Your Source for African American History
Thursday
August 28th 2008
a non-profit education organization
September 23

George Jackson
*This date marks the birth of George L. Jackson in 1941. He was an Africa-American activist.

Jackson was born in Chicago and moved with his family to Los Angeles at the age of fourteen. As a teen, had a number of juvenile problems, which landed him in trouble with the police and resulted in him spending time in the Youth Authority Corrections facility in Paso Robles, CA. At sixteen he was accused of stealing $71 from a gas station, received an indeterminate sentence of one year to life in which his case was reviewed annually. Jackson was never granted parole and spent the rest of his life in prison.

While incarcerated at Soledad Prison in Salinas, CA., he became politicized and began studying the theories of Mao Zedong, Frantz Fanon, and Fidel Castro. He developed strong ideas viewing capitalism as the source of the oppression of people of color, and became the leader in the politicization of Black and Chicano prisoners in Soledad. On January 16, 1970 in response to the death of three Black Muslims, a white guard (John Mills) was killed; Jackson, Fleeta Drumgo, and John Clutchette were accused of the murder. The three became known as the “Soledad Brothers.”

The fate of the Soledad Brothers became an international cause ce’le’bre, which focused on the treatment of blacks in prison. The publication of Jackson’s book Soledad Brother that same year added to his visibility. For many supporters the issue was the belief that the Soledad Brothers were victims of a prison conspiracy. In August 1970, Jackson’s teenage brother Jonathan was killed in the Marin County Courthouse in an attempt to rescue his brother.

After being transferred to San Quentin Prison, three days before he was to go to trial, George Jackson was killed by prison guards. The official report said that he was armed and had participated in a prison revolt earlier in the day, which had left five men (two guards and three prisoners) dead. Accounts of this incident remain conflicting. Many in the Black Power Movement and the New Left eulogized Jackson as a martyr and a hero.

Reference:
Soledad Brother
Prison letters of George Jackson, Softcover
by Jonathan Jackson
Copyright, 1995
ISBN: 1556522304

 

    

The African American Registry®, 
a resource on African American History,
is a 
501(c) (3) non-profit education organization
Our Mailing address is  
P.O.  Box  19441
Minneapolis, MN  55419
Fax:  (612) 825-0598
Email us at
info@aaregistry.com.

The African American Registry® Copyright 2005, 2006