They Called Him Dangerous For His Quest To Liberate His People

PushBlack
July 12, 2019

In 1911, A. Philip Randolph left his Florida home for NYC, hoping to make change for the common Black man.

He studied the politics of labor unions and economic theories until he settled on a plan for Black liberation which focused on one key factor - pay. 

By 1925, Randolph had become a master organizer and led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters’ fight for equal treatment, better wages, and benefits through railroad employers. 

To Randolph, liberation meant upgrading our collective economic influence by challenging workforce inequality. 

After Randolph successfully gained the porters access to lucrative railroad contracts, he expanded his vision to federal fights. 

Randolph led the original March On Washington For Jobs And Freedom in 1941, which threatened so much embarrassing political pressure that Presidents Franklin and Truman BOTH signed executive orders barring discrimination related to defense contracts and desegregated the U.S. army. 

He used the tactic again with the March On Washington of 1963 that pressured President John F. Kennedy to initiate a strong federal civil rights bill and set the stage for Martin Luther King’s famous “I Have A Dream” speech.

Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer called Randolph “the most dangerous Negro in America” because of Randolph’s drive to direct economic power into the hands of Black business owners and workers in the form of big contracts and jobs. 

Imagine what we could do now with such Black power.

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