Harold Christopher Carter, Last of the 39ers, Laid to Rest

Antigua and Barbuda paid solemn tribute to Harold Christopher Carter MH, the final surviving member of the pioneering ’39ers’ labor movement, during an Official Funeral and Thanksgiving Service at St Andrew’s Anglican Church on March 19, 2026. Carter, who passed away on December 26, 2025, was celebrated as a foundational figure in the nation’s workers’ rights history.

The 39ers, comprising both men and women, established the Antigua Trades and Labour Union—the territory’s first organized labor movement. Carter’s activism came at significant personal risk: in 1951, he was among thirteen activists arrested for leading protests against the brutal plantocracy system that dominated the islands’ socioeconomic structure.

Prime Minister Gaston Browne, who had previously honored Carter in January 2020, recognized his enduring legacy: “You represent the struggle and sacrifices made for the progress and development that Antigua & Barbuda enjoys today.”

The ceremony drew the nation’s highest leadership, including Governor General Sir Rodney Williams, Prime Minister Browne, Senate President Alincia Williams-Grant, multiple government ministers, Police Commissioner Everton Jeffers, newly elected MP Randy Baltimore, and Senator Johnathan Joseph, demonstrating cross-governmental respect for Carter’s historical significance.