Tag Archives: MOVE

May 13, 1985: The Day Philadelphia Bombed “MOVE”

On this day… 41 years ago…..

On May 13, 1985, the city of Philadelphia carried out one of the most shocking acts of state violence in modern American history when police dropped an explosive device on a residential home occupied by members of the Black liberation organization MOVE. The bombing killed adults and children, destroyed an entire neighborhood, and left deep scars on the city that remain decades later.

The tragedy unfolded in the predominantly Black neighborhood of Cobbs Creek on Osage Avenue in West Philadelphia. MOVE members had been living in a row house at 6221 Osage Avenue. Tensions between the organization and city authorities had been escalating for years due to complaints from neighbors, confrontations with police, and the group’s radical anti-government philosophy.

MOVE was founded in the early 1970s by John Africa, born Vincent Leaphart. The group promoted Black liberation, natural living, anti-industrial beliefs, and resistance to what they viewed as oppressive government systems. Members often adopted the surname “Africa” to symbolize unity and collective identity.

Authorities portrayed MOVE as dangerous militants, while supporters argued the group was heavily targeted because they were outspoken Black radicals challenging police brutality and systemic racism. The relationship between MOVE and the Philadelphia government became increasingly hostile throughout the 1970s and early 1980s.

The conflict had already turned deadly years earlier during the 1978 standoff between MOVE and Philadelphia police. That confrontation resulted in the death of police officer James Ramp and the controversial imprisonment of the “MOVE 9,” members of the organization who supporters argued were unfairly prosecuted.

By 1985, city officials, police leadership, and neighbors were frustrated with continuing disputes involving noise complaints, political tensions, and barricades constructed around the MOVE house. Officials claimed MOVE members made threats over loudspeakers and possessed weapons inside the home.

On the morning of May 13, police arrived with arrest warrants for several MOVE members. The city deployed hundreds of officers, evacuation teams, water cannons, armored vehicles, and large amounts of ammunition. The situation quickly escalated into an armed siege.

Gunfire erupted between police and occupants of the house. To this day, disputes remain over exactly who fired first and how events unfolded. What is undisputed is that the city made an extraordinary and catastrophic decision: officials authorized the dropping of an explosive device from a helicopter onto the roof of the home.

The bomb consisted of a satchel containing military-grade explosives, including Tovex and C-4. The device was dropped onto a rooftop bunker that police claimed MOVE members had constructed. The resulting explosion ignited a fire.

Instead of immediately extinguishing the flames, officials made the disastrous decision to allow the fire to burn temporarily in hopes of destroying the bunker and forcing occupants out. The fire rapidly spread beyond control across neighboring row houses.

The blaze consumed more than sixty homes and devastated the surrounding community. Families lost their houses, possessions, photographs, memories, and livelihoods in a matter of hours. Entire blocks were reduced to ashes while residents watched in horror.

Eleven people inside the MOVE house were killed, including five children. Among the dead were John Africa and several MOVE members and children who were trapped by the flames and smoke. Only two people survived from inside the house: Ramona Africa and a child named Birdie Africa.

Ramona Africa later described the terrifying conditions as the fire spread. She accused police of shooting at members attempting to flee the burning building, allegations that remain deeply controversial and painful in public memory.

Many scholars, activists, and residents have argued the bombing was racially motivated or at aminimum enabled by systemic racism and dehumanization of Black people. Critics questioned whether authorities would ever have dropped explosives on a white middle-class neighborhood under similar circumstances.

The event occurred during an era marked by racial tension, aggressive policing, urban decline, and distrust between Black communities and law enforcement. Philadelphia’s government under Mayor Wilson Goode faced enormous criticism for approving the operation despite being the city’s first Black mayor.

The irony of a Black-led administration overseeing the bombing of a Black neighborhood added another painful layer to the tragedy. Some residents felt betrayed, while others argued that city leadership was under immense pressure from police unions, political forces, and public fears surrounding MOVE.

An investigative commission later concluded that the decision to drop the bomb was “unconscionable.” The report condemned city officials, police leadership, and fire department decisions that allowed the blaze to spread uncontrollably. However, despite the devastating loss of life and property, no city officials were criminally convicted for the bombing.

The aftermath left survivors traumatized for generations. Displaced families struggled with poor reconstruction efforts as replacement homes were later found to have serious structural problems. Many residents felt abandoned by the city after already enduring the destruction of their community.

The MOVE bombing became a symbol of excessive state force and remains one of the only known instances in United States history where police dropped a bomb on a civilian residential neighborhood. Historians, civil rights scholars, and activists continue to study the event as an example of racial injustice, police militarization, and governmental abuse of power.

MOVE was a controversial Black liberation and back-to-nature organization founded in the early 1970s in Philadelphia by John Africa. Supporters viewed MOVE as a revolutionary group fighting against racism, police brutality, environmental destruction, animal cruelty, and government oppression. Critics, however, saw the group as confrontational and militant because of its clashes with authorities and neighbors.

Despite the controversy, MOVE believed they were defending vulnerable people and exposing injustice. Here are some of the causes and actions the organization became known for:

  • Speaking out against police brutality and racial injustice in Black communities.
  • Advocating for prisoners’ rights and protesting what they viewed as unfair imprisonment.
  • Promoting natural living, including raw foods, home births, anti-industrial beliefs, and rejection of modern technological dependence.
  • Defending animal rights and condemning cruelty toward animals.
  • Criticizing environmental pollution and corporate exploitation.
  • Supporting Black self-determination and resistance to systemic oppression.
  • Organizing protests, demonstrations, and public speeches challenging government institutions.

MOVE members often lived communally and rejected many mainstream social norms. They believed modern society corrupted humanity through greed, violence, capitalism, and environmental destruction.

The organization also became known for helping raise awareness about government overreach and aggressive policing, especially after the 1978 standoff and the MOVE bombing in which the city of Philadelphia dropped explosives on their home. After the bombing, many activists, scholars, and civil rights advocates pointed to MOVE as an example of how Black radical groups were heavily surveilled and targeted by authorities.

Supporters of MOVE argue the organization sacrificed greatly to expose injustice and state violence. They believe the bombing revealed how far government institutions were willing to go against dissident Black groups.

Critics, however, argue that MOVE’s confrontational tactics sometimes escalated conflicts unnecessarily. Complaints from neighbors included loudspeaker broadcasts, sanitation problems, and tense confrontations with police and the community.

The truth is historically complex. MOVE was neither simply a peaceful social club nor merely the dangerous caricature presented by some media outlets. The organization emerged during a period of intense racial conflict, distrust of police, and political radicalism in America following the Civil Rights Movement and the rise of Black liberation struggles.

Today, MOVE’s legacy remains debated. To some people, they symbolize resistance, Black liberation, and the fight against state oppression. To others, they represent the dangers of extremism and confrontation. But nearly everyone agrees that what happened on May 13, 1985, was a devastating tragedy that permanently changed Philadelphia’s history.

In later years, controversy continued surrounding the handling of victims’ remains. Institutions, including the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton University, faced criticism after it was revealed that remains linked to bombing victims had been used in academic settings without family consent.

The bombing continues to raise difficult moral questions about race, policing, government accountability, and the value placed on Black life in America. For many observers, May 13, 1985, was not simply a police operation gone wrong; it was the culmination of years of hostility, racial tension, fear, political failure, and institutional dehumanization.

Today, memorials, documentaries, books, and public discussions continue to honor the victims and preserve the truth about what happened on Osage Avenue. The story of MOVE remains a painful reminder that governments can inflict devastating harm when fear, power, racism, and militarized policing override humanity and restraint.

References

Africa, R. (2002). Ramona Africa: Eye of the storm. MOVE Publications.

Assefa, H. (1989). The MOVE crisis in Philadelphia: Extremist groups and conflict resolution. University of Pittsburgh Press.

MOVE bombing investigation commission report. (1986). Philadelphia Special Investigation Commission Report.

Linn Washington Jr. (2020). The MOVE bombing at 35: Philadelphia’s tragic legacy.

PBS documentary archives on the MOVE bombing and Osage Avenue tragedy.