Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Audley Moore
View through CrossRef
Audley Moore (b. 1898–d. 1997) was born in New Iberia, Louisiana, to St. Cyr and Ella Moore and had a relatively happy girlhood in New Orleans until the death of both parents left her and her sisters, Eloise and Loretta, orphaned. Her activist life began shortly after when she joined Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) in New Orleans in 1922. Moore’s fervor for Black Nationalism led her to migrate to Harlem—the location of UNIA headquarters—in the late 1920s. When she arrived, the UNIA had dissipated, but the Communist Party had taken its place as a group successfully organizing the local Black community. Moore joined the Communist Party and worked within it to organize the Black working class. By 1935, she was a lead recruiter and organizer for the Upper Harlem Branch of the Party. Her work at the grassroots level led to citywide, Party-backed appointments including managing communist candidate Ben Davis’s successful campaign for a New York City Council seat in 1944. During and after World War II, she worked with a range of Black leftist organizations including the National Negro Congress, the Civil Rights Congress, and the National Council of Negro Women. When 1950s anticommunist hysteria targeted communists and progressives alike, Moore left the Party and struck out on her own. In the second half of the 20th century Moore sowed the seeds of Black Nationalism across the United States. Moore fostered gender-conscious Black Nationalism and started the modern reparations movement through her New Orleans–based group, the Universal Association of Ethiopian Women (UAEW). She also nurtured Black Nationalism and reparations activity through Black Power–era organizations such as the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Republic of New Africa, and the Black Panther Party. From the 1970s to the 1990s, Moore served as a mother and mentor of the radical Black liberation movement, taking on the honorific “Queen Mother.” She was a sought-after teacher and theoretician who traveled globally. For example, Moore was the keynote speaker at the All-Africa Women’s Conference in Tanzania 1972 and a personal guest of Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere and Guinean President Sekou Touré in subsequent years. She was also member of other Black Nationalist and Pan-Africanist groups such as the All-African People’s Party and the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations (N’COBRA), among others. She passed away in Brooklyn, New York, on 2 May 1997.
Title: Audley Moore
Description:
Audley Moore (b.
1898–d.
1997) was born in New Iberia, Louisiana, to St.
Cyr and Ella Moore and had a relatively happy girlhood in New Orleans until the death of both parents left her and her sisters, Eloise and Loretta, orphaned.
Her activist life began shortly after when she joined Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) in New Orleans in 1922.
Moore’s fervor for Black Nationalism led her to migrate to Harlem—the location of UNIA headquarters—in the late 1920s.
When she arrived, the UNIA had dissipated, but the Communist Party had taken its place as a group successfully organizing the local Black community.
Moore joined the Communist Party and worked within it to organize the Black working class.
By 1935, she was a lead recruiter and organizer for the Upper Harlem Branch of the Party.
Her work at the grassroots level led to citywide, Party-backed appointments including managing communist candidate Ben Davis’s successful campaign for a New York City Council seat in 1944.
During and after World War II, she worked with a range of Black leftist organizations including the National Negro Congress, the Civil Rights Congress, and the National Council of Negro Women.
When 1950s anticommunist hysteria targeted communists and progressives alike, Moore left the Party and struck out on her own.
In the second half of the 20th century Moore sowed the seeds of Black Nationalism across the United States.
Moore fostered gender-conscious Black Nationalism and started the modern reparations movement through her New Orleans–based group, the Universal Association of Ethiopian Women (UAEW).
She also nurtured Black Nationalism and reparations activity through Black Power–era organizations such as the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Republic of New Africa, and the Black Panther Party.
From the 1970s to the 1990s, Moore served as a mother and mentor of the radical Black liberation movement, taking on the honorific “Queen Mother.
” She was a sought-after teacher and theoretician who traveled globally.
For example, Moore was the keynote speaker at the All-Africa Women’s Conference in Tanzania 1972 and a personal guest of Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere and Guinean President Sekou Touré in subsequent years.
She was also member of other Black Nationalist and Pan-Africanist groups such as the All-African People’s Party and the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations (N’COBRA), among others.
She passed away in Brooklyn, New York, on 2 May 1997.
Related Results
Marianne Moore
Marianne Moore
“Everything is worthless but the best and this is the best,” William Carlos Williams said of the poetry of Marianne Moore (b. 1887–d. 1972) in The Dial, though “only,” he warned, “...
Studi Perbandingan Implementasi Algoritma Boyer-Moore, Turbo Boyer-Moore, dan Tuned Boyer-Moore dalam Pencarian String
Studi Perbandingan Implementasi Algoritma Boyer-Moore, Turbo Boyer-Moore, dan Tuned Boyer-Moore dalam Pencarian String
String searching merupakan suatu proses yang umum dilakukan dalam proses-proses yang dilakukan komputer karena teks merupakan bentuk utama penyimpanan data. Terdapat beberapa macam...
Henry Moore: Neo-Working-Classicist
Henry Moore: Neo-Working-Classicist
With his Family Group of 1948–49, Henry Moore seemed to have reneged upon his early-career commitment to modernist experimentation, pivoting towards a more representation...
Sensation, Genders, and Identity Politics in Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret
Sensation, Genders, and Identity Politics in Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret
Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret (1862), considered one of the best sensational novels in the Victorian age, offers a new space for re-considering identities, genders,...
KONTRUKSI KEGILAAN DALAM NOVEL LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET KARYA MARY ELIZABETH BRADDON
KONTRUKSI KEGILAAN DALAM NOVEL LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET KARYA MARY ELIZABETH BRADDON
ABSTRAKPermasalahan permasalahan mengenai kegilaan sering menjadi tema para penulis sastra. Tema ini juga banyak hadir di karya sastra pada era Victoria. Para penulis besar menghad...
The Marianne Moore Digital Archive
The Marianne Moore Digital Archive
Established in 2015, the Marianne Moore Digital Archive (MMDA) makes digital reproductions and transcriptions of Moore’s notebooks easily and freely accessible to scholarly, classr...
Moore, George Edward (1873–1958)
Moore, George Edward (1873–1958)
G.E. Moore was one of the most influential British philosophers of the twentieth century. His early writings are renowned for his rejection of idealist metaphysics and his insisten...
Marianne Moore and the Archives
Marianne Moore and the Archives
Marianne Moore and the Archives explores the work of a major modernist poet in the contexts of material culture and the digital humanities. In major new discoveries, scholars discu...


