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  1. Amy Ashwood Garvey (née Ashwood; 10 January 1897 – 3 May 1969) was a Jamaican Pan-Africanist activist. She was a director of the Black Star Line Steamship Corporation, and along with her former husband Marcus Garvey she founded the Negro World newspaper.

  2. 25 de fev. de 2007 · Ashwood lived in West Africa for three years between 1946 and 1949. However, she returned to her native Jamaica where she died in 1969. Throughout her life Amy Ashwood Garvey campaigned for the liberation of the entire continent and in particular for the rights of African women.

  3. 24 de abr. de 2023 · Amy Ashwood Garvey: A Trailblazing Pan-Africanist and Advocate for Black Empowerment in the Windrush Generation. On 10 January 1897, Amy Ashwood Garvey was born in Port Antonio, Jamaica, and her personal journey as a prominent Pan-Africanist and a leading figure in the Windrush Generation began.

  4. Amy Ashwood-Garvey made unique contributions to the anti-colonial Garvey movement in the Caribbean and in Africa. She lectured in the Caribbean and in West Africa, and played an instrumental role in unifying the black and Indian populations in Guyana.

  5. Amy Ashwood Garvey was a race woman, a ‘street-strolling’ Pan-Africanist and leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. For this gifted conversationalist, public orator and rhetorician, political praxis and organizing were a way of theorizing.

  6. 1 de ago. de 2009 · https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2009-042. Share. Tools. Amy Ashwood was an activist in the pan-African movement, a feminist, and the first wife of Marcus Garvey. Their marriage ended after two months, when Garvey left her for Ashwoods chief bridesmaid and best friend Amy Jacques.

  7. Há 4 dias · Amy Ashwood, feminist, playwright, lecturer, and pan-Africanist, was one of the founding members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Jamaica, and the first wife of Marcus Garvey.