First Pan-African Conference, London, 1900
Black cells identify data we know is missing.
Last Name | First Name | Country | Title | Citation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alcindor | John | Trinidad & London | Physician & Activist | Martin 207 |
Archer | John | United Kingdom | Politician & Activist | Martin 207 |
Arnett | B.W. | United States | chaplain | Geiss 182 |
Barrier | Ella D. | United States | Geiss 182; Adi 79 | |
Brown | Henry B. | Canada | Reverend | Geiss 182 |
Buckle | J. | United Kingdom/Gold Coast | Geiss 183; Sherwood 78 | |
Calloway | T.J. | United States | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 182 | |
Christian | George Jaes | Dominica | Law student | |
Cobden Unwin | Jane | United Kingdom | London City Council | Schneer 178 |
Colenso | R.J. | South Africa | Doctor | Hooker 21 |
Coleridge Taylor | Samuel | United Kingdom | Composer-conductor | http://www.blackandasianstudies.org/jeff.pdf; Hooker 21 |
Cooper | Anna Julia | United States | Teacher & Activist | Hooker 21 |
Creighton | Mandell | United Kingdom | Bishop of London | Peter Fryer in Staying Power: The History of Black People in Britain(Pluto Press, 1984) |
Dean | Harry | Captain | Adi, Pan-Africanism 79 | |
Dove | G.W. | Sierra Leone | Councillor | Hooker 21 |
Downing | Henry Francis (alternate Henry R) | United States | Sailor, politician & writer | Tony Martin, Pan-African Connection: From Slavery to Garvey and Beyond (Dover: Majority Press, 1985), p. 207. |
Du Bois | W.E.B. | United States | Intellectual | Tony Martin, Pan-African Connection: From Slavery to Garvey and Beyond (Dover: Majority Press, 1985), p. 207; Hooker 21; Schneer 182 |
French | C.W. | St. Kitt's | Hooker 21; Schneer 182 | |
Hamilton | A.R. | Jamaica | Lawyer | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 183; Walters 254 |
Harris | Ada | United States | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 182 | |
Impey | Catherine | Adi, Pan-Africanism 78 | ||
Johnson | F.S.R. | Liberia | ex-attorney-general | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 182 |
Jones | Anna H. | United States | Teacher | |
Lee | Chas P. | United States | counsellor | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 182 |
Loudin | J.F. | United States | Director of Fisk Jubilee Singers | Hooker 21 |
Loudin | Mrs. J.F. | United States | Wife of J.F. Loudin | Walters 254 |
Love | J.L. | United States | Professor | Hooker 21 |
Mason Joseph | H. | Antigua | reverend | Geiss The Pan-Aftrican Movement 183 |
Meyer | William | West Indies | Medical student | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 183 |
Moscheles | Felix | United Kingdom | pacifist and internationalist | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 189 |
Naoroji | Dadabhai | India | Intellectual & Politician | Tony Martin, Pan-African Connection: From Slavery to Garvey and Beyond (Dover: Majority Press, 1985), p. 207. |
Phipps | Richard E | Trinidad | Lawyer | Hooker 21 |
Pulcherrie Pierre | A. | Trinidad | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 183 | |
Quinlan | John E. | St. Lucia | land surveyor | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 183 |
Ribeiro | A.F. | Gold Coast (Ghana) | Attorney | Hooker 21 |
Savage | Dr. R. Akiwande K. | West Indies | delegate of the Afro-West Indian Literary Society, Edinburgh | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 182; Adi, Pan-Africanism 148 |
Smith | Henry | United Kingdom | reverend | Geiss The Pan-African Movement 183 |
Sylvain | Benito | Haiti & Ethiopia | Aide-de-Camp to Emperor Menelik of Ethiopia | Hooker 21; Schneer 182 |
Tobias | D.E. | United States | ||
Walters | Alexander | United States | Bishop of AME Zion Church; also president of the National Afro-American Council | Tony Martin, Pan-African Connection: From Slavery to Garvey and Beyond (Dover: Majority Press, 1985), p. 207.; Hooker 21; Geiss "The Pan-African Movement" p. 182 |
Williams | Fannie Barrier | United States | Adi, Pan-Africanism 79 | |
Williams | Henry Sylvester | Trinidad | Barrister | https://newint.org//features/2000/08/05/simply/; per Hooker 21, Williams may have been inaccurately described as a barrister |