- 1950s in Angola
Angola in the 1950s transitioned from colonial to provincial status.
Angola had the status of a Portuguese colony from 1655 until theAssembly of the Republic passed a law onJune 11 ,1951 , giving all Portuguese colonies provincial status,cite book|last=Palmer|first=Alan Warwick|year=1979|title=The Facts on File Dictionary of 20th Century History, 1900-1978|pages=15] cite book|last=Dicken|first=Samuel Newton|coauthors=Forrest Ralph Pitts|year=1963|title=Introduction to Human Geography|pages=359] effective onOctober 20 ,1951 .cite book|last=Osmâanczyk|first=Edmund Jan|coauthors=Anthony Mango|year=2003|title=Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements|pages=95] Separatist political organizations advocating Angolan independence formed in the1950s despite strong resistance from the Portuguese government, leading to theAngolan War of Independence (1961-1975).Politics
Viriato da Cruz and others formed theMovement of Young Intellectuals , an organization that promoted Angolan culture, in 1948. Nationalists sent a letter to theUnited Nations calling for Angola to be given protectorate status under UN supervision. In 1953 Angolan nationalists founded theParty of the United Struggle for Africans in Angola (PLUA), the firstpolitical party to advocate Angolan independence from Portugal. Two years laterMário Pinto de Andrade and his brother Joaquim formed theAngolan Communist Party (PCA). In December 1956 PLUA merged with the PCA to form thePopular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). The MPLA, led by da Cruz, Mário Andrade,Ilidio Machado , andLúcio Lara , derived support from theMbundu people and inLuanda .cite book|last=Wright|first=George|year=1997|title=The Destruction of a Nation: United States Policy Towards Angola Since 1945|pages=2, 8-11, and 57] cite book|last=Oyebade|first=Adebayo O|year=2006|title=Culture And Customs of Angola|pages=XI] cite book|last=|first=|year=1977|title=Africa Year Book and Who's who|pages=238] cite book|last=Tvedten|first=Inge|year=1997|title=Angola: Struggle for Peace and Reconstruction|pages=29-36]Congolese-Angolan nationalists formed the Union of Peoples of Northern Angola, which advocated the independence of the traditional
Kingdom of Kongo , in 1954.cite book|last=Shadle|first=Robert (ADP)|coauthors=James Stuart Olson|year=1991|title=Historical Dictionary of European Imperialism|pages=26-27]Portuguese police arrested
Agostinho Neto of the MPLA and future President of Angola (1975-1979), in 1952 and again in 1955 for his involvement in the Portuguese Communist Party. He returned to Angola in 1959 and police arrested him again in 1960.cite book|last=Jessup|first=John E.|year=1998|title=An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Conflict and Conflict Resolution, 1945-1996|pages=518-519] Portuguese authorities arrested over 100 MPLA members in 1959.cite book|last=Wright|first=George|year=1997|title=The Destruction of a Nation: United States' Policy Towards Angola Since 1945|pages=3]Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev visited Angola onMay 25 ,1959 .Economy
The Portuguese discovered
petroleum in Angola in 1955. Production began in theCuanza basin in the1950s , in theCongo basin in the1960s , and in theexclave of Cabinda in 1968. The Belgian company Fina (today - 2007 -- a part of Total) was the first to be given a concession. The Portuguese colonial government granted operating rights for Block Zero to the Cabinda Gulf Oil Company (CABGOC), a subsidiary of the U.S. companyGulf Oil , now merged intoChevronTexaco , in 1955. The rate of Angola's economic expansion grew in the 1950s, but boomed in the 1960s as industries grew by an annual average rate of 17%.cite book|last=Clark|first=Desmond J.|year=1975|title=The Cambridge History of Africa|pages=772] Today the petroleum industry is the engine of theAngolan economy . [http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Angola/pdf.pdf Angola] Energy Information Administration] cite book|last=Tvedten|first=Inge|year=1997|title=Angola: Struggle for Peace and Reconstruction|pages=82]After
World War II , the Portuguese government encouraged citizens to move to Angola to compensate forunemployment . The white population in Angola increased from 79,000 in 1950 to 173,000 in 1960, with 55,000 living inLuanda alone.Establishments
Colonial authorities established the Institute of Angola at Luanda in 1952, the "Garcia de Orta" journal in 1953, Center of Historical Studies Overseas in 1955, the Center of Political and Social Studies in 1956, the Center of Scientific Records Overseas in 1957, and the Center of Missionary Studies in 1959.cite book|last=Gann|first=Lewis Henry|coauthors=Peter Duignan|year=1973|title=Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960|pages=28]
Colonial governors
#José Agapito de Silva Carvalho, High Commissioner of Angola (
1948 –1955 )
#Manoel de Gusmão Mascarenhas Gaivão, High Commissioner of Angola (1955 -1956 )
#Horácio José de Sá Viana Rebelo, High Commissioner of Angola (1956 -1960 )References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.