Young organizer at the Black Lives Matter rally in Anchorage (2020) by Anchorage Museum, Branstetter Collection, B2021.1Anchorage Museum
JUSTICE
Young organizer at the Black Lives Matter rally in Anchorage, 2020
Anchorage Museum, Branstetter Collection, B2021.1
JUSTICE
Activism has helped shape Alaska. Black Alaskans have taken to the streets, but also to city and town halls, the State Capitol, corporate boardrooms, and courtrooms to assert their rights and call out injustice, similar to efforts elsewhere in the US. Alaska’s Black activists protested housing and employment discrimination and advocated for greater accountability in law enforcement, at times forging alliances with Indigenous, Asian, Pacific Islander, and white allies.
Black Civil Rights in Alaska built on the momentum of ongoing Alaska Native activism and advocacy. In 1945, Alaska Native peoples successfully promoted the passage of the Equal Rights Act, an early measure by the territory to limit race-based discrimination in public places. In the 1960s, as the Civil Rights movement was gaining steam throughout the US, Alaska’s communities of color fought and won significant victories.
Celebrating Alaska youth participating in national ACT-SO sponsored by NAACP (1981) by Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.280 Anchorage Museum
CELEBRATING ALASKA YOUTH PARTICIPATING IN NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURAL TECHNOLOGICAL SCIENTIFIC OLYMPICS (ACT-SO) SPONSORED BY NAACP, 1981. Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.280
In the 1930s and 40s, the NAACP repeatedly declined to charter a branch in Alaska, since it was not yet a state. In 1951, after a racist arson attack, it didn’t take long for the NAACP to emerge as a hub for civil rights mobilization. John W. Thomas, Blanche McSmith, Clarence and Flossie Coleman, Joseph M. Jackson, John S. Parks, and Richard Watts are some associated with the early days of the NAACP in Alaska. The NAACP remains a focal point of Black activism and civic engagement in Alaska.
ANCHORAGE MAYOR BYER WITH MEMBERS OF THE ALASKA NAACP
Anchorage Museum, Ward Wells Collection, B1983.91.C3504
ANCHORAGE MAYOR GEORGE HENRY BYER WITH MEMBERS OF THE ALASKA NAACP, INCLUDING BLANCHE MCSMITH (SEATED), ANCHORAGE CITY HALL, 1959
Alvin C. Campbell (1969) by Anchorage Museum, Alaska Railroad Collection, B1979.2.1909Anchorage Museum
Alvin C. Campbell, 1969
Anchorage Museum, Alaska Railroad Collection, B1979.2.1909
Alvin Campbell encountered taunts and racist slurs as he and his family prepared to move into a newly constructed home in Anchorage’s segregated Rogers Park neighborhood. In October 1950, days before he and his family planned to move into the new house, it was burned to the ground in a racially motivated arson attack. Black Alaskans immediately rallied around the Campbells and successfully lobbied the NAACP to charter its first Alaskan branch.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Black activists along Alaska’s railbelt, the urbanized stretch of the state extending from Seward to Fairbanks, took up causes associated with the civil rights movement. Job security and employment discrimination, access to housing, and inclusion in politics and business represented some of the prevailing concerns.
Attorney Mahala Ashley Dickerson
Anchorage Museum, Fran Durner Collection, B2016.4.1021
Dickerson was born in 1912 and moved to Alaska in 1958. She was the first Black homesteader in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley. She became the first Black woman to practice law in Alaska. She was dedicated to human rights causes and often took on cases involving the rights of women and people of color as well as issues affecting the workplace. She found time to mentor young minority lawyers throughout her long career and worked tirelessly for decades to make Alaska better for everyone.
In a 1999 interview for the Matanuska-Susitna Historical Commission, Disckerson said that Alaska was “the best place in the world, the best people, the most beautiful place in the world.”
Ed Wesley with Rosa Parks at the New Hope Baptist Church in Anchorage (1982) by Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.192 Anchorage Museum
ED WESLEY WITH ROSA PARKS AT THE NEW HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH
Anchorage Museum, Ed Wesley Collection, B2021.004.192
QUEST FOR EQUALITY
Racism in the U.S. is structural, which means that patterns of discrimination are persistent and embedded in our legal, educational, health care, and economic institutions. Many Black Alaskans remain engaged in the quest for equality and have joined a diverse coalition to build a more inclusive Alaska in the 21st century, one with equity and justice at its center.
A mother and her child at the “I Can’t Breathe” rally (2020) by Anchorage Museum, Branstetter Collection, B2021.1 Anchorage Museum
A MOTHER AND HER CHILD AT THE “I CAN’T BREATHE” RALLY
Anchorage Museum, Branstetter Collection, B2021.1
After the killings of Trayvon Martin in Florida in 2012 and Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, nationwide protests erupted over systemic racial injustice and the deeply rooted and historic devaluation of Black lives in the US. The refrain, “Black Lives Matter” could be heard from Sanford, Florida to Anchorage, Alaska. The movement gained more traction after the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor by law enforcement in Minneapolis and Louisville, respectively, in 2020.
Amid the global pandemic, millions of people protested and demanded an end to racism, white supremacy, and police violence. Again, Alaskans took to the streets, not only in Anchorage and Fairbanks but also in smaller communities. A multi-racial coalition of Alaska Natives, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, and whites stood in solidarity with Black Alaskans. By the end of the year, Black Lives Matter had become one of the largest, most sustained social movements in the nation’s history.
To learn more about Black Lives in Alaska: Journey, Justice, Joy, visit the online exhibition: https://www.anchoragemuseum.org/exhibits/black-lives-in-alaska-journey-justice-joy/