He never held political office. He never recorded a song. But without him, the most iconic moment in Jamaican musical history never happens.
Aston "Bucky" Marshall Thomson was the top don of Matthews Lane — the most feared PNP-aligned enforcer in West Kingston during Jamaica's bloodiest era of political gang warfare. He controlled a garrison the political system built, armed, and depended on to win elections. And then, in a jail cell in January of nineteen seventy-eight, he made a decision that no politician had ordered and no party had planned. He chose peace.
Together with his sworn JLP rival Claudie Massop, Bucky Marshall negotiated a ceasefire that stopped a war the Jamaican government couldn't stop on its own. They organized the One Love Peace Concert — thirty-two thousand people, Bob Marley, and the moment two prime ministers were pulled onstage and forced to shake hands in front of the world.
Within two years, both men were dead.
This is the full story — from the garrison streets of West Kingston to the Brooklyn ballroom where it ended. The childhood, the rise, the peace treaty, the concert, the exile, and the killing. And the question the history has never answered: were their deaths a coincidence, or did the system that built them decide it no longer needed them?
The History of the Caribbean. The Jamaican Gangster series. This is the story of Bucky Marshall.
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