Decentralized baseband processing (DBP) architecture, which partitions the base station antennas into multiple antenna clusters, has been recently proposed to alleviate the excessively high interconnect bandwidth, chip input/output data rates, and detection complexity for massive multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MU-MIMO) systems. In this paper, we develop a novel decentralized Gaussian message passing (GMP) detection for the DBP architecture. By projecting the discrete probability distribution into a complex Gaussian function, the local means and variances iteratively calculated in each antenna cluster are fused to generate the global symbol beliefs based on the proposed message fusion rule in the centralized processing unit. We present the framework and analysis of the convergence of the decentralized GMP detection based on state evolution under the assumptions of large-system limit and Gaussian sources. Analytical results corroborated by simulations demonstrate that nonuniform antenna cluster partition scheme exhibits higher convergence rate than the uniform counterpart. Simulation results illustrate that the proposed decentralized GMP detection outperforms the recently proposed decentralized algorithms.