Isaac Theophilus Akunna Wallace-Johnson
Isaac Theophilus Akunna Wallace-Johnson
Isaac Theophilus Akunna Wallace-Johnson (1895-1965) was a West African trade union organizer, nationalist political leader, journalist, and pan-Africanist.
Isaac Wallace-Johnson was born of Creole parents in Wilberforce, Sierra Leone. Educated mainly in mission schools, he had to abandon secondary school in order to support his family. He worked in various commercial establishments until 1913, when he became a clerk for the colonial government.
Bureaucratic Career
Wallace-Johnson's talents as an organizer and public speaker quickly propelled him to a position of leadership. At the Customs Department, he organized the first trade union in Sierra Leone, among temporary customs officers. When he called for a strike in 1914, he was fired. He entered the British army in 1915 as a clerk in the Carrier Corps. Returning to Sierra Leone in 1920, he worked for the Freetown City
Council but resigned in 1926 to serve on a United States merchant ship. He published The Seafarer, an occasional journal of maritime labor news, then joined the staff of the Lagos Daily Times.
Wallace-Johnson first came to the attention of the Moscow Comintern in 1930 at an International Conference of Negro Workers in Hamburg, Germany. After organizing the African Workers' Union in Nigeria in 1931, he and other black nationalist leaders were invited to the Soviet Union to attend the International Labor Defense Congress. He may have also enrolled briefly in the People's University of the East in Moscow under his favorite pseudonym, W. Daniels. Eventually, he became an associate editor of the Paris Communist publication Negro Worker, contributing articles under several pseudonyms.
Journalist and Organizer
Wallace-Johnson then moved to the Gold Coast to write for the African Morning Post of his friend Nnamdi Azikiwe and to organize workers in the mining areas. Identified by the British as an agitator and potential troublemaker, he was arrested, along with Azikiwe, for writing and publishing a seditious editorial. Convicted, he appealed and lost, then appealed to Great Britain's Privy Council.
In England, Wallace-Johnson attracted attention and support from leading British left-wing intellectuals and politicians. He also intensified his contact with George Padmore, Jomo Kenyatta, C. L. R. James, and others affiliated with the newly established International African Service Bureau. Wallace-Johnson became editor of Africa and the World and with Padmore, of the African Sentinel.
In April 1938 Wallace-Johnson returned to Freetown, intending to make his stay a short one. But customs agents seized 2,000 copies of the African Sentinel which he was bringing into Sierra Leone. The resulting publicity drew crowds to his series of public lectures. His oratory was brilliant, his targets well chosen, the population ready for leadership. Less than three weeks after his arrival, bolstered by a mass following, Wallace-Johnson inaugurated the West African Youth League, the first effective, large-scale political movement in Sierra Leone's history.
Supported by wage earners and the unemployed, the Youth League swept two elections in a row: the Freetown Municipal Council elections of 1938 and the Legislative Council elections of 1939. These successes, plus Wallace-Johnson's charismatic effect on the masses, his unrelenting exposure of labor exploitation, and his uncanny ability to discredit the colonial government, further angered British officials.
Fearing that Wallace-Johnson would foment disloyalty among African soldiers and policemen, the government enacted a series of ordinances in the summer of 1939 which severely limited his and other Sierra Leoneans' liberties. At the start of World War II he was interned as an "undesirable."
Upon his release late in 1944, Wallace-Johnson resumed his activities immediately. He was an influential spokesman at several international conferences, particularly the 1945 Manchester Pan African Conference. Within Sierra Leone, however, he entered a political cul-de-sac. The Youth League foundered, never regaining the momentum and following which it had lost during the war. Wallace-Johnson himself lost considerable popular support when he opposed the planned reconstitution of the Legislative Council to give majority representation to the protectorate. Although he was still respected and admired as a witty political critic, his stand on this issue denied him a major role in Sierra Leone's postwar independence movement. On May 10, 1965, at the age of 70, he died in a car crash in Ghana while attending the Afro Asian Solidarity Conference.
Further Reading
There is no study of Wallace-Johnson as yet, but some information can be found in James Hooker, Black Revolutionary: George Padmore's Path from Communism to Pan-Africanism (1967). Wallace-Johnson's career is recounted in John R. Cartwright, Politics in Sierra Leone, 1947-67 (1970). Good background information is in Martin Kilson, Political Change in a West African State: A Study of the Modernization Process in Sierra Leone (1966). □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Holbein: court painter of the Reformation.(Hans Holbein)
Magazine article from: History Today; 2/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; Andrew Pettegree charts Hans Holbein's path from Germany to England...as a great Protestant painter. Hans Holbein, who was born 500 years ago this...traditions in which he had been raised. Hans Holbein came from a family of artists...
|
|
Holbein: anatomy of the first great secular artist: Holbein is being celebrated this year by exhibitions in Basel and London. At Basel, writes Bruce Boucher, the artist's reputation for psychological insight is triumphantly confirmed, together with a range and variety obscured by his reputation as a portraitist.(EXHIBITIONS)(Hans Holbein)
Magazine article from: Apollo; 7/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...London prepares for a major Holbein exhibition this autumn...known formative years. 'Hans Holbein: The Years in Basel...his Augsburg compatriot Hans Daucher, and an even...Lucas van Leyden shows Holbein embellishing the architectural...
|
|
Henry's head hunter; Artist HANS HOLBEIN had a high client turnover. No sooner was his paint dry than many of his subjects' heads were off. As a major new exhibition opens, TV's Tudor historian DAVID STARKEY tells his remarkable story.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 9/23/2006; 700+ words
; ...port of Antwerp. His name was Hans Holbein and his journey would take him...astonishing accomplishments of Hans Holbein. For without his career, mine...from the cradle as his father, Hans Holbein the Elder, was also an accomplished...
|
|
Swiss show Basel works of Hans Holbein, court painter to Henry VIII
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 4/19/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...2006 Dateline: BASEL, Switzerland Hans Holbein the Younger stayed on as a court...Professional pragmatism marked the life of Holbein, yet he is still considered by...Kunstmuseum, which holds the bulk of Holbein's works, has mounted a comprehensive...
|
|
Mortal immortal: Christopher S. Wood on Hans Holbein the Younger.(FROM THE VAULT)(Biography)
Magazine article from: Artforum International; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...neighboring room. The painting, Hans Holbein the Younger's Body of the Dead...rise again? Face-to-face with Holbein's painting, Dostoevsky doubted...In 2006 the bipolar career of Holbein (1497/98-1543) will unfold...
|
|
How the English dumbed down Hans Holbein; The brilliant young German who became court painter to Henry VIII was a devout Catholic and could easily have lost his head. Dull conformity saved him from the axe.
Newspaper article from: The Evening Standard (London, England); 9/29/2006; 700+ words
; ...particularly to Anne Boleyn, he described Hans Holbein as the King's painter, the Apelles...Alexander the Great, and thus, if Holbein was accounted the Apelles of the...then Henry must be the Alexander. Hans Holbein was born deep in the south of Germany...
|
|
Holbein at the Tate: Peter Furtado welcomes a major exhibition of the great painter of Henry VIII and his court at Tare Britain.(FRONTLINE)(Hans Holbein, the Younger)
Magazine article from: History Today; 10/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...of a painter born in Augsburg, Hans Holbein (1497/8-1543), many of whose...Tate Britain from September 28th. Holbein visited England twice; for the...place at the right time, arguably Holbein was the first great painter in early...
|
|
London looks north: a Holbein portrait recently authenticated in Apollo leads a London old master season that is exceptionally strong in northern works.(ART MARKET)(Hans Holbein the Younger)
Magazine article from: Apollo; 7/1/2006; 700+ words
; ...rediscovered late portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger, previously...which now allows us to see Holbein's underdrawing (as...examined it alongside Holbein's comparable portrait...July, Christie's offer Hans Hoffmann's splendid...
|
|
High Hopes For Hans Holbein
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 2/13/1992; ; 496 words
; ...Pet Squirrel and a Starling" by Hans Holbein the Younger, will be auctioned...Mantegna and is a contender for the Holbein. "Obviously the Getty will go...masters dealer. The Getty purchased Holbein's drawing "Portrait of a Scholar...
|
|
MOBILE MASTERPIECES; Salvador Diali. Hans-free Holbein. Toulouse La Signal. The artists who use their phones to make...(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 6/19/2009; 509 words
; AT FIRST glance they look like paintings that might grace the National Gallery of Ireland. But believe it or not, all these pictures were created on Apple iPhones, drawn using the artists' fingers on screens no more than 3.5in wide. The programme that allows art like this to be created is called
|
|
Hans Holbein the Younger
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Hans Holbein the Younger The German painter and graphic artist Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1497-1543) combined...painter to achieve international fame. Hans Holbein the Younger, born in Augsburg, was...
|
|
Hans Holbein
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Hans Holbein the elder, c.1465-1524, German painter and draftsman. Holbein...the same talent for which his son Hans became renowned. Ambrosius Holbein Hans Holbein's older son, Ambrosius Holbein, c.1495-c.1519, is best...
|
|
Holbein, Hans (the Younger) (1497–1543)
Book article from: The Renaissance
Holbein, Hans (the Younger) (1497...a student of his father, Hans Holbein the Elder, a noted painter...Gothic style in Germany. Holbein the Younger journeyed to...apprenticed with the painter Hans Herbster and where he joined...
|
|
Holbein, Hans, the Younger (1497/98–1543)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
HOLBEIN, HANS, THE YOUNGER (1497/98 – 1543) HOLBEIN, HANS, THE YOUNGER (1497/98 – 1543), German portrait painter. Hans Holbein the Younger, a painter and designer...
|
|
Holbein, Hans
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
Holbein, Hans ( b Augsburg, ?1497; d London, Oct./Nov. 1543). German painter...all portraitists. He trained in his native Augsburg with his father Hans Holbein the Elder ( c. 1465–1534), one of the leading artists of...
|