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The power of the Panthers


The power of the Panthers

Black Panther National Chairman Bobby Seale, left, wears a Colt .45, and Huey Newton, right, carries a shotgun in Oakland, California, in the 1960s. The group's look and defiant rhetoric made black militancy fashionable in the late '60s.

The power of the Panthers

Black Panther leader Kathleen Cleaver in 1968. Though men got most of the attention in the Black Panther Party, the group recruited many strong women leaders. Cleaver is now a law professor at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.

The power of the Panthers

Panthers line up at a rally in DeFremery Park, in Oakland, California. The Panthers' focus on police brutality in the black community and racial bias in the criminal justice system anticipated the Black Lives Matter movement 50 years later.

The power of the Panthers

American revolutionary and educator Angela Davis is pictured in November 1969, shortly after she was fired as philosophy professor at UCLA due to her membership in the Communist Party of America. Davis followed up her brilliant early academic career by joining the Black Panthers and being added to the FBI Most Wanted list. She was acquitted of all charges and continues to be a writer, educator, and activist for race, class, and gender equality.

The power of the Panthers

The power of the Panthers

Black Panthers demonstrate in Oakland, California. The group created free breakfast programs for poor kids and free health clinics for the needy. It also produced a Black Panther newspaper that reaches thousands of readers at the group's peak.

The power of the Panthers

American political and social activist and Black Panther Party member Fred Hampton speaks at the Days of Rage rally in Chicago in October 1969. Hampton was shot to death in his bed by police in a predawn raid only two months later.

The power of the Panthers

The Black Panther Party weren't just revolutionaries, they were fashion trendsetters. Their Afros and emphasis on "black is beautiful" changed how blacks dressed and carried themselves in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The power of the Panthers

Children walk by Panther Power graffiti. The group saw themselves as the vanguard of a worldwide revolution, a revolution that had sparked uprisings in places like Vietnam and Cuba in the 1960s.

The power of the Panthers

Black Panthers demonstrate at the Alameda County Court House in Oakland in July 1968. There are still several Panthers serving time in prison 50 years after the group's formation.

The power of the Panthers

The Panthers said they carried guns as a form of self-defense against police brutality. The Panthers, not the NRA, were forerunners of the open carry gun movement and were fierce defenders of the Second Amendment's right to bear arms.

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