Later years
In the 1920s, after breaking with Garvey, Harrison continued public speaking, writing, and organizing. He lectured on politics history, science, literature, social sciences, international affairs, and the arts for the
New York City Board of Education, and was one of the first to use radio to discuss topics in which he had expertise. In early July 1923, he spoke on "The Negro and The Nation" over New York station WEAF. His book and theater reviews and other writings appeared in many of the leading periodicals of the day—including the
New York Times,
New York Tribune,
Pittsburgh Courier,
Chicago Defender,
Amsterdam News,
New York World,
Nation,
New Republic,
Modern Quarterly,
Boston Chronicle, and
Opportunity magazine. He openly criticized the
Ku Klux Klan and the racist attacks of the "
Tulsa Race Riot" of 1921. He worked with various groups, including the Virgin Island Congressional Council, the
Democratic Party, the
Farmer-Labor Party, the
single tax movement, the
American Friends Service Committee, the
Urban League, the
American Negro Labor Congress, and the Workers (Communist) Party (the name at that time of the
Communist Party USA).
In 1924 Harrison founded the International Colored Unity League (ICUL), which was his most broadly unitary effort. The ICUL urged Black people to develop “race consciousness” as a defensive measure—to be aware of their racial oppression and to use that awareness to unite, organize, and respond as a group. The ICUL program sought political rights, economic power, and social justice; urged self-reliance, self-sufficiency, and cooperative efforts; and called for the founding of “a Negro state” in the U.S. (not in Africa, as Garvey advocated). In 1927 Harrison edited the ICUL’s
Voice of the Negro until shortly before his death that year.
In his last lecture, Harrison told his listeners that he had appendicitis and would be getting surgery. Afterwards, he said he would be giving another lecture. Unfortunately, he died on the operating table, at the age of 44.
Intellectual and educational work
Harrison’s appeal was both mass and individual. His race-conscious mass appeal utilized newspapers, popular lectures, and street-corner talks. This was in contrast to the approaches of
Booker T. Washington, who relied on white patrons and a Black political machine, and
W. E. B. Du Bois, who focused on the “
Talented Tenth of the Negro Race.” Harrison’s appeal (later identified with that of Garvey) was aimed directly at the masses. His class- and race-conscious radicalism, though neglected at some periods, laid out the contours of much subsequent debate and discussion of African-American social activists. It is being increasingly studied.
For many years after his 1927 death, Harrison was much neglected. However, recent scholarship on Harrison’s life and the Columbia University Library's acquisition of his papers show renewed interest.
[13] acquisition of the Hubert H. Harrison Papers,
[14] and publishing the "Hubert H. Harrison Papers, 1893-1927: Finding Aid",
[15] Columbia University plans to make Harrison's writings available on the internet. The forthcoming Columbia University Press two-volume Harrison biography also reflects the growing interest in Harrison’s life and thought.
Legacy and honors
Biographer Jeffrey B. Perry
[16] writes that, among the African-American leaders of his era, Harrison was “the most class conscious of the race radicals and the most race conscious of the class radicals.” Perry emphasized that Harrison was a key unifying figure between two major trends of African-American struggle—the labor/civil rights trend (identified with Randolph and Owen, and later with
Martin Luther King, Jr.) and the race/nationalist trend (identified with Garvey, and later with
Malcolm X).
[17]
He has been described as "the most distinguished, if not the most well-known, Caribbean radical in the United States in the early twentieth century" by the historian Winston James.
[18]
As an intellectual, Harrison was an unrivaled
soapbox orator, a featured lecturer for the
New York City Board of Education’s prestigious “Trend of the Times” series, a prolific and influential writer, and, reportedly, the first Black person to write regularly published
book reviews in history. His efforts in these areas were lauded by both black and white writers, intellectuals, and activists such as
Eugene O’Neill,
James Weldon Johnson,
Henry Miller, Hermie Huiswoud, William Pickens, Bertha Howe, Hodge Kirnon, and Oscar Benson. Harrison aided Black writers and artists, including
Charles Gilpin,
Andy Razaf, J. A. Rogers,
Eubie Blake, Walter Everette Hawkins,
Claude McKay,
Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje, Lucian B. Watkins, and
Augusta Savage. He was a pioneer Black participant in the
freethought, and
birth control movements; a
bibliophile and library popularizer. He created “Poetry for the People” columns in various publications, including the
New Negro magazine (1919), Garvey’s
Negro World (1920), and the International Colored Unity League’s
The Voice of the Negro (1927).
[19]
A sampling of his varied work and poetry appears in the edited collection
A Hubert Harrison Reader (2001). His collected writings are found in the Hubert H. Harrison Papers (which also contain a detailed
Finding Aid) at the Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Columbia University. Other writings appear in his two books
The Negro and the Nation (1917) and
When Africa Awakes. A two-volume biography by Jeffrey B. Perry is being published by
Columbia University Press. The first volume,
The Voice of Harlem Radicalism, 1883-1918,
[20] was published in November 2008 (an excerpt is available online).
[20]