The Berkeley Revolution
A digital archive of the East Bay's transformation in the late-1960s & 1970s
PROJECTS
The Flatlands’ War on Poverty
Berkeley Women’s Music Collective
The Asian Community Library
The Black Panthers’ Education Revolution
The Integral Urban House
The Countercultural Kitchen
A Place for Every Body
The Secret History of Recycling
Pacific Center
Threads of Rebellion
Citizens vs. Developers
The Women and Girls of Telegraph Ave
Berkeley’s Public Schools
The Rainbow Sign
The Third World Liberation Front
Transgender Berkeley
PEOPLE
Nacio Jan Brown, photographer
Mary Ann Pollar, activist and impresario
PLACES
Telegraph Avenue
The Keystone
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Documents Tagged ‘Huey Newton’
Rebop program on the OCS, with Huey Newton interviewed by a student
Archive Entry Date: 1978
Rare footage of OCS shows youth empowerment and joy, spiritual nourishment and critical thinking
200 Demonstrators Chant ‘Free Huey’
Archive Entry Date: 6/30/1977
Family and students of OCS, along with others, protest Newton's detainment in Canada on his way back from Cuba.
Invitation to Huey P. Newton’s Book Party
Archive Entry Date: 11/19/1972
The Rainbow Sign positioned itself somewhere between assimilation and revolution--but it was all Black Power
Solidarity with the Black Panther Party
Archive Entry Date: 8/8/1970
A Letter from Huey P. Newton in support of Gay and Women's Liberation galvanizes the movement and causes tension with the Gay Establishment
Huey Newton Released from Prison
Archive Entry Date: 8/5/1970
When Huey Newton's manslaughter conviction was reversed, supporters held a rally upon his release