Millennials Are Killing Capitalism

Queen Mother Audley Moore: Midwife of Black Revolutionary Nationalism with Dr. Ashley D Farmer

9 snips
Feb 1, 2026
Dr. Ashley D. Farmer, a historian of Black women and radical politics, guides a lively tour of Queen Mother Audley Moore’s life. Short vignettes cover Moore’s Garveyite roots, migration-driven organizing in Los Angeles and Harlem, her role in founding grassroots reparations, tense ties with parties and state surveillance, and the women-centered networks that sustained long-term Black nationalist work.
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INSIGHT

Midwife Of Black Nationalism

  • Queen Mother Audley Moore shaped 20th-century Black nationalism by advancing Garveyite ideas across decades.
  • Her longevity let her bridge Garveyism, communism, and later nationalist movements to sustain nationalist thought.
ANECDOTE

From Creole Privilege To Radicalization

  • Moore's father rose from slavery to own businesses and serve as a constable during Reconstruction in Louisiana.
  • That family background initially made her an unlikely nationalist until she met Marcus Garvey.
ANECDOTE

The Moore Sisters' Collective Work

  • The Moore sisters formed a lifelong organizing trio, with Eloise opening Audley's political eyes and Loretta providing steady support.
  • Their collective work ranged from soldier care to nationalist and grassroots organizing across decades.
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