Image of George W. Westerman, editor of thePanama Tribune. Courtesy of Afro Panavisions
Arthur Schomburg Library in Harlem, New York
President De La Guardia appointed Westerman as Ambassador to the United Nations, in addition to his duties as political advisor in 1956. This marked the highpoint in Westerman’s career and the “Criollos’” influence in the national life of Panama. In his position he helped to spearhead two pieces of legislation important to Criollos.
In 1956 they won approval for the Huertematte Law prohibiting racial discrimination and establishing fines for infractions. Westerman himself drafted the bill, using as a model a similar Brazilian law. Then in 1959 he helped push through a constitutional amendment to facilitate granting citizenship to children born in Panama to foreign parents. The measure, originally sponsored by Bazán, had to be approved by a later legislature, and Alfonso Giscombe of Colón finally won passage in January 1960.
Westerman also achieved major victory while serving in the UN. In 1958 and 1959 unrest grew in Panama and riots broke out over an incident involving the display of flags on the Canal Zone. President Eisenhower decided to take some action to reduce tensions, and he seized upon suggestions offered by Westerman that resulted in greater upward mobility for Panamanians and the construction of 500 new housing units in Panama to alleviate the crowded conditions in Panama due to depopulation of the Zone.
At the same time, Westerman sponsored appointments of Criollo politicians, and by 1960 he could point to several dozen in important posts throughout the government. Percival Toppin became the first full-time corregidor of the West Indian district of Calidonia, William Gibson, consul in Jamaica; Basilio Duff, governor of Bocas; Eduardo Charles, acting mayor of Panama; Hector Spenser and Norman Williams, department heads in the treasury ministry; Alejandro Stephens, deputy station commander of the National Guard in Colón; and many others.
In addition to his duties at the United Nations, Ambassador Westerman was also an official Panamanian representative at the independence of Togo, the Cameroons, and Jamaica, as well as the inaugural ceremonies of President Tubman of Liberia and Kennedy of the U.S.A.
Westerman began his journalistic career as sports commentator for the Panama-American. Later, with the demise of Sydney A. Young, founder and publisher of the Panama Tribune, in November of 1959, Dr. Westerman became the primary source behind the newspaper, serving as its editor and publisher until 1973. In addition to his newspaper articles, Westerman authored numerous pamphlets on historical, social, and racial themes, interpreting West Indian Panamanian history and challenging the systems of racial segregation that dominated Panamanian society. During the 1950s, he organized a series of concerts in Panama that featured leading African American artists such as Marian Anderson, Dorothy Maynor, Paul Robeson and Philippa Schuyler, among others.
His collection of the migration of our forefathers from Jamaica, Barbados and other Caribbean Islands, to work in building the Panama Canal, includes some of the most extensive documentation of this migration and its aftermath.
The George Westerman Collection includes correspondence, photographs, program bills and files on leading African American artists who appeared in the Westerman Concert Series at the Schomburg Center in Harlem. Westerman’s research files include original documents, research notes and drafts of manuscripts on the historical and cultural dimension of the West Indian presence in Panama including the manuscript for his unpublished book “Fifty Years of West Indian Life on the Isthmus of Panama (1903-1953). An extensive photograph collection documents Westerman’s personal and professional careers as well as the history of West Indians in Panama. Included is part of the photo archive of the Panama Tribune.
Westerman’s documentation of events and activities in the West Indian community include nearly verbatim transcripts of meetings of labor unions, cultural, political and civic organizations that he took in short hand and transcribed into detailed typewritten accounts. Research on a biographical directory of leading African Americans figures of the 1950s resulted in extensive correspondence, photographs, resumes and biographical data on hundreds of African Americans in all walks of life. A nearly complete run of the Panama Tribune (1929-1979) is included in the collection.
Born in the city of Colón (1910) of a Barbadian father and a St. Lucian mother, he moved to La Boca at an early age. He attended private school in Panama City under the tutelage of Samuel A. Innis, one of the leaders of the 1920 strike against the Canal Zone government. In 1956, Dr. Westerman was honored with a Doctorate degree from Philathea University in Canada.”
This story continues.



Over at Afropanavisions we received a strange letter from an individual claiming they are David Young son of the late editor of the Panama Tribune, Sydney Young.
The supposedly David Young mentioned the Panama Tribune papers and suggested that members of our community form a commitee and contact the Directors at the NY City Public Library and the Schomburg where the surviving papers are.
The crux of the suggestion was that we should restore and record the surviving copies of the Panama Tribune into modern technology. I wrote the supposedly David Young back but have received no reply.But as a spiritual person, I have gleaned that the individual was not David Young, but someone clothed with good intentions who was trying to advise us.I am interested in doing something with the papers.
I have two questions:
How should we go about with this advise?
Do you have any suggestions?
Saludos,
Anita
This is another great piece of blog journalism.
I am always reading your post even if, at times, my laziness turns into a failure not to comment.
As usually, this is a fine post.