at
Westminster Town Hall,
London, July 1900 Some time after June 1897, Williams formed the African Association (later called the
Pan-African Association). His good friend, Trinidad attorney
Emmanuel Mzumbo Lazare, who at the time was in London taking part in
Queen Victoria's 60th anniversary celebrations as an officer of the Trinidad Light Infantry Volunteers, mentioned to Williams a South African woman, Mrs A. V. Kinloch, whom Lazare had heard discuss "under what oppressions the black races of Africa lived" at a meeting of the Writers' Club in London. Williams himself subsequently met Kinloch, who was touring Britain on behalf of the
Aborigines' Protection Society (APS), speaking in particular about South Africa. The meeting of these minds resulted in the formation of the African Association. Stating that "the time has come when the voice of Black men should be heard independently in their own affairs", Williams gave his first address as honorary general secretary in the common-room at Gray's Inn, and Kinloch was the association's first treasurer. Some English people felt the Association would not last three months but by 1900 Williams was ready to hold the first Pan-African Conference (subsequent gatherings were known as
Congresses). The three-day gathering took place at Westminster Town Hall on 23, 24, and 25 July with delegates comprising "men and women of African blood and descent" from West and South Africa, the West Indies, the United States and
Liberia.
W. E. B. Du Bois, who was to become the movement's torchbearer at subsequent
Pan-African Congresses, was a participant and his Address to the Nations with its prophetic statement "The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the colour-line" came to be regarded as the defining statement of the conference. After this Williams set about spreading the word and he embarked on lecture tours to set up branches in Jamaica, Trinidad and the United States. On 28 June 1901 the Trinidad branch of the Pan African Association was formed, with branches in Naparima,
Sangre Grande,
Arima, Manzanilla,
Tunapuna, Arouca and
Chaguanas. He spent two months here and after his departure for the US even more local branches were formed. However, after this the profile of the Association suffered because he was not able to give it his full attention. Returning to London that year, he published a monthly journal called the
Pan-African, which lasted only a few issues. He finished his bar exams and, like
Mahatma Gandhi around the same time, went on to practise in South Africa, staying there from 1903 to 1905. Williams was the first black man to be admitted to the bar in the Cape Colony, on 29 October 1903, having presented to the court in
Cape Town a certificate issued on 20 September confirming his credentials: Mr. Sylvester Williams was admitted as a barrister in the Supreme Court of Cape Colony last month. He is a West Indian. He was educated for the most part at
Dalhousie University, Canada, where he spent eight years and took his degree. Afterwards he became a member of
Gray's Inn, London. He has practised for several years in London, mainly at the Old Bailey. –
Indian Opinion, 12 November 1903. He knew that non-whites were badly treated, but still he took this step. He was soon agitating for the rights of blacks. He also presided over the opening of a coloured preparatory school staffed by West Indians. He was eventually boycotted by the Cape Law Society for it was felt he was "preaching seditious doctrines to the natives against the white man". == Return to London ==