Richard Hart (13 August 1917 – 21 December 2013) was a Jamaican historian, solicitor and politician. He was a founding member of the People's National Party (PNP) and one of the pioneers of Marxism in Jamaica.[1] He played an important role in Jamaican politics in the years leading up to Independence in 1962.[2][3][4][5] He subsequently was based in Guyana for two years, before relocating to London, England, in 1965, working as a solicitor and co-founding the campaigning organisation Caribbean Labour Solidarity in 1974. He went on to serve as attorney-general in Grenada under the People's Revolutionary Government in 1983. He spent the latter years of his life in the UK, where he died in Bristol.
Hart was the author of several notable books on Caribbean history – including Towards Decolonisation: Political, Labour and Economic Developments in Jamaica 1939–1945 (1999), Slaves who Abolished Slavery (1980, 1985; reprinted 2002) and The Grenada Revolution: Setting the Record Straight (2005) – and he lectured on the subject at universities in the West Indies, the US, Canada and Europe.[6] Professor Rupert Lewis of the University of the West Indies' Mona campus once described Hart as "the most consistent Caribbean activist".[2]
He returned to Jamaica in 1937, and became a founding member of the People's National Party (PNP) in 1938;[7] he was on the party's executive committee from 1941 to 1952.[2][13] He had the responsibility of drafting a model trade union constitution as a member of Norman Manley's 1938 Labour Committee assisting Alexander Bustamante in the formation of a trade union,[16] and in 1940 was arrested for organising a demonstration demanding Bustamante's release from prison. Hart sat the English Law Society examinations in Jamaica, qualifying as a solicitor in 1941.[3][17] In 1942 he was imprisoned without trial by the British colonial government for his political activities.[9][13]
In 1954, Hart – who self-identified as a Marxist – was one of four PNP members who were expelled from the PNP for their (alleged) communist views.[14][18] The other three members were Frank Hill, Ken Hill and Arthur Henry, and they were collectively referred to as "the four Hs".[1][4][19] Hart was also very active in the trade union movement in Jamaica[20] in the 1940s and 1950s, and worked as a member of the executive committee of the Trade Union Council from 1946 to 1948.[9][13] He served as Assistant Secretary of the Caribbean Labour Congress from 1945 to 1946 and Assistant Secretary from 1947 to 1953.[13]
Hart was known to have been a close friend of communist activist Billy Strachan, an accomplished Royal Air Force pilot who went onto become a pioneer of Black civil rights in Britain. He once toured Jamaica with Strachan and another Black communist called Ferdinand Smith, writing a Calypso song dedicated to them both titled "The Ferdie and Billy Calypso".[21]
Believing in the importance of popular education to empower people and raise the level of political consciousness in the community – to which his first book, The Origin and Development of the People of Jamaica (1952), was dedicated – Hart helped establish the People's Educational Organisation (PEO), which organized a bookshop and held meetings and debates, including on the type of political party that was needed.[22] Together with other radical thinkers and activists he then formed the People's Freedom Movement (which was later renamed the Socialist Party of Jamaica).[23] The party disbanded in 1962.[1][4]
Guyana
After the demise of the People's Freedom Movement, Hart moved to Guyana, where he worked as the editor of The Mirror newspaper, which supported the views of Cheddi Jagan,[24] from 1963 to 1965.[13][17] While in Guyana, Hart also undertook research into the history and culture of the Arawak people, making many visits to Amerindian communities in the interior.[25] After returning to the UK Hart initiated a correspondence with Canon John P. Bennett – the first Arawak priest to be ordained as an Anglican priest – and worked to assist in the writing and publication of an Arawak-English Dictionary.[25][26] The letters exchanged between Hart and Bennett would eventually be published in 1991, in a book entitled Kabethechino ("Close Friends"), edited by Janette Forte of the University of Guyana.[25]
London
On leaving Guyana, Hart moved to London, England, where he worked as a solicitor to a Local Government Authority from 1965 to 1982.[14][17] In 1974, he was a founding member of Caribbean Labour Solidarity (CLS),[27] together with Cleston Taylor (1926–2010),[28][29] Lionel Jeffrey (1926–93)[30] and others. Hart remained the Honorary President of CLS,[27] a group that "sets itself the task of informing the concerned about labour issues in the region as a whole".[31]
Hart returned to England, where he operated a private legal practice for five years until he retired in 1988.[14][17] He contributed an introduction to In Nobody's Backyard: Maurice Bishop's Speeches, 1979–1983 — A Memorial Volume (Zed Books, 1984), placing the Grenada revolution in a historical context within the Caribbean, and later wrote other works on Grenada, including The Grenada Revolution: Setting the Record Straight (2005).
Later years
Hart was readmitted to the PNP in 2001.[2][5] In 2004, he was awarded an honorary degree by the University of the West of England.[3] In 2005, he was presented with a Gold Musgrave Medal from the Institute of Jamaica for his "sterling contribution and achievements in the field of historical research both in Jamaica and the Caribbean",[32][33] and was awarded an honorary doctorate by The University of the West Indies (UWI).[1] In June 2006, UWI ran a three-day conference on Hart's work, entitled "Politics, Activism and History: The Life and Times of Richard Hart".[1] In 2011, he was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Hull.[13]
Hart wrote a number of significant historical works over the years. He was also instrumental in the publication of the first Arawak dictionary in 1991.[34] His 1999 title Towards Decolonisation: Political, Labour and Economic Developments in Jamaica 1938–1945 was described by Linden Lewis in a review as: "a meticulously documented text about the struggle for decolonization, union recognition, and the establishment of an indigenous political party in Jamaica during the War years. The text is part memoir and part historical account. As a major participant in the labor and political struggles of the 1930s and 1940s, Hart was both observer and actor in the unfolding drama of the process of decolonization."[35] Hart's 2012 book, Caribbean Workers' Struggles, "is a wide-ranging and immensely readable essay that gives centre stage to the struggle for workers' rights and national independence against the forces of racism and imperialism."[36]Socialist Review states: "This book is testimony to the courageous and unceasing struggle from below that won freedom and political rights for a population of slaves."[37] His last published book was Occupation & Control: the British in Jamaica 1660–1962 (2013).
Labour Rebellions of the 1930s in the British Caribbean Region Colonies.[42] London: Caribbean Labour Solidarity & Socialist History Society, 2002.
The Ouster of the 4Hs from the People's National Party in Jamaica in 1952. London: Caribbean Labour Solidarity, 2000.
Towards Decolonisation: Political, Labour and Economic Developments in Jamaica 1939–1945. University of the West Indies Press. 1999. ISBN9789768125330.
^ abcdeHart, Richard (1991). "Biographical notes supplied by Richard Hart". In John P. Bennett, Richard Hart and Janette Forte (ed.). Kabethechino: A Correspondence on Arawak. Guyana: Demerara Publishers Limited. p. 42. ISBN976-8087-05-6.
^Bennett, John P.; Richard Hart (1991b). Janette Forte (ed.). Kabethechino: A Correspondence on Arawak. Guyana: Demerara Publishers Ltd. pp. 1–39. ISBN976-8087-05-6.
^Calling Hart and Taylor "two very special and unsung heroes of the Jamaican working-class movement", Winston James dedicates to them his book A Fierce Hatred of Injustice: Claude McKay's Jamaica and His Poetry of Rebellion (Verso, 2000, pp. xv–xvi): "Dick and Cleston have never forsaken the Caribbean working class and, even in exile and old age, they have worked tirelessly and selflessly to promote its cause. Veterans of the Jamaican labor movement stretching back to the 1930s, in exile they founded together Caribbean Labour Solidarity in London some thirty years ago and, through thick and mainly thin, have remained steadfast in supporting the struggle of the poor and exploited in the Caribbean. Dick and Cleston deserve to be better known, appreciated and celebrated."