Maine UPI August 23 1971 pp 1 3 Retrieved October 23 2010 Costly San Quentin 6 Trial Ends With 3 Convictions Milwaukee Journal August 13 1976 Bernstein Lee 2010 The Age of Jackson George Jackson and the Radical Critique of Incarceration America is the Prison Arts and Politics in Prison in the 1970s Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press p 66 ISBN 9780807871171 Retrieved July 12 2011 Cummings p 158 Newton Huey 2009 1973 Revolutionary Suicide Penguin Books ISBN 9780143105329 Casey Kesem American Top 40 January 8 1972 Retrieved August 23 2010 Jettin Blowout Comb Digable Planets Genius Retrieved January 13 2023 Gould Stephen Jay 1981 The Mismeasure of Man The definitive refutation to the argument of the Bell Curve revised and expanded New York Norton p 172 ISBN 0 393 31425 1 Q734 Transcript Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and People s Temple Jones Angry Don t you dirty the name of George Jackson Don t you Don t you dirty the name of George Jackson If George Jackson had had this movement he d be alive Don t you dirty his name You re not worthy of his goddamned name Don t you speak his name you prick Don t you mention it because this organization would ve saved George Jackson It s pricks like you that sold him down the river that caused him to be dead You re not a George Jackson you re a punk Schwarzenegger Arnold Statement of Decision PDF New York Times Finkelman Paul 2009 Encyclopedia of African American History 5 Volume Set Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0195167795 Further reading editSoledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson 1970 ISBN 1 55652 230 4 Blood In My Eye 1971 ISBN 0 933121 23 7 Min S Yee The Melancholy History of Soledad Prison In Which a Utopian Scheme Turns Bedlam 1973 ISBN 0 06 129800 X Eric Mann Comrade George An Investigation into the Life Political Thought and Assassination of George Jackson 1974 ISBN 978 0 06 080318 6 P Collier and D Horowitz Destructive Generation 1996 ISBN 978 0 684 82641 7 Jo Durden Smith Who Killed George Jackson 1976 ISBN 0 394 48291 3 d Black Lives White Imaginaries 2021 C O M P An Interdisciplinary Journal External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to George Jackson activist FBI file on George JacksonWritings interviews and advocacy of his views edit Soledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson online text of Jackson s 1970 book Remembering the Real Dragon An Interview with George Jackson by Karen Wald May and June 1971 George Jackson Black Revolutionary pro Jackson article by Walter Rodney November 1971 A collection of George Jackson quotes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Jackson activist amp oldid 1201698475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.