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Biographical
Information
The
way for social transformation of Barbados in the early 20th Century
was prepared largely by Charles Duncan O'Neal, and this he did contrary
to accepted norms, for he held high social and professional status.
Although
a medical doctor and especially a member of the privileged class,
he dedicated most of his working life to the poor. He agitated against
deep-seated racism of the 1920s and 1930s which the planter class
perpetrated against Blacks in education, religion, at the work place
and in housing.
O'Neal
is also credited with being the first politician in Barbados to
campaign for improved conditions for women in the workplace, and
the fact that women held leadership positions in the Democratic
League and the Working Men's Association.
Historian
Sir Alexander Hoyos has shown that "Adams' purpose after 1934
was to revive the political movement among the masses which
O'Neal had started". It could be said that O'Neal laid the
foundation of social reform on which Sir Grantley Adams built so
impresively after 1938.
In
translating his vision for this island, O'Neal can count among his
main achievements the creation of a network of grass-root organisations
- the Democratic League which was a quasi-political group; the setting
up of a proto-union - the Working Men's Association in 1926, and
the launching of a co-operative venture in Bridgetown. He invested
in a newspaper, "The Herald", which sounded the message
of reform, enfranchisement and social change.
His
work is particularly significant because it was the first time in
the island's history that a man of O'Neal's class, who had a university
education and was an independent professional, put his reputation
on the line by aligning himself with the down-trodden.
Born
in 1879 to Joseph and Catherine O'Neal he attended Trents Primary,
the Parry School and went on to Harrison College, placing second
in the examination for the Barbados Scholarship in 1899. His father
sent him to Edinburgh University in Scotland to study medicine and
he gained distinctions in almost all the academic areas and a Blue
Ribbon in surgery.
It
was there that he became a friend of Keir Hardie of the Independent
Labour Party and his interest in politics grew.
O'Neal
took the decision to run for a local government office and won a
seat on the Sunderland County Council. At that time he was practising
in the North England City of Newcastle. However, he had an over-riding
desire to return home and spread the socialist doctrine to fellow
citizens.
He
came back to Barbados in 1910 and found the conditions so depressing
that he went to Trinidad and Dominica to live and work.
But
the desire to serve Barbados compelled him to come home after 14
years and light a match under the authorities, forcing them to pay
attention to the social ills of that day.
O'Neal
founded the Democratic League in October 1924 and it won its first
significant victory two months later when C.A. "Chrissie"
Brathwaite was elected as a representative for St. Michael in the
House of Assembly.
The
League's programme was based on the principles of socialism and
it attracted membership among the coloured and black middle classes.
The
importance of educating ordinary people about politics also occupied
O'Neal's time and energies to such an extent that he sparked their
interest and some entered the political arena. He was the first
black activist in this century to agitate for free education and
free dental care for children; improved housing; and abolition of
the infamous Located Labourers' System and the Masters and Servants
Act. In addition, he campaigned although unsuccessfully for the
introduction of Universal Adult Suffrage.
In
1932, O'Neal finally won a seat in the House of Assembly as a Member
for Bridgetown, defeating the prominent merchant H.B.G. Austin by
one vote.
In
Parliament, he continued his fight to improve the plight of the
workers, was instrumental in securing an increased grant for the
Barbados Scholarship winners, and campaigned for abolishing the
despicable and degrading practice of child labour.
As
might be expected, O'Neal was feared and even hated by his adversaries.
However, when this outstandingly courageous Barbadian died on November
19, 1936, he left almost the entire community, including his foes,
to acknowledge that he had played an exceptional role in arousing
the political consciousness of the masses in the period leading
up to the Disturbances of 1937.
Principal
of the Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies, Sir
Keith Hunte, summed up O'Neal's life in the observation that he
advocated a political creed based on "the simple, plain, direct
principles laid down by Christ which emphasised the honouring of
social obligations among members of the human society, while recognising
that everyone was equal".
As
testimony to the high regard in which he continues to be held, O'Neal's
portrait appears on the $10 note while the Charles Duncan O'Neal
Bridge in Bridgetown bears his name.
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