Vote FREEDOM NOW!

Henry Cleage outside of Cleage Printers 1963

I wish my interviewing skills had been better when I recorded this. Obvious things like, turn off the radio and go to a quiet room. I edited out as much of the extraneous noise as I could. Henry and I were sitting in the living room of my house in Idlewild, MI. You can hear the sounds of the kids getting dinner on the table and hollering at the dog in the background. In 1994 my youngest four were all at home and we were homeschooling. Henry lived about 4 miles away and often had dinner with us. In his statements, Henry couldn’t remember some names. When I posted the transcript of the interview years ago, my friend Paul Lee commented:  “Henry couldn’t recall the names of the “two brothers” who co-founded the FNP with “Afro-American” newspaper foreign correspondent William W. Worthy. They were Leftist attorney Conrad J. Lynn and Daniel Watts, publisher of New York’s militant “Liberator” magazine. As you know, Worthy and Watts attended the National Negro Grass Roots Leadership Conference in November 1963.”

Yesterday I came across these posters from 1963 and today I found the theme for this weeks Sepia Saturday was Posters. Although these are not on a wall, there were identical ones put up around Detroit during the time leading up to the election of 1964.

Ronald Latham

Older posts about the Freedom Now Party

The Freedom Now Party – William Worthy’s Speech

The Freedom Now Party – Convention

Transcript of Interview With Henry Cleage – Freedom Now Party Votes Stolen

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And now a modern wall with posters not too far from my house. The colorful part is painted. The faces are printed on paper and glued on. To the left of my sister’s face, three artists were peeled off. The building is a former night spot what now stands empty in a mostly deserted strip mall.  I hope they plan to put the three missing artists back up. There were men in the back painting that wall and there are similar murals on the other walls.

A wall in Southwest Atlanta dedicated to local artists. My sister Pearl Cleage, a writer/playwrite is in the center.
For other Sepia Saturday Posts, Click photo.

22 thoughts on “Vote FREEDOM NOW!

  1. Great days. Frankly, I don’t like thinking about them cuz it makes our present reality seem — well, like a betrayal of that struggle, or like its tragic failure. As you know, last year, I was privileged to visit and photograph the now-abandoned old Cleage printers office. Even in its present disastrous state, I could still feel the vibrations of those days. Made me proud to know and be trusted by your family (a trust that I’ve never felt worthy of). Thank you, Cleage family, for EVERYTHING that you did and tried to do. And thank you, Kris, for making such a wonderful record of your family and its remarkable (mostly unheralded and misunderstood) contributions. I doubt that I’ll live long enough to see scholars get it right!

    1. Paul! It’s great to see you here. It makes me sad for the same reason. I’m so glad you and my son James did that tour of important places. I need to do some more composite photos using them.

  2. If you and Jan take that trip back in time, I’m joining you! I hadn’t thought about you using the photos that James and I shot to make more composites. Wow. If we go back in time, I’m going to stop in 1971 and stay there. After 1972, everything seemed to go south. Good intentions, for sure, but it didn’t end well. As hard as they were, my favorite years were from 1963-68, maybe including 1962. So much hope, so much possibility. Ah, well.

  3. What treasures! Thank you so much for sharing them with us! I remember the freedom now posters for Hugh, Billy Smith and my dad; they were tucked away in our dining room when I was a child. Dad used to talk about these times; your post reminds me of him.

  4. Yes, I still have a couple of my dad’s posters.
    You are right; they should have been framed and on display. I will have to work on that. Do you have one of your dad? I don’t recall ever seeing one for him.

  5. I seem to remember seeing posters for other people at some point–Lonnie, Louis, Henry? I think that the only three I have are the same ones you have posted. I wish I had asked my mother what happened to all of the rest. It is strange–a mystery that cannot be solved.

  6. Posters were often just thrown away after an event or a political campaign. Yet such ephemera is important as potent evidence of the times. In Britain this century, we have had local and general elections, plus referendum on Scottish independence, leaving the European Union and introducing proportional representation for the UK Parliament. I was involved with the regional archive centre in collecting leaflets, posters, election addresses etc on my local campaigns, and so preserving them for future researchers. Thank you for highlighting in a personal way the significance of such material. Like old newspapers I find them fascinating.

    1. So do I. We used to have a lot more, but somewhere as we moved around so much, they got lost. Wish I had kept some things more carefully.

  7. I always learn from you. And, yes, so timely with the election on our doorstep and the incidents of gerrymandering and voter suppression or oppression – not to mention the threat of hacking. Even if you didn’t follow the best practices for conducting an interview, you have this conversation and his voice recorded.

  8. Political posters must be one of the more difficult ephemera to collect. Though many were produced, they were only visible to the public for a very few weeks. And posters for losing candidates had absolutely no value on the day after the election.

    My father-in-law who lived in London was a committed saver and never threw anything away. After his death his daughters discovered a box filled with old labor party ephemera like posters and flyers. One daughter, a university history professor, recognized it as a valuable collection of historic British political material. If was sorted into order and donated to a local history society for preservation.

  9. And absolutely fabulous and timely post about a pivotal period in U.S. history. Although there are background noises in the audio, they seem to add rather than detract from the interview. This is family, after all — and to hear the comings and goings of your children and other relatives while you and Henry are talking brings home in a personal way how important and inseparable politics is too a family’s daily life.

  10. The posters are wonderful – and make me want to learn more about the Freedom Party. They also make me realize the importance of saving posters from current campaigns.

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