Huggins enlisted in the Navy in the fall of 1962, only seventeen years old. Huggins became a class A radarman, and helped direct pilots drop bombs. Huggins questioned the purpose of the war in an editorial he wrote for an old New Haven publication, “They would bomb roads in the day, and at night hundreds of women and children would work filling up the craters with sand. So the planes would drop flares and come in low and strafe them. That was the big joke of the fleet. Here were those poor Orientals trying to fill the roads by hand and we with our machines could mow them down. I guess it showed the supremacy of White America or something.”
Huggins also endured racist comments from his fellow soldiers. He recalled, “’In the Philippines they call them ‘monkeys,’ because they’re darker and a little shorter, I guess. I just wondered what they called me behind my back.”
In early 1967 Huggins attended Lincoln College in Pennsylvania where he met his future wife, Ericka Jenkins. After a year at Lincoln College, the couple drove to California to join the Black Panthers. Huggins enrolled himself at UCLA and joined the Black Student Union. Janice Culberson, roommate of John Huggins, commented,“I loved to hear him speak; he was very articulate. And the way he would
captivate all sizes of audiences- small, large, two people, one person. He had a lot of patience, too, he had to, because some of things they’d ask him, they were ridiculous.” A fellow student described his first encounter with Huggins, “To me, Huggins didn’t really look like your average Panther. He wore the kind of clothes you would expect to see on a white hippie, thrift-store stuff...That day at UCLA, he welcomed me to the meeting with the words, ‘Glad to have you, comrade.’ I smiled and clasped his hand.”
Huggins’ popularity was not appreciated by all. Ron Karenga, a black nationalist, feared that Huggins’ presence would threaten his influence at UCLA. Rising tensions culminated in a fatal confrontation when Karenga’s men shot John Huggins and Bunchy Carter on the UCLA campus. Huggins died only twenty-three years old. A news article captured the chaos of the scene, “John Huggins caught the first dum-dum bullet in a vital blood vessel, one-eighth of an inch from his heart. It severed his aorta. John went down for dead. Terrified students pasted themselves on the floor.”
Ericka and her infant daughter, Mai, moved to New Haven in order to live with the Huggins family. Ericka founded the New Haven Black Panther Chapter, which would go on to make national headlines.