Louise Little Explained

Louise Little
Birthname:Louise Helen Norton Langdon
Birth Date:1894 or 1897
Birth Place:La Digue, Saint Andrew Parish, Grenada
Death Date:December 18, 1989 (aged 91–95)[1]
Death Place:Lilley Township, Michigan, U.S.
Occupation:Activist
Children:8, including Malcolm X

Louise Helen Norton Little (née Langdon; 1894 or 1897 – December 18, 1989) was a Grenadian-born American activist. She was the mother of Malcolm X.

Early years and family

Louise Helen Norton Langdon was born in La Digue, Saint Andrew Parish, Grenada to Ella Langdon in either 1894 or 1897.[2] Ella was the daughter of Jupiter and Mary Jane Langdon, both of whom were kidnapped from Africa, possibly in the region of modern-day Nigeria, and sold into slavery. The pair were freed by the British Royal Navy and eventually transported to the Grenadian village of La Digue.[3] It has been claimed that Louise's mother, Ella,[4] one of six children of the Langdons, was raped by a "significantly older" Scotsman named Norton, resulting in Louise's birth.[5] [6]

In later years, Louise's maternal uncle, Egerton Langdon, stated that her father was a bank teller from England. A local historian has suggested that Louise had an older brother, Ruford, who only died at a few years of age.

Little was raised by her grandparents, Jupiter and Mary Jane, until Jupiter's death in 1901 and Mary Jane's death in 1916.[7] She was educated in a local Anglican school, and was fluent in English, French and Grenadian Creole French.[8] After her grandmother's death, she emigrated from Grenada in 1917 to Montreal, where her uncle Egerton Langdon introduced her to Garveyism and the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA).[9]

Career

Through the UNIA in Montreal, she met Earl Little, a craftsman and a lay minister from Reynolds, Georgia. The couple married on May 10, 1919.[10] The following year, they moved to Philadelphia because they believed that their lives in that city would be better than their lives in Canada, and then, they moved to Omaha, Nebraska in 1921. While she was in Omaha, she became the secretary and the "branch reporter" of the UNIA's local chapter, sending news about local UNIA activities, led by Earl, to Negro World; they inculcated self-reliance and black pride in their children.[11] [12] [13] Their son Malcolm, who became famous as Malcolm X, later said that white violence killed four of his father's brothers.[14] Another son, Wilfred, later remembered that Louise "received letters from the leaders of the movement thanking her for the work she had done and praising her for her devotion to the cause".[15] Earl and Louise had seven children together: Wilfred (1920–1998), Hilda (1921–2015), Philbert (1923–1993), Malcolm (1925–1965), Reginald (1927–2001), Wesley (1928–2009), and Yvonne (1929–2003). Her eighth child, Robert (1938–1999), had a different father. See below.

Because of threats from the Ku Klux Klan – Earl's UNIA activities were said to be "spreading trouble"[16] – the family relocated to Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1926, and shortly thereafter, the family relocated to Lansing, Michigan.[17] There the family was frequently harassed by the Black Legion, a white racist group. When the family home burned in 1929, Earl accused the Black Legion.[18]

In 1931, Earl died in what was officially ruled a streetcar accident, though Louise believed Earl had been murdered by the Black Legion. Rumors that white racists were responsible for Earl's death were widely circulated, and were very disturbing to Louise and their children.[19] After a dispute with creditors, Louise received a life insurance benefit (nominally $1,000about $,000 in dollars) in payments of $18 per month;[20] the issuer of another, larger policy refused to pay, claiming her husband Earl had committed suicide.[21] To make ends meet Louise rented out part of her garden, and her sons hunted game.[22]

During the 1930s, white Seventh-day Adventists witnessed to the Little family; later on Louise Little and her son Wilfred were baptized into the Seventh-day Adventist Church.[23] In 1937, a man Louise had been datingmarriage had seemed a possibilityvanished from her life when she became pregnant with his child, Robert (1938–1999).[24] In late 1938 she had a nervous breakdown and was committed to Kalamazoo State Hospital. The children were separated and sent to foster homes.

Little was institutionalized at the Kalamazoo Mental Hospital from 1939 through 1963. Malcolmwho rose to fame as Malcolm X, a leading minister of the Nation of Islamjoined his siblings in securing her release from the hospital. She lived with her surviving family and descendants for the rest of her life mostly in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Most of her children lived and died in Grand Rapids like her where she was a member of Bethel Seventh-Day Adventist Church.

References

Sources

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Overlooked No More: Louise Little, Activist and Mother of Malcolm X . The New York Times . 19 March 2022 . January 9, 2023 . Solomon . Jolie .
  2. Jolie Solomon, "Overlooked No More: Louise Little: Activist and Mother of Malcolm X" in New York Times March 19, 2022 clearly states we do not know if Little was born in 1894 or 1897. Other sources give one year or the other, but it appears that we cannot state from actual available sources either year definitavely
  3. Web site: On Louise Little, the Mother of Malcolm X: An Interview with Erik S. McDuffie . Keisha N. . Blain . February 19, 2017 . Black Perspectives . African American Intellectual History Society . July 14, 2018 .
  4. Book: Russell, Jessica. The Life of Louise Norton Little: An extraordinary woman: mother of Malcolm X and his 7 siblings. 31 August 2020 . August 31, 2020) .
  5. Erik S. . McDuffie . The Diasporic Journeys of Louise Little: Grassroots Garveyism, the Midwest, and Community Feminism . Fall 2016 . Women, Gender, and Families of Color . 4 . 2 . 152 . 10.5406/womgenfamcol.4.2.0139 .
  6. Web site: Writer, Teacher, Activist and Voice for Caribbean History . Lorraine . Graham . November 14, 2018 . College of Arts & Humanities, University of Maryland . June 17, 2020 .
  7. McDuffie, pp.152–153.
  8. Web site: Activist's mom 'stood her ground' . Julie . Wurth . April 7, 2016 . . July 14, 2018 .
  9. McDuffie, p.155.
  10. McDuffie, p.155.
  11. Book: Marable, Manning . Manning Marable . . New York . Viking . 2011 . 978-0-670-02220-5 . 20–30 .
  12. Book: Perry, Bruce . Malcolm: The Life of a Man Who Changed Black America . 1991 . Station Hill . Barrytown, N.Y. . 978-0-88268-103-0 . 2–3 . registration .
  13. Ted . Vincent . The Garveyite Parents of Malcolm X . . 20 . 2 . March–April 1989 . 10–13 . 10.1080/00064246.1989.11412923 . 41067613 .
  14. Book: . . . 1965 . 1992 . One World . New York . 978-0-345-37671-8 . 3–4 .
  15. Book: Carew, Jan . Jan Carew . Ghosts in Our Blood: With Malcolm X in Africa, England and the Caribbean . 1994 . Lawrence Hill Books . Chicago . 978-1-55652-218-5 . 118 . registration .
  16. Book: DeCaro Jr., Louis A. . On the Side of My People: A Religious Life of Malcolm X . 1996 . New York University Press . New York . 978-0-8147-1864-3 . 43–44 .
  17. Book: Natambu, Kofi . The Life and Work of Malcolm X . 2002 . Alpha Books . Indianapolis . 978-0-02-864218-5 . 3 .
  18. Natambu, p.4.
  19. Marable, MalcolmX, p.29.
  20. Marable, MalcolmX, p.32
  21. Natambu, p.10.
  22. Marable, MalcolmX, p.32.
  23. Web site: Malcolm X and Seventh-day Adventism. blacksdahistory.org. July 25, 2019. July 29, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190729224741/http://www.blacksdahistory.org/malcolm-x-and-sdas.html. dead.
  24. Marable, MalcolmX, p.35.