In the first part of this article we showed that evidence from the Colenso papers, held at the Bodleian Library of Commonwealth and African Studies at Rhodes House in Oxford, together with other sources, throws new light on the role of Frank Colenso, the second son of Bishop Colenso, in the African Association, the Pan-African Conference of 1900 and the Pan-African Association (PAA) that grew out of the conference. We now consider the part played by Frank Colenso in the dissolution of the PAA in 1901 while its secretary, Henry Sylvester Williams [see fig 1], was in the Caribbean. We are able to throw new light on the attempt by Williams to revive the organisation and offer an alternative interpretation to that provided in the contemporary record of the dissolution that most historians have relied on.