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Ida B. Wells

Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 – March 25, 1931) was an American investigative journalist, educator, and early leader in the civil rights movement. She was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).[1] Wells dedicated her career to combating prejudice and violence, and advocating for African-American equality—especially that of women.[2]

Ida B. Wells
Wells, c. 1893
Born
Ida Bell Wells

(1862-07-16)July 16, 1862
DiedMarch 25, 1931(1931-03-25) (aged 68)
Burial placeOak Woods Cemetery
Other names
  • Ida B. Wells-Barnett
  • Iola (pen name)
Education
Occupations
Political partyRepublican
Other political
affiliations
Spouse
(m. 1895)
Children6, including Alfreda Duster

Throughout the 1890s, Wells documented lynching in the United States in articles and through pamphlets such as Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in all its Phases and The Red Record, which debunked the fallacy frequently voiced by Whites at the time that all Black lynching victims were guilty of crimes. Wells exposed the brutality of lynching, and analyzed its sociology, arguing that Whites used lynching to terrorize African Americans in the South because they represented economic and political competition—and thus a threat of loss of power—for Whites. She aimed to demonstrate the truth about this violence and advocate for measures to stop it.[3]

Wells was born into slavery in Holly Springs, Mississippi. At the age of 14,[4] she lost both her parents and her infant brother in the 1878 yellow fever epidemic. She went to work and kept the rest of the family together with the help of her grandmother. Later, moving with some of her siblings to Memphis, Tennessee, Wells found better pay as a teacher. Soon, Wells co-owned and wrote for the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight newspaper, where her reporting covered incidents of racial segregation and inequality. Eventually, her investigative journalism was carried nationally in Black-owned newspapers. Subjected to continued threats and criminal violence, including when a white mob destroyed her newspaper office and presses, Wells left Memphis for Chicago, Illinois. She married Ferdinand L. Barnett in 1895 and had a family while continuing her work writing, speaking, and organizing for civil rights and the women's movement for the rest of her life.

Wells was outspoken regarding her beliefs as a Black female activist and faced regular public disapproval, sometimes including from other leaders within the civil rights movement and the women's suffrage movement. She was active in women's rights and the women's suffrage movement, establishing several notable women's organizations. A skilled and persuasive speaker, Wells traveled nationally and internationally on lecture tours.[5] Wells died of kidney disease on March 25, 1931, in Chicago, and in 2020 was honored with a Pulitzer Prize special citation "for her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching."[6]

Early life edit

 
The Bolling–Gatewood House. The Wells family lived in a shack behind this house while enslaved by its owner, Spires Bolling.

Ida Bell Wells was born on the Bolling Farm near Holly Springs, Mississippi,[7] Born on July 16, 1862, Ida Wells was the first child of James Madison Wells (1840–1878) and Elizabeth "Lizzie" (Warrenton). James Wells was enslaved, born to an enslaved woman named Peggy and Peggy's white enslaver. When James was 18, his father brought James to Holly Springs, hiring him out as a carpenter's apprentice to Spires Bolling, with James' wages going to his enslaver. One of ten children born on a plantation in Virginia, Lizzie was abducted and trafficked away from her family and siblings and tried without success to locate her family following the Civil War.[8] Lizzie was owned by Spires Bolling for domestic labor in his home, now the Bolling-Gatewood House. Thus, before the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, both of Wells' parents were enslaved to Spires Bolling and bore children under these conditions. James Wells built much of the Bolling-Gatewood house, in which Spires Bolling lived. The Bolling–Gatewood House has become the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum.[9] The Wells family lived elsewhere on the property. Blueprints on display in the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum identify shacks behind the house as the residence of the Wells family.

After emancipation, Wells' father, James Wells, became a trustee of Shaw College (now Rust College). He refused to vote for Democratic candidates during the period of Reconstruction, became a member of the Loyal League, and was known as a "race man" for his involvement in politics and his commitment to the Republican Party.[8] He founded a successful carpentry business in Holly Springs in 1867, and his wife Lizzie became known as a "famous cook".[10]

Ida B. Wells was one of the eight children, and she enrolled in the historically Black liberal arts college Rust College in Holly Springs (formerly Shaw College). In September 1878, both of Ida's parents died during a yellow fever epidemic that also claimed a sibling.[11] Wells had been visiting her grandmother's farm near Holly Springs at the time and was spared.

Following the funerals of her parents and brother, friends and relatives decided that the five remaining Wells children should be separated and sent to foster homes. Wells resisted this proposition. To keep her younger siblings together as a family, she found work as a teacher in a rural Black elementary school outside Holly Springs. Her paternal grandmother, Peggy Wells (née Peggy Cheers; 1814–1887), along with other friends and relatives, stayed with her siblings and cared for them during the week while Wells was teaching.[12]

About two years after Wells' grandmother Peggy had a stroke and her sister Eugenia died, Wells and her two youngest sisters moved to Memphis to live with an aunt, Fanny Butler (née Fanny Wells; 1837–1908), in 1883.[13] Memphis is about 56 miles (90 km) from Holly Springs.

Early career and anti-segregation activism edit

. . . It is with no pleasure that I have dipped my hands in the corruption here exposed ... Somebody must show that the Afro-American race is more sinned against than sinning, and it seems to have fallen upon me to do so.

– Ida B. Wells (1892)[2]

Soon after moving to Memphis, Tennessee, Wells was hired in Woodstock by the Shelby County school system. During her summer vacations, she attended summer sessions at Fisk University, a historically Black college in Nashville, Tennessee. She also attended Lemoyne-Owen College, a historically Black college in Memphis. She held strong political opinions and provoked many people with her views on women's rights. At the age of 24, she wrote: "I will not begin at this late day by doing what my soul abhors; sugaring men, weak deceitful creatures, with flattery to retain them as escorts or to gratify a revenge."[14]

On September 15, 1883, and again on May 4, 1884, a train conductor with the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad[15][16] ordered Wells to give up her seat in the first-class ladies car and move to the smoking car, which was already crowded with other passengers.[12] In 1883, the United States Supreme Court had ruled against the federal Civil Rights Act of 1875 (which had banned racial discrimination in public accommodations). This verdict supported railroad companies that chose to racially segregate their passengers. When Wells refused to give up her seat on September 15, the conductor and two men dragged her out of the car. Wells gained publicity in Memphis when she wrote a newspaper article for The Living Way, a Black church weekly, about her treatment on the train. In Memphis, she hired an African-American attorney to sue the railroad. When her lawyer was paid off by the railroad,[17] she hired a White attorney.

Wells won her case on December 24, 1884, when the local circuit court granted her a $500 (~$16,285 in 2022) award. The railroad company appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court, which reversed the lower court's ruling in 1887. It concluded: "We think it is evident that the purpose of the defendant in error was to harass with a view to this suit, and that her persistence was not in good faith to obtain a comfortable seat for the short ride."[18] Wells was ordered to pay court costs. Her reaction to the higher court's decision revealed her strong convictions on civil rights and religious faith, as she responded: "I felt so disappointed because I had hoped such great things from my suit for my people. ... O God, is there no ... justice in this land for us?"[19]

While continuing to teach elementary school, Wells became increasingly active as a journalist and writer. She accepted an editorial position for a small Memphis journal, the Evening Star, and she began writing weekly articles for The Living Way newspaper under the pen name "Iola".[20] Articles she wrote under her pen name attacked racist Jim Crow policies.[21] In 1889, she became editor and co-owner with J. L. Fleming of The Free Speech and Headlight, a Black-owned newspaper established by the Reverend Taylor Nightingale (1844–1922) and based at the Beale Street Baptist Church in Memphis.

In 1891, Wells was dismissed from her teaching post by the Memphis Board of Education due to her articles criticizing conditions in the Black schools of the region. She was devastated but undaunted, and concentrated her energy on writing articles for The Living Way and the Free Speech and Headlight.[19]

Anti-lynching campaign and investigative journalism edit

The lynching at The Curve in Memphis edit

 
The People's Grocery near Memphis, Tennessee, was a successful African-American cooperative. The 1892 lynchings of its owners led Wells to begin her investigations of lynching.

In 1889, Thomas Henry Moss, Sr. (1853–1892), an African American, opened People's Grocery, which he co-owned. The store was located in a South Memphis neighborhood nicknamed "The Curve". Wells was close to Moss and his family, having stood as godmother to his first child, Maurine E. Moss (1891–1971). Moss's store did well and competed with a White-owned grocery store across the street, Barrett's Grocery, owned by William Russell Barrett (1854–1920).[22]

On March 2, 1892, a young Black male youth named Armour Harris was playing a game of marbles with a young White male youth named Cornelius Hurst in front of the People's Grocery. The two male youths got into an argument during the game, then began to fight. As the Black youth, Harris, seemed to be winning the fight, the father of Cornelius Hurst intervened and began to "thrash" Harris. The People's Grocery employees William Stewart and Calvin R. McDowell (1870–1892) saw the fight and rushed outside to defend the young Harris from the adult Hurst as people in the neighborhood gathered into what quickly became a "racially charged mob".[23]

The White grocer Barrett returned the following day, March 3, 1892, to the People's Grocery with a Shelby County Sheriff's Deputy, looking for William Stewart. Calvin McDowell, who greeted Barrett, indicated that Stewart was not present, but Barrett was dissatisfied with the response and was frustrated that the People's Grocery was competing with his store. Angry about the previous day's mêlée, Barrett responded that "Blacks were thieves" and hit McDowell with a pistol. McDowell wrestled the gun away and fired at Barrett—missing narrowly. McDowell was later arrested but subsequently released.[23]

On March 5, 1892, a group of six White men including a sheriff's deputy took electric streetcars to the People's Grocery. The group of White men were met by a barrage of bullets from the People's Grocery, and Shelby County Sheriff Deputy Charley Cole was wounded, as well as civilian Bob Harold. Hundreds of Whites were deputized almost immediately to put down what was perceived by the local Memphis newspapers Commercial and Appeal-Avalanche as an armed rebellion by Black men in Memphis.[23] Thomas Moss, a postman in addition to being the owner of the People's Grocery, was named as a conspirator along with McDowell and Stewart. The three men were arrested and jailed pending trial.[22]

Around 2:30 a.m. on the morning of March 9, 1892, 75 men wearing black masks took Moss, McDowell, and Stewart from their jail cells at the Shelby County Jail to a Chesapeake and Ohio rail yard one mile north of the city and shot them dead. The Memphis Appeal-Avalanche reports: Just before he was killed, Moss said to the mob: "Tell my people to go west, there is no justice here."[23]

After the lynching of her friends, Wells wrote in Free Speech and Headlight urging Blacks to leave Memphis altogether:

There is, therefore, only one thing left to do; save our money and leave a town which will neither protect our lives and property, nor give us a fair trial in the courts, but takes us out and murders us in cold blood when accused by White persons.[24]

The event led Wells to begin investigating lynchings. She began to interview people associated with lynchings, including a lynching in Tunica, Mississippi, in 1892 where she concluded that the father of a young White woman had implored a lynch mob to kill a Black man with whom his daughter was having a sexual relationship, under a pretense "to save the reputation of his daughter".[23]

Free Speech newspaper destroyed by a mob edit

Wells' anti-lynching commentaries in the Free Speech had been building, particularly with respect to lynchings and imprisonment of Black men suspected of raping White women. A story was published on January 16, 1892, in the Cleveland Gazette, describing a wrongful conviction for a sexual affair between a married White woman, Julia Underwood (née Julie Caroline Wells), and a single Black man, William Offet (1854–1914) of Elyria, Ohio. Offet was convicted of rape and served four years of a 15-year sentence, despite his sworn denial of rape. Underwood's husband, Rev. Isaac T. Underwood – after she confessed to him that she had lied two years later – diligently worked to get Offet out of the penitentiary. After hiring an influential Pittsburgh attorney, Thomas Harlan Baird Patterson (1844–1907), Rev. Underwood prevailed, Offet was released and subsequently pardoned by the Ohio Governor.[25]

Dear Miss Wells:
     Thank you for your faithful paper on the lynch abomination now generally practiced against colored people in the South. There has been no word equal to it in convincing power. I have spoken, but my word is feeble in comparison ... Brave woman! ...

Frederick Douglass (October 25, 1892)[26]

On May 21, 1892, Wells published an editorial in the Free Speech refuting what she called "that old threadbare lie that Negro men rape White women. If Southern men are not careful, a conclusion might be reached which will be very damaging to the moral reputation of their women."[27]

Four days later, on May 25, The Daily Commercial wrote: "The fact that a Black scoundrel [Ida B. Wells] is allowed to live and utter such loathsome and repulsive calumnies is a volume of evidence as to the wonderful patience of Southern Whites. But we've had enough of it."[28] The Evening Scimitar (Memphis) copied the story that same day, and added: "Patience under such circumstances is not a virtue. If the Negroes themselves do not apply the remedy without delay it will be the duty of those whom he has attacked to tie the wretch who utters these calumnies to a stake at the intersection of Main and Madison Sts., brand him in the forehead with a hot iron and perform upon him a surgical operation with a pair of tailor's shears."[28]

A White mob ransacked the Free Speech office, destroying the building and its contents.[29] James L. Fleming, co-owner with Wells and business manager, was forced to flee Memphis; and, reportedly, the trains were being watched for Wells' return. Creditors took possession of the office and sold the assets of the Free Speech. Wells had been out of town, vacationing in Manhattan; she never returned to Memphis.[28] A "committee" of White businessmen, reportedly from the Cotton Exchange, located Rev. Nightingale and, although he had sold his interest to Wells and Fleming in 1891,[30] assaulted him and forced him at gunpoint to sign a letter retracting the May 21 editorial.[31][32]

Wells subsequently accepted a job with The New York Age and continued her anti-lynching campaign from New York.[33] For the next three years, she resided in Harlem, initially as a guest at the home of Timothy Thomas Fortune (1856–1928) and wife, Carrie Fortune (née Caroline Charlotte Smiley; 1860–1940).[34]

According to Kenneth W. Goings, no copy of the Memphis Free Speech survives. The only knowledge of the newspaper ever existing comes from reprinted articles in other archived newspapers.[35]

Southern Horrors (1892) edit

 
Cover of Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases

On October 26, 1892, Wells began to publish her research on lynching in a pamphlet titled Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases.[36][37] Having examined many accounts of lynchings due to the alleged "rape of White women", she concluded that Southerners accused Black men of rape to hide their real reasons for lynchings: Black economic progress, which White Southerners saw as a threat to their own economic progress, and White ideas of enforcing Black second-class status in the society. Black economic progress was a contemporary issue in the South, and in many states Whites worked to suppress Black progress. In this period at the turn of the century, Southern states, starting with Mississippi in 1890, passed laws and/or new constitutions to disenfranchise most Black people and many poor White people through use of poll taxes, literacy tests and other devices.

Wells, in Southern Horrors, adopted the phrase "poor, blind Afro-American Sampsons" to denote Black men as victims of "White Delilahs". The Biblical "Samson", in the vernacular of the day, came from Longfellow's 1865 poem, "The Warning", containing the line: "There is a poor, blind Samson in the land ... " To explain the metaphor "Sampson", John Elliott Cairnes, an Irish political economist, in his 1865 article about Black suffrage, wrote that Longfellow was prophesizing; to wit: in "the long-impending struggle for Americans following the Civil War, [he, Longfellow] could see in the Negro only an instrument of vengeance, and a cause of ruin".[38]

The Red Record (1895) edit

After conducting further research, Wells published The Red Record, in 1895, a 100-page pamphlet with more detail, describing lynching in the United States since the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863. It also covered Black people's struggles in the South since the Civil War. The Red Record explored the alarmingly high rates of lynching in the United States (which was at a peak from 1880 to 1930). Wells said that during Reconstruction, most Americans outside the South did not realize the growing rate of violence against Black people in the South. She believed that during slavery, White people had not committed as many attacks because of the economic labour value of slaves. Wells noted that, since slavery time, "ten thousand Negroes have been killed in cold blood, [through lynching] without the formality of judicial trial and legal execution".[39]

Frederick Douglass had written an article noting three eras of "Southern barbarism" and the excuses that Whites claimed in each period.

Wells explored these in her The Red Record:[40]

  • During the time of enslavement, she observed that Whites worked to "repress and stamp out alleged 'race riots'" or suspected rebellions by the abducted, usually killing Black people in far higher proportions than any White casualties. Once the Civil War ended, White people feared Black people, who were in the majority in many areas. White people acted to control them and suppress them by violence.[39]
  • During the Reconstruction Era White people murdered Black people as part of mob efforts to suppress Black political activity and re-establish White supremacy after the war. They feared so-called "Negro Domination" through voting and taking office. Wells urged Black people in high-risk areas to move away to protect their families.[41]
  • She observed that Whites frequently claimed that Black men had "to be killed to avenge their assaults upon women". She said that White people falsely assumed that any relationship between a White woman and a Black man was a result of rape. But, given power dynamics, it was much more common for White men to take sexual advantage of poor Black women. She stated: "Nobody in this section of the country believes the old threadbare lie that Black men rape White women."[42] Wells connected lynching to sexual violence, showing how the myth of the Black man's lust for White women led to the murder of African-American men.

Wells gave 14 pages of statistics related to lynching cases committed from 1892 to 1895; she also included pages of graphic accounts detailing specific lynchings. She wrote that her data was taken from articles by White correspondents, White press bureaus, and White newspapers.[43] Her delivery of these statistics did not simply reduce the murders to numbers, Wells strategically paired the data with descriptive accounts in a way that helped her audience conceptualize the scale of the injustice. This powerful quantification captivated Black and White audiences about the horrors of lynching, through both her circulated works and public oration.[44]

Southern Horrors and The Red Record's documentation of lynchings captured the attention of Northerners who knew little about these mob murders or accepted the common explanation that Black men deserved this fate.[45]

According to the Equal Justice Initiative, 4,084 African Americans were murdered in the South, alone, between 1877 and 1950,[46] of which, 25 percent were accused of sexual assault and nearly 30 percent, murder.[46] Generally southern states and White juries refused to indict any perpetrators for lynching,[47] although they were frequently known and sometimes shown in the photographs being made more frequently of such events.[48][49]

Despite Wells's attempt to gain support among White Americans against mob murders, she believed that her campaign could not overturn the economic interests Whites had in using lynching as an instrument to maintain Southern order and discourage Black economic ventures. Ultimately, Wells concluded that appealing to reason and compassion would not succeed in gaining criminalization of lynching by Southern Whites.[50] In response to the extreme violence perpetrated upon Black Americans, Wells concluded that armed resistance was a reasonable and effective means to defend against lynching.[51] She said, a "Winchester rifle should have a place of honor in every black home."[52]

Speaking tours in Britain edit

Wells travelled twice to Britain in her campaign against lynching, the first time in 1893 and the second in 1894 in effort to gain the support of a powerful White nation such as Britain to shame and sanction the racist practices of the United States.[50] She and her supporters in America saw these tours as an opportunity for her to reach larger, White audiences with her anti-lynching campaign, something she had been unable to accomplish in America. In these travels, Wells notes that her own transatlantic voyages in themselves held a powerful cultural context given the histories of the Middle Passage, and black female identity within the dynamics of segregation.[53] She found sympathetic audiences in Britain, already shocked by reports of lynching in America.[54] Wells had been invited for her first British speaking tour by Catherine Impey[55] and Isabella Fyvie Mayo. Impey, a Quaker abolitionist who published the journal Anti-Caste,[56] had attended several of Wells' lectures while traveling in America. Mayo was a writer and poet who wrote under the name of Edward Garrett. Both women had read of the particularly gruesome mob murder of Henry Smith in Texas and wanted to organize a speaking tour to call attention to American lynchings.

Impey and Mayo asked Frederick Douglass to make the trip, but he declined, citing his age and health. He then suggested Wells, who enthusiastically accepted the invitation.[57][58] In 1894, before leaving the US for her second visit to Great Britain, Wells called on William Penn Nixon, the editor of the Daily Inter Ocean, a Republican newspaper in Chicago. It was the only major White paper that persistently denounced lynching.[59] After she told Nixon about her planned tour, he asked her to write for the newspaper while in England.[59] She was the first African-American woman to be a paid correspondent for a mainstream White newspaper.[60]

Wells toured England, Scotland,[61] with Eliza Wigham in attendance[62] and Wales for two months, addressing audiences of thousands,[63] and rallying a moral crusade among the British.[64] She relied heavily on her pamphlet Southern Horrors in her first tour, and showed shocking photographs of lynchings in America. On May 17, 1894, she spoke in Birmingham, West Midlands, at the Young Men's Christian Assembly and at Central Hall, staying in Edgbaston at 66 Gough Road.[65] On June 25, 1894, at Bradford she gave a "sensational address, though in a quiet and restrained manner".[66]

On the last night of her second tour, the London Anti-Lynching Committee[67] was established – reportedly the first anti-lynching organization in the world.[68] Its founding members included many notable figure including the Duke of Argyll, Sir John Gorst, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lady Henry Somerset and some twenty Members of Parliament,[69] with activist Florence Balgarnie as the honorary secretary.[70]

As a result of her two lecture tours in Britain, Wells received significant coverage in the British and American press. Many of the articles published by the latter at the time of her return to the United States were hostile personal critiques, rather than reports of her anti-lynching positions and beliefs. The New York Times, for example, called her "a slanderous and nasty-minded Mulatress".[71] Despite these attacks from the American press, Wells had nevertheless gained extensive recognition and credibility, and an international audience of supporters for her cause.[72] Wells' tours in Britain even influenced public opinion to the extent that British textile manufacturers fought back with economic strategies, imposing a temporary boycott on Southern cotton that pressured southern businessmen to condemn the practice of lynching publicly.[73]

Marriage and family edit

 
Attorney Ferdinand Lee Barnett (c. 1900). Wells married Barnett in 1895.
 
Wells with her four children, 1909
 
Grave marker for Ida B. Wells-Barnett and her husband Ferdinand L. Barnett at Oak Woods Cemetery

On June 27, 1895, in Chicago at Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Wells married attorney Ferdinand Lee Barnett,[74] a widower with two sons, Ferdinand Barnett and Albert Graham Barnett (1886–1962). Ferdinand Lee Barnett, who lived in Chicago, was a prominent attorney, civil rights activist, and journalist. Like Wells, he spoke widely against lynchings and in support of the civil rights of African Americans. Wells and Barnett had met in 1893, working together on a pamphlet protesting the lack of Black representation at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Barnett founded The Chicago Conservator, the first Black newspaper in Chicago, in 1878. Wells began writing for the paper in 1893, later acquired a partial ownership interest, and after marrying Barnett, assumed the role of editor.[75]

Wells' marriage to Barnett was a legal union as well as a partnership of ideas and actions. Both were journalists, as well as established activists with a shared commitment to civil rights. In an interview, Wells' daughter Alfreda said that the two had "like interests" and that their journalist careers were "intertwined". This sort of close working relationship between a wife and husband was unusual at the time, as women often played more traditional domestic roles in a marriage.[76]

In addition to Barnett's two children from his previous marriage, the couple had four more: Charles Aked Barnett (1896–1957), Herman Kohlsaat Barnett (1897–1975), Ida Bell Wells Barnett, Jr. (1901–1988), and Alfreda Marguerita Barnett (married surname Duster; 1904–1983). Charles Aked Barnett's middle name was the surname of Charles Frederic Aked (1864–1941), an influential British-born-turned-American progressive Protestant clergyman who, in 1894, while pastor of the Pembrooke Baptist Church in Liverpool, England, befriended Wells, endorsed her anti-lynching campaign, and hosted her during her second speaking tour in England in 1894.[77]

Wells began writing her autobiography, Crusade for Justice (1928), but never finished the book; edited by her daughter Alfreda Barnett Duster, it was posthumously published, in 1970, as Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells.[11][78]In a chapter of Crusade For Justice, titled "A Divided Duty", Wells described the challenge of splitting her time between family and work. She continued to work after the birth of her first child, traveling and bringing the infant Charles with her. Although she tried to balance her roles as a mother and as a national activist, it was alleged that she was not always successful. Susan B. Anthony said she seemed "distracted".[79]

The establishment by Wells of Chicago's first kindergarten prioritizing Black children, located in the lecture room of the Bethel AME Church, demonstrates how her public activism and her personal life were connected; as her great-granddaughter Michelle Duster notes: "When her older children started getting of school age, then she recognized that black children did not have the same kind of educational opportunities as some other students .... And so, her attitude was, 'Well since it doesn't exist, we'll create it ourselves.'"[80]

African American leadership edit

The 19th century's acknowledged leader for African-American civil rights, Frederick Douglass praised Wells' work, giving her introductions and sometimes financial support for her investigations. When he died in 1895, Wells was perhaps at the height of her notoriety, but many men and women were ambivalent or against a woman taking the lead in Black civil rights at a time when women were not seen as, and often not allowed to be, leaders by the wider society.[81] The new leading voices, Booker T. Washington, his rival, W. E. B. Du Bois, and more traditionally minded women activists, often viewed Wells as too radical.[82]

Wells encountered and sometimes collaborated with the others, but they also had many disagreements, while also competing for attention for their ideas and programs. For example, there are differing in accounts for why Wells' name was excluded from the original list of founders of the NAACP. In his autobiography Dusk of Dawn, Du Bois implied that Wells chose not to be included.[83] However, in her autobiography, Wells stated that Du Bois deliberately excluded her from the list.[84]

Organizing in Chicago edit

Having settled in Chicago, Wells continued her anti-lynching work while becoming more focused on the civil rights of African Americans. She worked with national civil rights leaders to protest a major exhibition, she was active in the national women's club movement, and she ultimately ran for a position in the Illinois State Senate. She also was passionate about women's rights and suffrage. She was a spokeswoman and an advocate for women being successful in the workplace, having equal opportunities, and creating a name for themselves.[85][page needed]

 
Ida B. Wells House is a Chicago landmark and National Historic Landmark.

Wells was an active member of the National Equal Rights League (NERL), founded in 1864, and was their representative calling on President Woodrow Wilson to end discrimination in government jobs.[86][87] In 1914, she served as president of NERL's Chicago bureau.[88]

World's Columbian Exposition edit

In 1893, the World's Columbian Exposition was held in Chicago. Together with Frederick Douglass and other Black leaders, Wells organized a Black boycott of the fair, for the fair's lack of representation of African American achievement in the exhibits.[89] Wells, Douglass, Irvine Garland Penn, and Wells' future husband, Ferdinand L. Barnett, wrote sections of the pamphlet The Reason Why: The Colored American Is Not in the World's Columbian Exposition, which detailed the progress of Blacks since their arrival in America and also exposed the basis of Southern lynchings.[90] Wells later reported to Albion W. Tourgée that copies of the pamphlet had been distributed to more than 20,000 people at the fair.[91] That year she started work with The Chicago Conservator, the oldest African American newspaper in the city.[92]

Women's clubs edit

Living in Chicago in the late 19th century, Wells was very active in the national Woman's club movement. In 1893, she organized The Women's Era Club, a first-of-its-kind civic club for African American women in Chicago. Wells recruited veteran Chicago activist Mary Richardson Jones to serve as the first chair of the new club in 1894; Jones recruited for the organization and lent it considerable prestige.[93][94] It would later be renamed the Ida B. Wells Club in her honor. In 1896, Wells took part in the meeting in Washington, D.C., that founded the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs.[95] After her death, the club advocated to have a housing project in Chicago named after the founder, Ida B. Wells, and succeeded, making history in 1939 as the first housing project named after a woman of color.[96] Wells also helped organize the National Afro-American Council, serving as the organization's first secretary.[97]

Wells received much support from other social activists and her fellow club women. Frederick Douglass praised her work: "You have done your people and mine a service... What a revelation of existing conditions your writing has been for me."[28]

Despite Douglass's praise, Wells was becoming a controversial figure among local and national women's clubs. This was evident when in 1899 the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs intended to meet in Chicago. Writing to the president of the association, Mary Terrell, Chicago organizers of the event stated that they would not cooperate in the meeting if it included Wells. When Wells learned that Terrell had agreed to exclude Wells, she called it "a staggering blow".[98]

School segregation edit

In 1900, Wells was outraged when the Chicago Tribune published a series of articles suggesting adoption of a system of racial segregation in public schools. Given her experience as a schoolteacher in segregated systems in the South, she wrote to the publisher on the failures of segregated school systems and the successes of integrated public schools. She then went to his office and lobbied him. Unsatisfied, she enlisted the social reformer Jane Addams in her cause. Wells and the pressure group she put together with Addams are credited with stopping the adoption of an officially segregated school system.[99][100]

Suffrage edit

Willard controversy edit

 
Ida B. Wells c. 1895

Wells' role in the U.S. suffrage movement was inextricably linked to her lifelong crusade against racism, violence and discrimination towards African Americans. Her view of women's enfranchisement was pragmatic and political.[101] Like all suffragists she believed in women's right to vote, but she also saw enfranchisement as a way for Black women to become politically involved in their communities and to use their votes to elect African Americans, regardless of gender, to influential political office.[102]

As a prominent Black suffragist, Wells held strong positions against racism, violence and lynching that brought her into conflict with leaders of largely White suffrage organizations. Perhaps the most notable example of this conflict was her public disagreement with Frances Willard, the first President of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).[103]

The WCTU was a predominantly White women's organization, with branches in every state and a growing membership, including in the Southern United States, where segregation laws and lynching occurred. With roots in the call for temperance and sobriety, the organization later became a powerful advocate of suffrage in the U.S.

In 1893 Wells and Willard travelled separately to Britain on lecture tours. Willard was promoting temperance as well as suffrage for women, and Wells was calling attention to lynching in the U.S. The basis of their dispute was Wells' public statements that Willard was silent on the issue of lynching.[19] Wells referred to an interview Willard had conducted during her tour of the American South, in which Willard had blamed African Americans' behavior for the defeat of temperance legislation. "The colored race multiplies like the locusts of Egypt", Willard had said, and "the grog shop is its center of power. The safety of women, of childhood, of the home is menaced in a thousand localities, so that men dare not go beyond the sight of their own roof tree."[104][105][106]

Although Willard and her prominent supporter Lady Somerset were critical of Wells' comments, Wells was able to turn that into her favor, portraying their criticisms as attempts by powerful White leaders to "crush an insignificant colored woman".[107]

Wells also dedicated a chapter in The Red Record to juxtapose the different positions that she and Willard held. The chapter titled "Miss Willard's Attitude" condemned Willard for using rhetoric that promoted violence and other crimes against African Americans in America.[108]

Negro Fellowship League edit

Wells, her husband, and some members of their Bible study group, in 1908 founded the Negro Fellowship League (NFL), the first Black settlement house in Chicago.[109] The organization, in rented space, served as a reading room, library, activity center, and shelter for young Black men in the local community at a time when the local Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) did not allow Black men to become members. The NFL also assisted with job leads and entrepreneurial opportunities for new arrivals in Chicago from Southern States, notably those of the Great Migration.[110] During her involvement, the NFL advocated for women's suffrage and supported the Republican Party in Illinois.[111]

Alpha Suffrage Club edit

In the years following her dispute with Willard, Wells continued her anti-lynching campaign and organizing in Chicago. She focused her work on Black women's suffrage in the city following the enactment of a new state law enabling partial women's suffrage. The Illinois Presidential and Municipal Suffrage Bill of 1913 (see Women's suffrage in Illinois) gave women in the state the right to vote for presidential electors, mayor, aldermen and most other local offices; but not for governor, state representatives or members of Congress.[112][113][a] Illinois was the first state east of the Mississippi to grant women these voting rights.[114]

The prospect of passing the act, even one of partial enfranchisement, was the impetus for Wells and her White colleague Belle Squire to organize the Alpha Suffrage Club in Chicago on January 30, 1913.[115][116][page needed] One of the most important Black suffrage organizations in Chicago, the Alpha Suffrage Club was founded as a way to further voting rights for all women, to teach Black women how to engage in civic matters, and to work to elect African Americans to city offices. Two years after its founding, the club played a significant role in electing Oscar De Priest as the first African American alderman in Chicago.[117]

As Wells and Squire were organizing the Alpha Club, the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was organizing a suffrage parade in Washington D.C. Marching the day before the inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as president in 1913, suffragists from across the country gathered to demand universal suffrage.[118] Wells, together with a delegation of members from Chicago, attended. On the day of the march, the head of the Illinois delegation told the Wells delegates that the NAWSA wanted "to keep the delegation entirely White",[119] and all African American suffragists, including Wells, were to walk at the end of the parade in a "colored delegation".[120]

Instead of going to the back with other African Americans, however, Wells waited with spectators as the parade was underway, and stepped into the White Illinois delegation as they passed by. She visibly linked arms with her White suffragist colleagues, Squire and Virginia Brooks, for the rest of the parade, demonstrating, according to The Chicago Defender, the universality of the women's civil rights movement.[121]

From "race agitator" to political candidate edit

During World War I, the U.S. government placed Wells under surveillance, labeling her a dangerous "race agitator".[10] She defied this threat by continuing civil rights work during this period with such figures as Marcus Garvey, Monroe Trotter, and Madam C. J. Walker.[10] In 1917, Wells wrote a series of investigative reports for the Chicago Defender on the East St. Louis Race Riots.[122] After almost thirty years away, Wells made her first trip back to the South in 1921 to investigate and publish a report on the Elaine massacre in Arkansas (published 1922).[122]

In the 1920s, she participated in the struggle for African American workers' rights, urging Black women's organizations to support the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, as it tried to gain legitimacy.[10] However, she lost the presidency of the National Association of Colored Women in 1924 to the more diplomatic Mary Bethune.[123] To challenge what she viewed as problems for African Americans in Chicago, Wells started a political organization named Third Ward Women's Political Club in 1927. In 1928, she tried to become a delegate to the Republican National Convention but lost to Oscar De Priest. Her feelings toward the Republican Party became more mixed due to what she viewed as the Hoover administration's poor stance on civil rights and attempts to promote a "Lily-White" policy in Southern Republican organizations. In 1930, Wells unsuccessfully sought elective office, running as an Independent for a seat in the Illinois Senate, against the Republican Party candidate, Adelbert Roberts.[122][10]

Influence on Black feminist activism edit

Wells explained that the defense of White women's honor allowed Southern White men to get away with murder by projecting their own history of sexual violence onto Black men. Her call for all races and genders to be accountable for their actions showed African American women that they can speak out and fight for their rights. According to some, by portraying the horrors of lynching, she worked to show that racial and gender discrimination are linked, furthering the Black feminist cause.[124]

Legacy and honors edit

 
Ida B. Wells display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture

Since Wells' death, with the rise of mid-20th-century civil rights activism, and the 1971 posthumous publication of her autobiography, interest in her life and legacy has grown. Awards have been established in her name by the National Association of Black Journalists,[125] the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University,[126] the Coordinating Council for Women in History,[127] the Type Investigations (formerly the Investigative Fund),[128] the University of Louisville,[129] and the New York County Lawyers' Association (awarded annually since 2003),[130] among many others. The Ida B. Wells Memorial Foundation and the Ida B. Wells Museum have also been established to protect, preserve and promote Wells' legacy.[131] In her hometown of Holly Springs, Mississippi, there is an Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum named in her honor that acts as a cultural center of African American history.[132]

In 1941, the Public Works Administration (PWA) built a Chicago Housing Authority public housing project in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago; it was named the Ida B. Wells Homes in her honor. The buildings were demolished in August 2011 due to changing demographics and ideas about such housing.[133]

In 1988, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.[134] In August that year, she was also inducted into the Chicago Women's Hall of Fame.[135] Molefi Kete Asante included Wells on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans in 2002.[136] In 2011, Wells was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame for her writings.[137]

On February 1, 1990, at the start of Black History Month in the U.S., the U.S. Postal Service dedicated a 25¢ stamp commemorating Wells in a ceremony at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. The stamp, designed by Thomas Blackshear II, features a portrait of Wells illustrated from a composite of photographs of her taken during the mid-1890s. Wells is the 25th African American entry – and fourth African American woman – on a U.S. postage stamp. She is the 13th in the Postal Service's Black Heritage series.[138][139][140]

In 2006, the Harvard Kennedy School commissioned a portrait of Wells.[141] In 2007, the Ida B. Wells Association was founded by University of Memphis philosophy graduate students to promote discussion of philosophical issues arising from the African American experience and to provide a context in which to mentor undergraduates. The Philosophy Department at the University of Memphis has sponsored the Ida B. Wells conference every year since 2007.[142]

On February 12, 2012, Mary E. Flowers, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives, introduced House Resolution 770 during the 97th General Assembly, honoring Ida B. Wells by declaring March 25, 2012 – the eighty-ninth anniversary of her death – as Ida B. Wells Day in the State of Illinois.[143]

 
Historical marker honoring Ida B. Wells in Holly Springs, Mississippi

In August 2014, Wells was the subject of an episode of the BBC Radio 4 programme Great Lives, in which her work was championed by Baroness Oona King.[144] Wells was honored with a Google Doodle on July 16, 2015, which would have been her 153rd birthday.[145][146][147][148]

In 2016, the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Reporting was launched in Memphis, Tennessee, with the purpose of promoting investigative journalism.[149] Following in the footsteps of Wells, this society encourages minority journalists to expose injustices perpetuated by the government and defend people who are susceptible to being taken advantage of.[149] This organization was created with much support from the Open Society Foundations, Ford Foundation, and CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.[149]

In 2018, the National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened, including a reflection space dedicated to Wells, a selection of quotes by her, and a stone inscribed with her name.[150][151]

 
The mayor of Birmingham, England, commemorating Wells' 1893 British Isles lecture tour with a blue plaque, February 12, 2019

On March 8, 2018, The New York Times published a belated obituary for her,[2] in a series marking International Women's Day and entitled "Overlooked", which set out to acknowledge that, since 1851, the newspaper's obituary pages had been dominated by White men, while notable women – including Wells – had been ignored.[152][153]

In July 2018, Chicago's City Council officially renamed Congress Parkway as Ida B. Wells Drive;[154] it is the first downtown Chicago street named after a woman of color.[155]

On February 12, 2019, a blue plaque, provided by the Nubian Jak Community Trust, was unveiled by the mayor of Birmingham, Yvonne Mosquito, at the Edgbaston Community Centre, Birmingham, England, commemorating Wells' stay in a house on the exact site of 66 Gough Road where she stayed in 1893 during her speaking tour of the British Isles.[68][156]

On July 13, 2019, a marker for her was unveiled in Mississippi, on the northeast corner of Holly Springs' Courthouse Square. The marker was dedicated by the Wells-Barnett Museum and the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation.[157]

In 2019, a new middle school in Washington, D.C., was named in her honor.[158] On November 7, 2019, a Mississippi Writers Trail historical marker was installed at Rust College in Holly Springs, commemorating the legacy of Ida B. Wells.[159]

On May 4, 2020, she was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize special citation, "for her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching."[6][160] The Pulitzer Prize board announced that it would donate at least $50,000 in support of Wells' mission to recipients who would be announced at a later date.[6]

In 2021, a public high school in Portland, Oregon, that had been named for Woodrow Wilson was renamed Ida B. Wells High School.[161]

Wells will be honored on a U.S. quarter in 2025 as part of the final year of the American Women quarters program.[162]

Monuments edit

 
The life-sized statue of Ida B. Wells in downtown Memphis

In 2021 Chicago erected a monument to Wells in the Bronzeville neighborhood, near where she lived and close to the site of the former Ida B. Wells Homes housing project.[163] Officially called The Light of Truth Ida B. Wells National Monument (based on her quote, "the way to right wrongs is to cast the light of truth upon them"), it was created by sculptor Richard Hunt.[164]

Also in 2021, Memphis dedicated a new Ida B. Wells plaza with a life-sized statue of Wells. The monument is adjacent to the historic Beale Street Baptist Church, where Wells produced the Free Speech newspaper.[165]

Representation in media edit

In 1949 the anthology radio drama Destination Freedom recapped parts of her life in the episode "Woman with a Mission", written by Richard Durham.[166]

The PBS documentary series American Experience aired on December 19, 1989 – season 2, episode 11 (one-hour) – "Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice", written and directed by William Greaves. The documentary featured excerpts of Wells' memoirs read by Toni Morrison.[167] (viewable via YouTube)

In 1995, the play In Pursuit of Justice: A One-Woman Play About Ida B. Wells, written by Wendy D. Jones (born 1953) and starring Janice Jenkins,[168] was produced. It draws on historical incidents and speeches from Wells' autobiography, and features fictional letters to a friend. It won four awards from the AUDELCO (Audience Development Committee Inc.), an organization that honors Black theater.[169]

In 1999, a staged reading of the play Iola's Letter, written by Michon Boston (née Michon Alana Boston; born 1962), was performed at Howard University in Washington, D.C., under the direction of Vera J. Katz,[b][170] including then-student Chadwick Boseman among the cast. The play is inspired by the real-life events that compelled a 29-year-old Ida B. Wells to launch an anti-lynching crusade from Memphis in 1892 using her newspaper, Free Speech.[171]

Wells' life is the subject of Constant Star (2002), a widely performed musical drama by Tazewell Thompson,[172] who was inspired to write it by the 1989 documentary Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice.[69] Thompson's play explores Wells as "a seminal figure in Post-Reconstruction America".[172]

Wells was played by Adilah Barnes in the 2004 film Iron Jawed Angels. The film dramatizes a moment during the Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913 when Wells ignored instructions to march with the segregated parade units and crossed the lines to march with the other members of her Illinois chapter.[173]

Selected publications edit

  • The Arkansas Race Riot (Manuscript). 1920 – via Northern Illinois University Digital Library.
  • Mob Rule in New Orleans: Robert Charles and His Fight to Death, the Story of His Life, Burning Human Beings Alive, Other Lynching Statistics. 1900.
  • The Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynching in the United States. 1895.
  • Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases. New York: New York Age Print. 1892 – via Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, New York Public Library.
  • Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells. 1970 — via The University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences.

See also edit

Bibliography edit

Annotations edit

  1. ^ 48th Illinois General Assembly, Regular Biennial Session:
    1. May 7, 1913: Senate Bill 63 – State Senator Hugh Stewart Magill, Jr. (1868–1958), from Princeton, sponsored a limited women's suffrage bill. The Illinois Senate (the Upper House) passed it May 7, 1913, by a vote of 29 to 15 – three more than the required majority.
    2. June 11, 1913: The House posed a stiffer challenge, right up to the day of the vote. The Illinois House of Representatives (the Lower House) passed it June 11, 1913, by a vote of 83 to 58.
    3. June 26, 1913: Governor Edward F. Dunne signed the bill June 26, 1913, in Springfield. The signing ceremony was filmed for the movies.
  2. ^ Vera J. Katz (née Vera Joy Weintraub; born 1936) is Professor Emerita from Howard University, Department of Theater Arts, where she taught acting and directing for 32 years – from 1969 to about 2001. [Like many of the writers cited in this article], Katz has devoted much of her career to fighting bigotry. (Hentoff March 28, 1994)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Giddings, Encyclopedia 2013.
  2. ^ a b c Dickerson.
  3. ^ Giddings, Paula (1984). "1: 'To Sell My Life as Dearly as Possible': Ida B. Wells and the Antilynching Campaign". When and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America.
  4. ^ Moses, Wilson Jeremiah. The Golden Age of Black Nationalism, 1850–1925. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 109.
  5. ^ Wells Papers, Univ. Chicago.
  6. ^ a b c Pulitzer 2020.
  7. ^ McKinney.
  8. ^ a b McMurry.
  9. ^ Matthews, Dasha.
  10. ^ a b c d e Giddings, Sword Among Lions, 2008, pp. 5–10.
  11. ^ a b Black, Patti Carr.
  12. ^ a b Mitchell, p. D13.
  13. ^ Heather-Lea, pp. 4 & 7 (section A).
  14. ^ Bay, p. 67.
  15. ^ Yaeger, October 21, 2015.
  16. ^ Franklin, pp. 61, 63–65.
  17. ^ Fradin & Fradin, p. 21.
  18. ^ Chesapeake, O. & S. R. Co. v. Wells, 1887, p. 5.
  19. ^ a b c Wells–Duster, 1970, p. xviii.
  20. ^ Wells–Duster, 1970, pp. 23–24.
  21. ^ Cardon.
  22. ^ a b Peavey & Smith, pp. 46–49.
  23. ^ a b c d e Giddings, Sword Among Lions, 2008, pp. 178–180, 183, 207.
  24. ^ Wells–Duster, 1970, p. 52.
  25. ^ "Horrible but True", January 16, 1892, p. 1.
  26. ^ Douglass, Frederick 1892, p. 25.
  27. ^ Wormser.
  28. ^ a b c d Wells, Southern Horrors 1892, pp. 3–5.
  29. ^ Staples, Brent (July 10, 2021). "How the White Press Wrote Off Black America". The New York Times. Retrieved April 1, 2022.
  30. ^ Schechter, p. 70.
  31. ^ "A Bright Woman", p. 1 (section 2).
  32. ^ Sheriff, p. 63 (footnote 46).
  33. ^ Schechter, p. 79.
  34. ^ Sheriff, pp. 63–64.
  35. ^ Goings.
  36. ^ Baker.
  37. ^ Wells, Southern Horrors 1892.
  38. ^ Cairnes, p. 343.
  39. ^ a b Wells, Red Record, p. 8.
  40. ^ Wells, Red Record.
  41. ^ Wells, Red Record, p. 9.
  42. ^ Wells, Red Record, p. 12.
  43. ^ Wells, Red Record, p. 71.
  44. ^ Murphy, Benjamin J. (June 1, 2021). ""Multiplied without Number": Lynching, Statistics, and Visualization in Ida B. Wells, Mark Twain, and W. E. B. Du Bois". American Literature. 93 (2): 195–226. doi:10.1215/00029831-9003554. ISSN 0002-9831. S2CID 233966886.
  45. ^ Wells, Red Record, p. 82.
  46. ^ a b "Key Findings", p. 4.
  47. ^ Johnston & Oliver, p. 24.
  48. ^ Thompson, p. 238.
  49. ^ Allen,[full citation needed].
  50. ^ a b Curry.
  51. ^ Wells, Southern Horrors 1892, p. 23.
  52. ^ Johnson, Nicholas. "Negroes and the Gun: The Black Tradition of Arms". Washington Post. Retrieved September 22, 2022.
  53. ^ Totten, Gary (Spring 2008). "Embodying Segregation: Ida B. Wells and the Cultural Work of Travel". African American Review. 42 (1): 47–60. JSTOR 40301303.
  54. ^ Zackodnik, p. 264.
  55. ^ "Public Notices". Aberdeen Press and Journal. April 24, 1893.
  56. ^ Quakers.
  57. ^ Bay, p. 4.
  58. ^ Duster, Michelle, p. 13.
  59. ^ a b Wells–Duster, 1970, p. 125.
  60. ^ Elliott, p. 242.
  61. ^ "Lynch Law in the Southern States". St. Andrews Citizen. May 6, 1893. p. 2.
  62. ^ "Lynch Law in the Southern States". The Scotsman. April 29, 1893. p. 8.
  63. ^ Busby, p. 150.
  64. ^ McBride.
  65. ^ Enright.
  66. ^ "Considerable interest was felt". Bradford Weekly Telegraph. British Newspaper Archive. June 30, 1894. p. 4 col.4. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  67. ^ "On the Road: Anti-Lynching Lectures Around the U.S. and Abroad – A Voice for Justice – The University of Chicago Library". www.lib.uchicago.edu. Retrieved March 9, 2022.
  68. ^ a b Washington, Linn.
  69. ^ a b Myrick-Harris.
  70. ^ Paisana, p. 197.
  71. ^ Smith, David.
  72. ^ Zackodnik, pp. 268–270.
  73. ^ Mary Jo Deegan, ed. (1991). Women in sociology: a bio-bibliographical sourcebook. New York: Greenwood Press. p. 436. ISBN 0-313-26085-0. OCLC 22181691.
  74. ^ "Miss Wells", June 13, 1895.
  75. ^ Ritchie, p. 165.
  76. ^ Schechter, p. 176.
  77. ^ Jordan, Brucella Wiggins, pp. 195–196.
  78. ^ Duster, Alfreda.
  79. ^ Tichi, p. 340 (note 16).
  80. ^ Nettles, Arionne Alyssa.
  81. ^ Seymour, p. 333.
  82. ^ Palmer, pp. 106–107.
  83. ^ Du Bois 1940, p. 224.
  84. ^ Wells–Duster, 1970, p. 322.
  85. ^ DuRocher, Kristina (2016). Ida B. Wells: Social Activist and Reformer. Taylor and Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-66219-8. OCLC 957700358.
  86. ^ Biography.
  87. ^ Rooney & Lemerand, p. 650.
  88. ^ Doenecke, pp. 358–359.
  89. ^ Schechter, pp. 94–95.
  90. ^ Wells, Douglass, Penn, Barnett, 1893.
  91. ^ Portwood.
  92. ^ Bonfiglio, p. C2.
  93. ^ Smith, Jessie Carney; Phelps, Shirelle, eds. (2003). "Jones, Mary Jane Richardson". Notable Black American Women. Vol. 3. Detroit: Gale Research. ISBN 0-8103-4749-0. OCLC 24468213.
  94. ^ Schultz, Rima Lunin; Adele Hast, eds. (2001). Women building Chicago, 1790–1990: a biographical dictionary. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33852-5. OCLC 44573291.
  95. ^ National Association of Colored Women's Clubs.
  96. ^ Honoring Ida B. Wells.
  97. ^ National Afro-American Council.
  98. ^ Wells–Duster, 1970, p. 258.
  99. ^ Pinar 2009, pp. 77–79.
  100. ^ Gyimah, p. 977.
  101. ^ Schechter, p. 14.
  102. ^ Schechter, p. 199.
  103. ^ Wagner.
  104. ^ Pinar 2001.
  105. ^ Willard.
  106. ^ Truth-Telling.
  107. ^ Schechter, p. 102.
  108. ^ Wells, Red Record, p. 84.
  109. ^ Mann, p. 12.
  110. ^ Wells, Chicago Daily News, 1911.
  111. ^ Schechter, p. 194.
  112. ^ Illinois Senate Journal 1914.
  113. ^ Illinois House Journal 1914.
  114. ^ Grossman.
  115. ^ Alpha Suffrage Record, 1914, p. 1.
  116. ^ Bay.
  117. ^ Schechter, p. 205.
  118. ^ Boissoneault.
  119. ^ Bay, p. 290.
  120. ^ Flexner & Fitzpatrick, p. 318.
  121. ^ Stillion Southard, p. 85.
  122. ^ a b c DeCosta-Willis.
  123. ^ McCluskey, p. 8.
  124. ^ Stansell, p. 127.
  125. ^ NABJ.
  126. ^ Northwestern University.
  127. ^ CCWH 2012.
  128. ^ Type Investigations.
  129. ^ University of Louisville.
  130. ^ New York County Lawyers Association.
  131. ^ Wells-Barnett Museum.
  132. ^ Wells-Barnett Museum (home page).
  133. ^ Wikimapia.
  134. ^ National Women's Hall of Fame.
  135. ^ Burleigh, p. 2; section 6.
  136. ^ Asante.
  137. ^ Chicago Literary Hall of Fame.
  138. ^ USPS: Women stamps, p. 3.
  139. ^ USPS: African American stamps, p. 2.
  140. ^ Sama, p. 11 (section 14).
  141. ^ Portrait.
  142. ^ University of Memphis.
  143. ^ Flowers.
  144. ^ King, Oona.
  145. ^ Cruickshank.
  146. ^ Jalabi.
  147. ^ Berenson.
  148. ^ Cavna.
  149. ^ a b c "Our Creation Story".
  150. ^ Brown, DeNeen L.
  151. ^ Slevin.
  152. ^ Danielle.
  153. ^ Linton & Dickerson.
  154. ^ Pavithra.
  155. ^ Pratt & Byrne.
  156. ^ I Am Birmingham.
  157. ^ Klinger.
  158. ^ Collins, Sam P. K., p. 24.
  159. ^ Mississippi Writers Trail.
  160. ^ Greene.
  161. ^ Young, Jenny (January 26, 2021). "PPS changes Wilson HS name to honor Ida B. Wells-Barnett". Portland, Oregon: KOIN. from the original on February 3, 2021. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  162. ^ "United States Mint Announces 2025 American Women Quarters™ Program Coins". United States Mint. October 17, 2023. Retrieved October 17, 2023.
  163. ^ Shaw.
  164. ^ "A Monument To Journalist, Civil Rights Activist Ida B. Wells Is Unveiled In Chicago". NPR. July 2021. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  165. ^ "Memphis Unveils New Ida. B. Wells Monument". Southern Hollows Podcast. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  166. ^ MacDonald, J. Fred, ed. (1989). Richard Durham's Destination Freedom. New York: Praeger. p. x. ISBN 0-275-93138-2.
  167. ^ Brody.
  168. ^ Jones.
  169. ^ Viagas.
  170. ^ Hentoff March 28, 1994.
  171. ^ Perkins & Stephens.
  172. ^ a b Gates, Anita.
  173. ^ Stetz.

References to linked inline notes edit

Books, journals, magazines, academic papers, online blogs

  • Allen, James E. (2011) [1994]. Without Sanctuary: Photographs and Postcards of Lynching in America. Santa Fe: Twin Palms Publisher.
    Print:
    1. Book (1st ed.) (July 31, 1999); OCLC 936079991
    2. Book (10th ed.) (February 1, 2000): OCLC 994750311, 751138477; ISBN 978-0-944092-69-9
    3. Book (11th ed.) (2011): OCLC 1075938297

    Exhibitions, film, digital:

    1. Roth Horowitz Gallery, 160A East 70th Street, Manhattan (January 14, 2000 – February 12, 2000); Andrew Roth and Glenn Horowitz, gallery co-owners, Witness: Photographs of Lynchings from the Collection of James Allen and John Littlefield, organized by Andrew Roth
    2. New York Historical Society (March 14, 2000 – October 1, 2000); OCLC 809988821, Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America, curated by James Allen and Julia Hotton
    3. Andy Warhol Museum (September 22, 2001 – February 21, 2002), The Without Sanctuary Project, curated by James Allen; co-directed by Jessica Arcand and Margery King
    4. Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park (May 1, 2002 – December 31, 2002), Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America; OCLC 782970109, curated by Joseph F. Jordan, PhD (né Joseph Ferdinand Jordan, Jr.; born 1951); Douglas H. Quin, PhD (born 1956) exhibition designer; National Park Service MLK site team: Frank Catroppa, Saudia Muwwakkil, and Melissa English-Rias
    5. The 2002 short film, Without Sanctuary, directed by Matt Dibble (né Matthew Phillips Dibble; born 1959) and produced by Joseph F. Jordan, PhD (né Joseph Ferdinand Jordan Jr.; born 1951), accompanied the 2002–2003 exhibition by the same name, Without Sanctuary, at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park (co-sponsored by Emory University)
    6. Digital format (2008): OCLC 1179211921, 439904269 (Overview, Movie, Photos, Forum)
    7. Official website; part of collection at the Robert W. Woodruff Library at Emory University
    1. "Michon Boston" (1962–  ), pp. 366–367
    2. Iola's Letter (1994), pp. 368–408

News media

  • "A Bright Woman". St. Joseph Daily News. Vol. 17, no. 9. St. Joseph, Missouri. June 11, 1895. p. 7. OCLC 13745156. Retrieved October 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com. (also LCCN sn86063691)
  • Bonfiglio, Jeremy Dean (February 19, 2012). "Great Grandson of Influential Civil Rights Pioneer Ida B. Wells Keeps Her Legacy Alive". The Herald-Palladium. Vol. 127, no. 50. St. Joseph, Michigan. pp. 1–2 (section C). ISBN 978-3-8472-0182-3. OCLC 669922511. Retrieved October 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Brown, DeNeed L. (April 26, 2018). "Ida B. Wells: Lynching Museum, Memorial Honors Woman Who Fought Lynching". The Washington Post ("Retropolis" – a history blog; online). Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  • Burgess, Katherine (October 26, 2020). "Ida B. Wells was driven out of Memphis in 1892. She might soon have her own statue there". USA Today. Retrieved November 4, 2020. One of the loudest voices speaking out against Wells in Memphis was Edward Ward Carmack, editor of the Memphis Commercial, the predecessor of The Commercial Appeal. He demanded that White citizens retaliate against 'the Black wench' for her writings against the lynchings.
  • Burleigh, Nina (August 21, 1988). "Hall of Fame Will Induct 10". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 142, no. 234. p. 2, section 6. ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved June 30, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Cavna, Michael (July 16, 2015). "Here's Why Google Doodle Salutes Fearless, Peerless Word-Warrior Ida B. Wells". The Washington Post (online). Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  • Chase, William Calvin, ed. (October 22, 1892). "Miss Ida B. Wells – A Lecture". (3-column, tombstone-style advertisement). The Washington Bee (weekly newspaper, Saturdays). Vol. 11, no. 19. Washington, D.C.: Bee Publishing. p. 3. ISSN 1940-7424. LCCN sn84025891. OCLC 10587828. Retrieved November 10, 2020 – via Chronicling America.
  • Collins, Sam P. K. (April 4–10, 2019). "D.C.'s Newest Middle School Named After Ida B. Wells". Education. The Washington Informer. Vol. 54, no. 25. ISSN 0741-9414 – via ISSUU. Digitized print edition. The online edition, here, is dated March 26, 2019.
  • Dickerson, Caitlin (March 9, 2018) [March 8, 2018]. Padnani, Amisha (Amy); Bennett, Jessica (eds.). "Ida B. Wells, Who Took on Racism in the Deep South With Powerful Reporting on Lynchings" (online). Women We Overlooked in 167 Years of New York Times Obituaries. The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  • Gates, Anita (July 23, 2006). "Theater Review; A Pageant Based on History, With Songs That Yearn". The New York Times (National ed.). p. 14, section CN. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  • Greene, Morgan (May 4, 2020). "Ida B. Wells Receives Pulitzer Prize Citation: 'The Only Thing She Really Had Was the Truth'". Chicago Tribune (online). ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  • Grossman, Ron (June 23, 2013). "Illinois Women Win the Right to Vote". Chicago Tribune (online). ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  • Heather-Lea, Patricia (March 30, 2017). . Addison County Independent. Vol. 71, no. 13. Middlebury, Vermont. Archived from the original on November 4, 2020. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  • Hentoff, Nat (March 28, 1994). "One Teacher's Struggle to Overcome Bigotry". Pasadena Star-News. p. A10. Retrieved November 6, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • "Horrible but True". Cleveland Gazette. Vol. 9, no. 23. January 16, 1892. p. 1 – via Ohio Historical Society.[permanent dead link]
  • "Birmingham Blue Plaque Unveiled to Commemorate Civil Rights Activist Ida B. Wells". I Am Birmingham (digital-only news). Birmingham, England: Adam Yosef. February 14, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  • Jalabi, Raya (July 16, 2015). "Ida B Wells, African American Activist, Honored by Google". The Guardian (online). London. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  • Linton, Caroline; Dickerson, Caitlin (March 8, 2018). "'We Want to Address These Inequities of Our Time': NYT Starts New Series Featuring Overlooked Obituaries". CBS News (online video & text). Retrieved March 31, 2019.
  • . The Washington Post. June 13, 1895. ISSN 2641-0702. LCCN sn82014727. OCLC 8787120. Archived from the original on January 11, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2008.
  • Pratt, Gregory; Byrne, John; Lolly Bowean (July 25, 2018). "Ida B. Wells Gets Her Street—City Council Approves Renaming Congress in Her Honor". Chicago Tribune (online). ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved July 28, 2018.
  • Rogers, Phil (April 11, 2018). "Great-Granddaughter of Ida B. Wells Looks to Erect Memorial". NBC Chicago. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  • Sama, Dominic (February 4, 1990). "Issues Honor Ida B. Wells, Judicial System". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 143, no. 35 (Final ed.). p. 11 (section 14). Retrieved November 11, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Shaw, Nichole (June 30, 2021). "Unveiling of Ida B. Wells Monument in Bronzeville met with 'joy, excitement, appreciation and humbleness'". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  • Slevin, Peter (July 10, 2018). "History: Movement to Honor Anti-Lynching Crusader and Journalist Ida B. Wells in Chicago Is Gaining Momentum, and Is 'Long Overdue'". Good Black News. News aggregator and blog of Facebook. (www.goodblacknews.org). Retrieved July 13, 2018. Originally published June 20, 2018, in The Lily of The Washington Post (link), which, in turn, was an adaptation of a story in The Washington Post by Peter Slevin published June 15, 2015, titled "'You Can't Just Gloss Over This History': The Movement to Honor Ida B. Wells Gains Momentum."
  • Smith, David (November 11, 2018). "Ida B Wells: The Unsung Heroine of the Civil Rights Movement". The Guardian (online) (US ed.). London. Retrieved November 11, 2018.
  • Washington, Linn (February 14, 2019). "Ida Wells Barnett Honored in Birmingham, England". The Chicago Crusader (online). Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  • Wells, Ida B. (1911). "The Negro's Quest for Work". Chicago Daily News. OCLC 11473657 (all editions).
    1. Reprinted by the New York Call (July 23, 1911). "The Negro's Quest for Work". LCCN sn83-30226. OCLC 9448923 (all editions).
    2. Transcribed and published by The Black Worker (1900 to 1919). Vol. 5. Foner, Philip Sheldon (1910–1994); Lewis, Ronald L. (eds.). Part I: "Economic Condition of the Black Worker at the Turn of the Twentieth-Century". Temple University Press. pp. 38–39 – via JSTOR j.ctvn1tcpp.5. OCLC 1129353605 (all editions).
  • Wormser, Richard. "The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow – Jim Crow Stories: Ida B. Wells Forced Out of Memphis (1892)". www.thirteen.org. WNET. Retrieved November 27, 2018.

Government and genealogical archives

  • Flowers, Mary E. (February 12, 2012). "House Resolution 770: Ida B. Wells Day in the State of Illinois". House Journal, Ninety-Seventh General Assembly (PDF). Illinois House of Representatives 104th Legislative Day, Regular & Perfunctory Session. pp. 7–8. Retrieved November 9, 2020. ... presented to Michelle Duster, great-granddaughter of Ida B. Wells for efforts to protect her legacy.
  • Journal of the Senate of the 48th General Assembly of the State of Illinois. Illinois Senate (Regular Biennial Session ed.). Springfield: Illinois State Journal Co. 1914. Retrieved November 9, 2020 – via Internet Archive.
  • Journal of the House of Representatives of the 48th General Assembly of the State of Illinois. Illinois House of Representatives (Regular Biennial Session ed.). Springfield: Illinois State Journal Co. 1914. Retrieved November 9, 2020 – via HathiTrust.

General references (not linked to notes) edit

Further reading edit

  • Baker, Lee D. (April 1996). "Ida B. Wells-Barnett (1862–1931) and Her Passion for Justice". Duke University. Retrieved December 9, 2007. In Franklin, Vincent P. (1995), Living Our Stories, Telling Our Truths: Autobiography and the Making of African American Intellectual Tradition. Oxford University Press.
  • Ida B. Wells (1862–1931) (Biography)
  • Davidson, James West. 'They say': Ida B. Wells and the Reconstruction of Race. Oxford University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-516021-5. OCLC 237042761.
  • Dray, Philip, Yours for Justice, Ida B. Wells: The Daring Life of a Crusading Journalist, Peachtree, 2008.
  • "Illinois During the Gilded Age, 1866–1896". DeKalb: Illinois Historical Digitization Projects at the Northern Illinois University Libraries. OCLC 62124756. Retrieved March 28, 2008.
    • "Ida B. Wells, 1862–1931"
      • "The Writing of Ida B. Wells"
        • A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States, 1892–1893–1894
      • "About Ida B. Wells and Her Writings". Schechter, Patricia Ann, PhD. Portland State University.
        • "Biography of Ida B Wells"
        • "The Anti-Lynching Pamphlets of Ida B. Wells, 1892–1920"
      • "Video" – In the videos, Schechter talks about Wells' experiences and legacy – archive link May 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine via Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on July 19, 2008 (14 files archived in RealMedia format). Retrieved March 28, 2008.
  • Lutes, Jean Marie (2007). Front Page Girls: Women Journalists in American Culture and Fiction, 1880–1930. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-7412-5. Retrieved July 16, 2015.
  • Wells, Ida B. (1995). Decosta-Willis, Miriam (ed.). The Memphis Diary of Ida B. Wells: An Intimate Portrait of the Activist as a Young Woman (illustrated, revised ed.). Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-7065-3. Foreword by Mary Helen Washington, Afterword by Dorothy Sterling. (Memoirs, travel notes and selected articles.)
  • Shay, Alison (July 16, 2012). . Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina. Archived from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved September 29, 2012 – via Wayback Machine.
This work was originally posted on a blog that was part of UNC's Long Civil Rights Movement Project – The LCRM Project (JSTOR 3660172). It was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and UNC for five years, from 2008 to 2012, and its published works were a collaboration of (i) the UNC Special Collections Library, (ii) the University of North Carolina Press, and (iii) the Southern Oral History Program in UNC's Center for the Study of the American South. A fourth partner during the project's first three years was the Center for Civil Rights of UNC's School of Law.
  • Silkey, Sarah Lynn (2015). Black Woman Reformer: Ida B. Wells, Lynching, and Transatlantic Activism. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-5378-4. OCLC 1005870470.
  • Summerville, Raymond M. (2021). "'Eternal Vigilance is the Price of Liberty': The Proverbs and Proverbial Sayings of Ida B. Wells-Barnett". Proverbium. 38: 315–360. ISSN 0743-782X. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  • Wells, Ida B. (1893) "Lynch Law", History Is a Weapon website.
  • Wells, Ida B. (April 27, 2018). "'Lynching is color-line murder': the blistering speech denouncing America's shame". The Guardian. London. Retrieved October 8, 2020. Republication of "Lynching: Our National Crime", Wells' speech delivered during the 1909 National Negro Conference, published in the book, Proceedings of the National Negro Conference, 1909. pp. 174–179. New York: May 31 and June 1 – book is accessible via Internet Archive).
  • Works by Ida B. Wells at Project Gutenberg.

External links edit

wells, american, lawyer, wells, bell, wells, barnett, july, 1862, march, 1931, american, investigative, journalist, educator, early, leader, civil, rights, movement, founders, national, association, advancement, colored, people, naacp, wells, dedicated, career. For the American lawyer see Ida V Wells Ida Bell Wells Barnett July 16 1862 March 25 1931 was an American investigative journalist educator and early leader in the civil rights movement She was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP 1 Wells dedicated her career to combating prejudice and violence and advocating for African American equality especially that of women 2 Ida B WellsWells c 1893BornIda Bell Wells 1862 07 16 July 16 1862Holly Springs Mississippi U S DiedMarch 25 1931 1931 03 25 aged 68 Chicago Illinois U S Burial placeOak Woods CemeteryOther namesIda B Wells BarnettIola pen name EducationRust CollegeFisk UniversityOccupationsCivil rights and women s rights activistjournalist and newspaper editorteacherPolitical partyRepublicanOther politicalaffiliationsIndependent 1930 SpouseFerdinand L Barnett m 1895 wbr Children6 including Alfreda DusterThroughout the 1890s Wells documented lynching in the United States in articles and through pamphlets such as Southern Horrors Lynch Law in all its Phases and The Red Record which debunked the fallacy frequently voiced by Whites at the time that all Black lynching victims were guilty of crimes Wells exposed the brutality of lynching and analyzed its sociology arguing that Whites used lynching to terrorize African Americans in the South because they represented economic and political competition and thus a threat of loss of power for Whites She aimed to demonstrate the truth about this violence and advocate for measures to stop it 3 Wells was born into slavery in Holly Springs Mississippi At the age of 14 4 she lost both her parents and her infant brother in the 1878 yellow fever epidemic She went to work and kept the rest of the family together with the help of her grandmother Later moving with some of her siblings to Memphis Tennessee Wells found better pay as a teacher Soon Wells co owned and wrote for the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight newspaper where her reporting covered incidents of racial segregation and inequality Eventually her investigative journalism was carried nationally in Black owned newspapers Subjected to continued threats and criminal violence including when a white mob destroyed her newspaper office and presses Wells left Memphis for Chicago Illinois She married Ferdinand L Barnett in 1895 and had a family while continuing her work writing speaking and organizing for civil rights and the women s movement for the rest of her life Wells was outspoken regarding her beliefs as a Black female activist and faced regular public disapproval sometimes including from other leaders within the civil rights movement and the women s suffrage movement She was active in women s rights and the women s suffrage movement establishing several notable women s organizations A skilled and persuasive speaker Wells traveled nationally and internationally on lecture tours 5 Wells died of kidney disease on March 25 1931 in Chicago and in 2020 was honored with a Pulitzer Prize special citation for her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching 6 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career and anti segregation activism 3 Anti lynching campaign and investigative journalism 3 1 The lynching at The Curve in Memphis 3 2 Free Speech newspaper destroyed by a mob 3 3 Southern Horrors 1892 3 4 The Red Record 1895 3 5 Speaking tours in Britain 4 Marriage and family 5 African American leadership 6 Organizing in Chicago 6 1 World s Columbian Exposition 6 2 Women s clubs 6 3 School segregation 7 Suffrage 7 1 Willard controversy 7 2 Negro Fellowship League 7 3 Alpha Suffrage Club 8 From race agitator to political candidate 9 Influence on Black feminist activism 10 Legacy and honors 10 1 Monuments 10 2 Representation in media 11 Selected publications 12 See also 13 Bibliography 13 1 Annotations 13 2 Notes 13 3 References to linked inline notes 13 4 General references not linked to notes 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life edit nbsp The Bolling Gatewood House The Wells family lived in a shack behind this house while enslaved by its owner Spires Bolling Ida Bell Wells was born on the Bolling Farm near Holly Springs Mississippi 7 Born on July 16 1862 Ida Wells was the first child of James Madison Wells 1840 1878 and Elizabeth Lizzie Warrenton James Wells was enslaved born to an enslaved woman named Peggy and Peggy s white enslaver When James was 18 his father brought James to Holly Springs hiring him out as a carpenter s apprentice to Spires Bolling with James wages going to his enslaver One of ten children born on a plantation in Virginia Lizzie was abducted and trafficked away from her family and siblings and tried without success to locate her family following the Civil War 8 Lizzie was owned by Spires Bolling for domestic labor in his home now the Bolling Gatewood House Thus before the Emancipation Proclamation was issued both of Wells parents were enslaved to Spires Bolling and bore children under these conditions James Wells built much of the Bolling Gatewood house in which Spires Bolling lived The Bolling Gatewood House has become the Ida B Wells Barnett Museum 9 The Wells family lived elsewhere on the property Blueprints on display in the Ida B Wells Barnett Museum identify shacks behind the house as the residence of the Wells family After emancipation Wells father James Wells became a trustee of Shaw College now Rust College He refused to vote for Democratic candidates during the period of Reconstruction became a member of the Loyal League and was known as a race man for his involvement in politics and his commitment to the Republican Party 8 He founded a successful carpentry business in Holly Springs in 1867 and his wife Lizzie became known as a famous cook 10 Ida B Wells was one of the eight children and she enrolled in the historically Black liberal arts college Rust College in Holly Springs formerly Shaw College In September 1878 both of Ida s parents died during a yellow fever epidemic that also claimed a sibling 11 Wells had been visiting her grandmother s farm near Holly Springs at the time and was spared Following the funerals of her parents and brother friends and relatives decided that the five remaining Wells children should be separated and sent to foster homes Wells resisted this proposition To keep her younger siblings together as a family she found work as a teacher in a rural Black elementary school outside Holly Springs Her paternal grandmother Peggy Wells nee Peggy Cheers 1814 1887 along with other friends and relatives stayed with her siblings and cared for them during the week while Wells was teaching 12 About two years after Wells grandmother Peggy had a stroke and her sister Eugenia died Wells and her two youngest sisters moved to Memphis to live with an aunt Fanny Butler nee Fanny Wells 1837 1908 in 1883 13 Memphis is about 56 miles 90 km from Holly Springs Early career and anti segregation activism edit It is with no pleasure that I have dipped my hands in the corruption here exposed Somebody must show that the Afro American race is more sinned against than sinning and it seems to have fallen upon me to do so Ida B Wells 1892 2 Soon after moving to Memphis Tennessee Wells was hired in Woodstock by the Shelby County school system During her summer vacations she attended summer sessions at Fisk University a historically Black college in Nashville Tennessee She also attended Lemoyne Owen College a historically Black college in Memphis She held strong political opinions and provoked many people with her views on women s rights At the age of 24 she wrote I will not begin at this late day by doing what my soul abhors sugaring men weak deceitful creatures with flattery to retain them as escorts or to gratify a revenge 14 On September 15 1883 and again on May 4 1884 a train conductor with the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railroad 15 16 ordered Wells to give up her seat in the first class ladies car and move to the smoking car which was already crowded with other passengers 12 In 1883 the United States Supreme Court had ruled against the federal Civil Rights Act of 1875 which had banned racial discrimination in public accommodations This verdict supported railroad companies that chose to racially segregate their passengers When Wells refused to give up her seat on September 15 the conductor and two men dragged her out of the car Wells gained publicity in Memphis when she wrote a newspaper article for The Living Way a Black church weekly about her treatment on the train In Memphis she hired an African American attorney to sue the railroad When her lawyer was paid off by the railroad 17 she hired a White attorney Wells won her case on December 24 1884 when the local circuit court granted her a 500 16 285 in 2022 award The railroad company appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court which reversed the lower court s ruling in 1887 It concluded We think it is evident that the purpose of the defendant in error was to harass with a view to this suit and that her persistence was not in good faith to obtain a comfortable seat for the short ride 18 Wells was ordered to pay court costs Her reaction to the higher court s decision revealed her strong convictions on civil rights and religious faith as she responded I felt so disappointed because I had hoped such great things from my suit for my people O God is there no justice in this land for us 19 While continuing to teach elementary school Wells became increasingly active as a journalist and writer She accepted an editorial position for a small Memphis journal the Evening Star and she began writing weekly articles for The Living Way newspaper under the pen name Iola 20 Articles she wrote under her pen name attacked racist Jim Crow policies 21 In 1889 she became editor and co owner with J L Fleming of The Free Speech and Headlight a Black owned newspaper established by the Reverend Taylor Nightingale 1844 1922 and based at the Beale Street Baptist Church in Memphis In 1891 Wells was dismissed from her teaching post by the Memphis Board of Education due to her articles criticizing conditions in the Black schools of the region She was devastated but undaunted and concentrated her energy on writing articles for The Living Way and the Free Speech and Headlight 19 Anti lynching campaign and investigative journalism editMain articles Anti lynching movement and Lynching in the United States The lynching at The Curve in Memphis edit Main article People s Grocery lynchings nbsp The People s Grocery near Memphis Tennessee was a successful African American cooperative The 1892 lynchings of its owners led Wells to begin her investigations of lynching In 1889 Thomas Henry Moss Sr 1853 1892 an African American opened People s Grocery which he co owned The store was located in a South Memphis neighborhood nicknamed The Curve Wells was close to Moss and his family having stood as godmother to his first child Maurine E Moss 1891 1971 Moss s store did well and competed with a White owned grocery store across the street Barrett s Grocery owned by William Russell Barrett 1854 1920 22 On March 2 1892 a young Black male youth named Armour Harris was playing a game of marbles with a young White male youth named Cornelius Hurst in front of the People s Grocery The two male youths got into an argument during the game then began to fight As the Black youth Harris seemed to be winning the fight the father of Cornelius Hurst intervened and began to thrash Harris The People s Grocery employees William Stewart and Calvin R McDowell 1870 1892 saw the fight and rushed outside to defend the young Harris from the adult Hurst as people in the neighborhood gathered into what quickly became a racially charged mob 23 The White grocer Barrett returned the following day March 3 1892 to the People s Grocery with a Shelby County Sheriff s Deputy looking for William Stewart Calvin McDowell who greeted Barrett indicated that Stewart was not present but Barrett was dissatisfied with the response and was frustrated that the People s Grocery was competing with his store Angry about the previous day s melee Barrett responded that Blacks were thieves and hit McDowell with a pistol McDowell wrestled the gun away and fired at Barrett missing narrowly McDowell was later arrested but subsequently released 23 On March 5 1892 a group of six White men including a sheriff s deputy took electric streetcars to the People s Grocery The group of White men were met by a barrage of bullets from the People s Grocery and Shelby County Sheriff Deputy Charley Cole was wounded as well as civilian Bob Harold Hundreds of Whites were deputized almost immediately to put down what was perceived by the local Memphis newspapers Commercial and Appeal Avalanche as an armed rebellion by Black men in Memphis 23 Thomas Moss a postman in addition to being the owner of the People s Grocery was named as a conspirator along with McDowell and Stewart The three men were arrested and jailed pending trial 22 Around 2 30 a m on the morning of March 9 1892 75 men wearing black masks took Moss McDowell and Stewart from their jail cells at the Shelby County Jail to a Chesapeake and Ohio rail yard one mile north of the city and shot them dead The Memphis Appeal Avalanche reports Just before he was killed Moss said to the mob Tell my people to go west there is no justice here 23 After the lynching of her friends Wells wrote in Free Speech and Headlight urging Blacks to leave Memphis altogether There is therefore only one thing left to do save our money and leave a town which will neither protect our lives and property nor give us a fair trial in the courts but takes us out and murders us in cold blood when accused by White persons 24 The event led Wells to begin investigating lynchings She began to interview people associated with lynchings including a lynching in Tunica Mississippi in 1892 where she concluded that the father of a young White woman had implored a lynch mob to kill a Black man with whom his daughter was having a sexual relationship under a pretense to save the reputation of his daughter 23 Free Speech newspaper destroyed by a mob edit Wells anti lynching commentaries in the Free Speech had been building particularly with respect to lynchings and imprisonment of Black men suspected of raping White women A story was published on January 16 1892 in the Cleveland Gazette describing a wrongful conviction for a sexual affair between a married White woman Julia Underwood nee Julie Caroline Wells and a single Black man William Offet 1854 1914 of Elyria Ohio Offet was convicted of rape and served four years of a 15 year sentence despite his sworn denial of rape Underwood s husband Rev Isaac T Underwood after she confessed to him that she had lied two years later diligently worked to get Offet out of the penitentiary After hiring an influential Pittsburgh attorney Thomas Harlan Baird Patterson 1844 1907 Rev Underwood prevailed Offet was released and subsequently pardoned by the Ohio Governor 25 Dear Miss Wells Thank you for your faithful paper on the lynch abomination now generally practiced against colored people in the South There has been no word equal to it in convincing power I have spoken but my word is feeble in comparison Brave woman Frederick Douglass October 25 1892 26 On May 21 1892 Wells published an editorial in the Free Speech refuting what she called that old threadbare lie that Negro men rape White women If Southern men are not careful a conclusion might be reached which will be very damaging to the moral reputation of their women 27 Four days later on May 25 The Daily Commercial wrote The fact that a Black scoundrel Ida B Wells is allowed to live and utter such loathsome and repulsive calumnies is a volume of evidence as to the wonderful patience of Southern Whites But we ve had enough of it 28 The Evening Scimitar Memphis copied the story that same day and added Patience under such circumstances is not a virtue If the Negroes themselves do not apply the remedy without delay it will be the duty of those whom he has attacked to tie the wretch who utters these calumnies to a stake at the intersection of Main and Madison Sts brand him in the forehead with a hot iron and perform upon him a surgical operation with a pair of tailor s shears 28 A White mob ransacked the Free Speech office destroying the building and its contents 29 James L Fleming co owner with Wells and business manager was forced to flee Memphis and reportedly the trains were being watched for Wells return Creditors took possession of the office and sold the assets of the Free Speech Wells had been out of town vacationing in Manhattan she never returned to Memphis 28 A committee of White businessmen reportedly from the Cotton Exchange located Rev Nightingale and although he had sold his interest to Wells and Fleming in 1891 30 assaulted him and forced him at gunpoint to sign a letter retracting the May 21 editorial 31 32 Wells subsequently accepted a job with The New York Age and continued her anti lynching campaign from New York 33 For the next three years she resided in Harlem initially as a guest at the home of Timothy Thomas Fortune 1856 1928 and wife Carrie Fortune nee Caroline Charlotte Smiley 1860 1940 34 According to Kenneth W Goings no copy of the Memphis Free Speech survives The only knowledge of the newspaper ever existing comes from reprinted articles in other archived newspapers 35 Southern Horrors 1892 edit nbsp Cover of Southern Horrors Lynch Law in All Its PhasesOn October 26 1892 Wells began to publish her research on lynching in a pamphlet titled Southern Horrors Lynch Law in All Its Phases 36 37 Having examined many accounts of lynchings due to the alleged rape of White women she concluded that Southerners accused Black men of rape to hide their real reasons for lynchings Black economic progress which White Southerners saw as a threat to their own economic progress and White ideas of enforcing Black second class status in the society Black economic progress was a contemporary issue in the South and in many states Whites worked to suppress Black progress In this period at the turn of the century Southern states starting with Mississippi in 1890 passed laws and or new constitutions to disenfranchise most Black people and many poor White people through use of poll taxes literacy tests and other devices Wells in Southern Horrors adopted the phrase poor blind Afro American Sampsons to denote Black men as victims of White Delilahs The Biblical Samson in the vernacular of the day came from Longfellow s 1865 poem The Warning containing the line There is a poor blind Samson in the land To explain the metaphor Sampson John Elliott Cairnes an Irish political economist in his 1865 article about Black suffrage wrote that Longfellow was prophesizing to wit in the long impending struggle for Americans following the Civil War he Longfellow could see in the Negro only an instrument of vengeance and a cause of ruin 38 The Red Record 1895 edit It has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled The Red Record pamphlet Discuss November 2023 After conducting further research Wells published The Red Record in 1895 a 100 page pamphlet with more detail describing lynching in the United States since the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 It also covered Black people s struggles in the South since the Civil War The Red Record explored the alarmingly high rates of lynching in the United States which was at a peak from 1880 to 1930 Wells said that during Reconstruction most Americans outside the South did not realize the growing rate of violence against Black people in the South She believed that during slavery White people had not committed as many attacks because of the economic labour value of slaves Wells noted that since slavery time ten thousand Negroes have been killed in cold blood through lynching without the formality of judicial trial and legal execution 39 Frederick Douglass had written an article noting three eras of Southern barbarism and the excuses that Whites claimed in each period Wells explored these in her The Red Record 40 During the time of enslavement she observed that Whites worked to repress and stamp out alleged race riots or suspected rebellions by the abducted usually killing Black people in far higher proportions than any White casualties Once the Civil War ended White people feared Black people who were in the majority in many areas White people acted to control them and suppress them by violence 39 During the Reconstruction Era White people murdered Black people as part of mob efforts to suppress Black political activity and re establish White supremacy after the war They feared so called Negro Domination through voting and taking office Wells urged Black people in high risk areas to move away to protect their families 41 She observed that Whites frequently claimed that Black men had to be killed to avenge their assaults upon women She said that White people falsely assumed that any relationship between a White woman and a Black man was a result of rape But given power dynamics it was much more common for White men to take sexual advantage of poor Black women She stated Nobody in this section of the country believes the old threadbare lie that Black men rape White women 42 Wells connected lynching to sexual violence showing how the myth of the Black man s lust for White women led to the murder of African American men Wells gave 14 pages of statistics related to lynching cases committed from 1892 to 1895 she also included pages of graphic accounts detailing specific lynchings She wrote that her data was taken from articles by White correspondents White press bureaus and White newspapers 43 Her delivery of these statistics did not simply reduce the murders to numbers Wells strategically paired the data with descriptive accounts in a way that helped her audience conceptualize the scale of the injustice This powerful quantification captivated Black and White audiences about the horrors of lynching through both her circulated works and public oration 44 Southern Horrors and The Red Record s documentation of lynchings captured the attention of Northerners who knew little about these mob murders or accepted the common explanation that Black men deserved this fate 45 According to the Equal Justice Initiative 4 084 African Americans were murdered in the South alone between 1877 and 1950 46 of which 25 percent were accused of sexual assault and nearly 30 percent murder 46 Generally southern states and White juries refused to indict any perpetrators for lynching 47 although they were frequently known and sometimes shown in the photographs being made more frequently of such events 48 49 Despite Wells s attempt to gain support among White Americans against mob murders she believed that her campaign could not overturn the economic interests Whites had in using lynching as an instrument to maintain Southern order and discourage Black economic ventures Ultimately Wells concluded that appealing to reason and compassion would not succeed in gaining criminalization of lynching by Southern Whites 50 In response to the extreme violence perpetrated upon Black Americans Wells concluded that armed resistance was a reasonable and effective means to defend against lynching 51 She said a Winchester rifle should have a place of honor in every black home 52 Speaking tours in Britain edit Wells travelled twice to Britain in her campaign against lynching the first time in 1893 and the second in 1894 in effort to gain the support of a powerful White nation such as Britain to shame and sanction the racist practices of the United States 50 She and her supporters in America saw these tours as an opportunity for her to reach larger White audiences with her anti lynching campaign something she had been unable to accomplish in America In these travels Wells notes that her own transatlantic voyages in themselves held a powerful cultural context given the histories of the Middle Passage and black female identity within the dynamics of segregation 53 She found sympathetic audiences in Britain already shocked by reports of lynching in America 54 Wells had been invited for her first British speaking tour by Catherine Impey 55 and Isabella Fyvie Mayo Impey a Quaker abolitionist who published the journal Anti Caste 56 had attended several of Wells lectures while traveling in America Mayo was a writer and poet who wrote under the name of Edward Garrett Both women had read of the particularly gruesome mob murder of Henry Smith in Texas and wanted to organize a speaking tour to call attention to American lynchings Impey and Mayo asked Frederick Douglass to make the trip but he declined citing his age and health He then suggested Wells who enthusiastically accepted the invitation 57 58 In 1894 before leaving the US for her second visit to Great Britain Wells called on William Penn Nixon the editor of the Daily Inter Ocean a Republican newspaper in Chicago It was the only major White paper that persistently denounced lynching 59 After she told Nixon about her planned tour he asked her to write for the newspaper while in England 59 She was the first African American woman to be a paid correspondent for a mainstream White newspaper 60 Wells toured England Scotland 61 with Eliza Wigham in attendance 62 and Wales for two months addressing audiences of thousands 63 and rallying a moral crusade among the British 64 She relied heavily on her pamphlet Southern Horrors in her first tour and showed shocking photographs of lynchings in America On May 17 1894 she spoke in Birmingham West Midlands at the Young Men s Christian Assembly and at Central Hall staying in Edgbaston at 66 Gough Road 65 On June 25 1894 at Bradford she gave a sensational address though in a quiet and restrained manner 66 On the last night of her second tour the London Anti Lynching Committee 67 was established reportedly the first anti lynching organization in the world 68 Its founding members included many notable figure including the Duke of Argyll Sir John Gorst the Archbishop of Canterbury Lady Henry Somerset and some twenty Members of Parliament 69 with activist Florence Balgarnie as the honorary secretary 70 As a result of her two lecture tours in Britain Wells received significant coverage in the British and American press Many of the articles published by the latter at the time of her return to the United States were hostile personal critiques rather than reports of her anti lynching positions and beliefs The New York Times for example called her a slanderous and nasty minded Mulatress 71 Despite these attacks from the American press Wells had nevertheless gained extensive recognition and credibility and an international audience of supporters for her cause 72 Wells tours in Britain even influenced public opinion to the extent that British textile manufacturers fought back with economic strategies imposing a temporary boycott on Southern cotton that pressured southern businessmen to condemn the practice of lynching publicly 73 Marriage and family edit nbsp Attorney Ferdinand Lee Barnett c 1900 Wells married Barnett in 1895 nbsp Wells with her four children 1909 nbsp Grave marker for Ida B Wells Barnett and her husband Ferdinand L Barnett at Oak Woods CemeteryOn June 27 1895 in Chicago at Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church Wells married attorney Ferdinand Lee Barnett 74 a widower with two sons Ferdinand Barnett and Albert Graham Barnett 1886 1962 Ferdinand Lee Barnett who lived in Chicago was a prominent attorney civil rights activist and journalist Like Wells he spoke widely against lynchings and in support of the civil rights of African Americans Wells and Barnett had met in 1893 working together on a pamphlet protesting the lack of Black representation at the World s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 Barnett founded The Chicago Conservator the first Black newspaper in Chicago in 1878 Wells began writing for the paper in 1893 later acquired a partial ownership interest and after marrying Barnett assumed the role of editor 75 Wells marriage to Barnett was a legal union as well as a partnership of ideas and actions Both were journalists as well as established activists with a shared commitment to civil rights In an interview Wells daughter Alfreda said that the two had like interests and that their journalist careers were intertwined This sort of close working relationship between a wife and husband was unusual at the time as women often played more traditional domestic roles in a marriage 76 In addition to Barnett s two children from his previous marriage the couple had four more Charles Aked Barnett 1896 1957 Herman Kohlsaat Barnett 1897 1975 Ida Bell Wells Barnett Jr 1901 1988 and Alfreda Marguerita Barnett married surname Duster 1904 1983 Charles Aked Barnett s middle name was the surname of Charles Frederic Aked 1864 1941 an influential British born turned American progressive Protestant clergyman who in 1894 while pastor of the Pembrooke Baptist Church in Liverpool England befriended Wells endorsed her anti lynching campaign and hosted her during her second speaking tour in England in 1894 77 Wells began writing her autobiography Crusade for Justice 1928 but never finished the book edited by her daughter Alfreda Barnett Duster it was posthumously published in 1970 as Crusade for Justice The Autobiography of Ida B Wells 11 78 In a chapter of Crusade For Justice titled A Divided Duty Wells described the challenge of splitting her time between family and work She continued to work after the birth of her first child traveling and bringing the infant Charles with her Although she tried to balance her roles as a mother and as a national activist it was alleged that she was not always successful Susan B Anthony said she seemed distracted 79 The establishment by Wells of Chicago s first kindergarten prioritizing Black children located in the lecture room of the Bethel AME Church demonstrates how her public activism and her personal life were connected as her great granddaughter Michelle Duster notes When her older children started getting of school age then she recognized that black children did not have the same kind of educational opportunities as some other students And so her attitude was Well since it doesn t exist we ll create it ourselves 80 African American leadership editThe 19th century s acknowledged leader for African American civil rights Frederick Douglass praised Wells work giving her introductions and sometimes financial support for her investigations When he died in 1895 Wells was perhaps at the height of her notoriety but many men and women were ambivalent or against a woman taking the lead in Black civil rights at a time when women were not seen as and often not allowed to be leaders by the wider society 81 The new leading voices Booker T Washington his rival W E B Du Bois and more traditionally minded women activists often viewed Wells as too radical 82 Wells encountered and sometimes collaborated with the others but they also had many disagreements while also competing for attention for their ideas and programs For example there are differing in accounts for why Wells name was excluded from the original list of founders of the NAACP In his autobiography Dusk of Dawn Du Bois implied that Wells chose not to be included 83 However in her autobiography Wells stated that Du Bois deliberately excluded her from the list 84 Organizing in Chicago editHaving settled in Chicago Wells continued her anti lynching work while becoming more focused on the civil rights of African Americans She worked with national civil rights leaders to protest a major exhibition she was active in the national women s club movement and she ultimately ran for a position in the Illinois State Senate She also was passionate about women s rights and suffrage She was a spokeswoman and an advocate for women being successful in the workplace having equal opportunities and creating a name for themselves 85 page needed nbsp Ida B Wells House is a Chicago landmark and National Historic Landmark Wells was an active member of the National Equal Rights League NERL founded in 1864 and was their representative calling on President Woodrow Wilson to end discrimination in government jobs 86 87 In 1914 she served as president of NERL s Chicago bureau 88 World s Columbian Exposition edit In 1893 the World s Columbian Exposition was held in Chicago Together with Frederick Douglass and other Black leaders Wells organized a Black boycott of the fair for the fair s lack of representation of African American achievement in the exhibits 89 Wells Douglass Irvine Garland Penn and Wells future husband Ferdinand L Barnett wrote sections of the pamphlet The Reason Why The Colored American Is Not in the World s Columbian Exposition which detailed the progress of Blacks since their arrival in America and also exposed the basis of Southern lynchings 90 Wells later reported to Albion W Tourgee that copies of the pamphlet had been distributed to more than 20 000 people at the fair 91 That year she started work with The Chicago Conservator the oldest African American newspaper in the city 92 Women s clubs edit Living in Chicago in the late 19th century Wells was very active in the national Woman s club movement In 1893 she organized The Women s Era Club a first of its kind civic club for African American women in Chicago Wells recruited veteran Chicago activist Mary Richardson Jones to serve as the first chair of the new club in 1894 Jones recruited for the organization and lent it considerable prestige 93 94 It would later be renamed the Ida B Wells Club in her honor In 1896 Wells took part in the meeting in Washington D C that founded the National Association of Colored Women s Clubs 95 After her death the club advocated to have a housing project in Chicago named after the founder Ida B Wells and succeeded making history in 1939 as the first housing project named after a woman of color 96 Wells also helped organize the National Afro American Council serving as the organization s first secretary 97 Wells received much support from other social activists and her fellow club women Frederick Douglass praised her work You have done your people and mine a service What a revelation of existing conditions your writing has been for me 28 Despite Douglass s praise Wells was becoming a controversial figure among local and national women s clubs This was evident when in 1899 the National Association of Colored Women s Clubs intended to meet in Chicago Writing to the president of the association Mary Terrell Chicago organizers of the event stated that they would not cooperate in the meeting if it included Wells When Wells learned that Terrell had agreed to exclude Wells she called it a staggering blow 98 See also Ida B Wells Alpha Suffrage Club School segregation edit In 1900 Wells was outraged when the Chicago Tribune published a series of articles suggesting adoption of a system of racial segregation in public schools Given her experience as a schoolteacher in segregated systems in the South she wrote to the publisher on the failures of segregated school systems and the successes of integrated public schools She then went to his office and lobbied him Unsatisfied she enlisted the social reformer Jane Addams in her cause Wells and the pressure group she put together with Addams are credited with stopping the adoption of an officially segregated school system 99 100 Suffrage editWillard controversy edit nbsp Ida B Wells c 1895Wells role in the U S suffrage movement was inextricably linked to her lifelong crusade against racism violence and discrimination towards African Americans Her view of women s enfranchisement was pragmatic and political 101 Like all suffragists she believed in women s right to vote but she also saw enfranchisement as a way for Black women to become politically involved in their communities and to use their votes to elect African Americans regardless of gender to influential political office 102 As a prominent Black suffragist Wells held strong positions against racism violence and lynching that brought her into conflict with leaders of largely White suffrage organizations Perhaps the most notable example of this conflict was her public disagreement with Frances Willard the first President of the Woman s Christian Temperance Union WCTU 103 The WCTU was a predominantly White women s organization with branches in every state and a growing membership including in the Southern United States where segregation laws and lynching occurred With roots in the call for temperance and sobriety the organization later became a powerful advocate of suffrage in the U S In 1893 Wells and Willard travelled separately to Britain on lecture tours Willard was promoting temperance as well as suffrage for women and Wells was calling attention to lynching in the U S The basis of their dispute was Wells public statements that Willard was silent on the issue of lynching 19 Wells referred to an interview Willard had conducted during her tour of the American South in which Willard had blamed African Americans behavior for the defeat of temperance legislation The colored race multiplies like the locusts of Egypt Willard had said and the grog shop is its center of power The safety of women of childhood of the home is menaced in a thousand localities so that men dare not go beyond the sight of their own roof tree 104 105 106 Although Willard and her prominent supporter Lady Somerset were critical of Wells comments Wells was able to turn that into her favor portraying their criticisms as attempts by powerful White leaders to crush an insignificant colored woman 107 Wells also dedicated a chapter in The Red Record to juxtapose the different positions that she and Willard held The chapter titled Miss Willard s Attitude condemned Willard for using rhetoric that promoted violence and other crimes against African Americans in America 108 Negro Fellowship League edit Wells her husband and some members of their Bible study group in 1908 founded the Negro Fellowship League NFL the first Black settlement house in Chicago 109 The organization in rented space served as a reading room library activity center and shelter for young Black men in the local community at a time when the local Young Men s Christian Association YMCA did not allow Black men to become members The NFL also assisted with job leads and entrepreneurial opportunities for new arrivals in Chicago from Southern States notably those of the Great Migration 110 During her involvement the NFL advocated for women s suffrage and supported the Republican Party in Illinois 111 Alpha Suffrage Club edit In the years following her dispute with Willard Wells continued her anti lynching campaign and organizing in Chicago She focused her work on Black women s suffrage in the city following the enactment of a new state law enabling partial women s suffrage The Illinois Presidential and Municipal Suffrage Bill of 1913 see Women s suffrage in Illinois gave women in the state the right to vote for presidential electors mayor aldermen and most other local offices but not for governor state representatives or members of Congress 112 113 a Illinois was the first state east of the Mississippi to grant women these voting rights 114 The prospect of passing the act even one of partial enfranchisement was the impetus for Wells and her White colleague Belle Squire to organize the Alpha Suffrage Club in Chicago on January 30 1913 115 116 page needed One of the most important Black suffrage organizations in Chicago the Alpha Suffrage Club was founded as a way to further voting rights for all women to teach Black women how to engage in civic matters and to work to elect African Americans to city offices Two years after its founding the club played a significant role in electing Oscar De Priest as the first African American alderman in Chicago 117 As Wells and Squire were organizing the Alpha Club the National American Woman Suffrage Association NAWSA was organizing a suffrage parade in Washington D C Marching the day before the inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as president in 1913 suffragists from across the country gathered to demand universal suffrage 118 Wells together with a delegation of members from Chicago attended On the day of the march the head of the Illinois delegation told the Wells delegates that the NAWSA wanted to keep the delegation entirely White 119 and all African American suffragists including Wells were to walk at the end of the parade in a colored delegation 120 Instead of going to the back with other African Americans however Wells waited with spectators as the parade was underway and stepped into the White Illinois delegation as they passed by She visibly linked arms with her White suffragist colleagues Squire and Virginia Brooks for the rest of the parade demonstrating according to The Chicago Defender the universality of the women s civil rights movement 121 From race agitator to political candidate editDuring World War I the U S government placed Wells under surveillance labeling her a dangerous race agitator 10 She defied this threat by continuing civil rights work during this period with such figures as Marcus Garvey Monroe Trotter and Madam C J Walker 10 In 1917 Wells wrote a series of investigative reports for the Chicago Defender on the East St Louis Race Riots 122 After almost thirty years away Wells made her first trip back to the South in 1921 to investigate and publish a report on the Elaine massacre in Arkansas published 1922 122 In the 1920s she participated in the struggle for African American workers rights urging Black women s organizations to support the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters as it tried to gain legitimacy 10 However she lost the presidency of the National Association of Colored Women in 1924 to the more diplomatic Mary Bethune 123 To challenge what she viewed as problems for African Americans in Chicago Wells started a political organization named Third Ward Women s Political Club in 1927 In 1928 she tried to become a delegate to the Republican National Convention but lost to Oscar De Priest Her feelings toward the Republican Party became more mixed due to what she viewed as the Hoover administration s poor stance on civil rights and attempts to promote a Lily White policy in Southern Republican organizations In 1930 Wells unsuccessfully sought elective office running as an Independent for a seat in the Illinois Senate against the Republican Party candidate Adelbert Roberts 122 10 Influence on Black feminist activism editWells explained that the defense of White women s honor allowed Southern White men to get away with murder by projecting their own history of sexual violence onto Black men Her call for all races and genders to be accountable for their actions showed African American women that they can speak out and fight for their rights According to some by portraying the horrors of lynching she worked to show that racial and gender discrimination are linked furthering the Black feminist cause 124 Legacy and honors edit nbsp Ida B Wells display at the National Museum of African American History and CultureSince Wells death with the rise of mid 20th century civil rights activism and the 1971 posthumous publication of her autobiography interest in her life and legacy has grown Awards have been established in her name by the National Association of Black Journalists 125 the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University 126 the Coordinating Council for Women in History 127 the Type Investigations formerly the Investigative Fund 128 the University of Louisville 129 and the New York County Lawyers Association awarded annually since 2003 130 among many others The Ida B Wells Memorial Foundation and the Ida B Wells Museum have also been established to protect preserve and promote Wells legacy 131 In her hometown of Holly Springs Mississippi there is an Ida B Wells Barnett Museum named in her honor that acts as a cultural center of African American history 132 In 1941 the Public Works Administration PWA built a Chicago Housing Authority public housing project in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago it was named the Ida B Wells Homes in her honor The buildings were demolished in August 2011 due to changing demographics and ideas about such housing 133 In 1988 she was inducted into the National Women s Hall of Fame 134 In August that year she was also inducted into the Chicago Women s Hall of Fame 135 Molefi Kete Asante included Wells on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans in 2002 136 In 2011 Wells was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame for her writings 137 On February 1 1990 at the start of Black History Month in the U S the U S Postal Service dedicated a 25 stamp commemorating Wells in a ceremony at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago The stamp designed by Thomas Blackshear II features a portrait of Wells illustrated from a composite of photographs of her taken during the mid 1890s Wells is the 25th African American entry and fourth African American woman on a U S postage stamp She is the 13th in the Postal Service s Black Heritage series 138 139 140 In 2006 the Harvard Kennedy School commissioned a portrait of Wells 141 In 2007 the Ida B Wells Association was founded by University of Memphis philosophy graduate students to promote discussion of philosophical issues arising from the African American experience and to provide a context in which to mentor undergraduates The Philosophy Department at the University of Memphis has sponsored the Ida B Wells conference every year since 2007 142 On February 12 2012 Mary E Flowers a member of the Illinois House of Representatives introduced House Resolution 770 during the 97th General Assembly honoring Ida B Wells by declaring March 25 2012 the eighty ninth anniversary of her death as Ida B Wells Day in the State of Illinois 143 nbsp Historical marker honoring Ida B Wells in Holly Springs MississippiIn August 2014 Wells was the subject of an episode of the BBC Radio 4 programme Great Lives in which her work was championed by Baroness Oona King 144 Wells was honored with a Google Doodle on July 16 2015 which would have been her 153rd birthday 145 146 147 148 In 2016 the Ida B Wells Society for Investigative Reporting was launched in Memphis Tennessee with the purpose of promoting investigative journalism 149 Following in the footsteps of Wells this society encourages minority journalists to expose injustices perpetuated by the government and defend people who are susceptible to being taken advantage of 149 This organization was created with much support from the Open Society Foundations Ford Foundation and CUNY Graduate School of Journalism 149 In 2018 the National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened including a reflection space dedicated to Wells a selection of quotes by her and a stone inscribed with her name 150 151 nbsp The mayor of Birmingham England commemorating Wells 1893 British Isles lecture tour with a blue plaque February 12 2019On March 8 2018 The New York Times published a belated obituary for her 2 in a series marking International Women s Day and entitled Overlooked which set out to acknowledge that since 1851 the newspaper s obituary pages had been dominated by White men while notable women including Wells had been ignored 152 153 In July 2018 Chicago s City Council officially renamed Congress Parkway as Ida B Wells Drive 154 it is the first downtown Chicago street named after a woman of color 155 On February 12 2019 a blue plaque provided by the Nubian Jak Community Trust was unveiled by the mayor of Birmingham Yvonne Mosquito at the Edgbaston Community Centre Birmingham England commemorating Wells stay in a house on the exact site of 66 Gough Road where she stayed in 1893 during her speaking tour of the British Isles 68 156 On July 13 2019 a marker for her was unveiled in Mississippi on the northeast corner of Holly Springs Courthouse Square The marker was dedicated by the Wells Barnett Museum and the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation 157 In 2019 a new middle school in Washington D C was named in her honor 158 On November 7 2019 a Mississippi Writers Trail historical marker was installed at Rust College in Holly Springs commemorating the legacy of Ida B Wells 159 On May 4 2020 she was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize special citation for her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching 6 160 The Pulitzer Prize board announced that it would donate at least 50 000 in support of Wells mission to recipients who would be announced at a later date 6 In 2021 a public high school in Portland Oregon that had been named for Woodrow Wilson was renamed Ida B Wells High School 161 Wells will be honored on a U S quarter in 2025 as part of the final year of the American Women quarters program 162 Monuments edit nbsp The life sized statue of Ida B Wells in downtown MemphisIn 2021 Chicago erected a monument to Wells in the Bronzeville neighborhood near where she lived and close to the site of the former Ida B Wells Homes housing project 163 Officially called The Light of Truth Ida B Wells National Monument based on her quote the way to right wrongs is to cast the light of truth upon them it was created by sculptor Richard Hunt 164 Also in 2021 Memphis dedicated a new Ida B Wells plaza with a life sized statue of Wells The monument is adjacent to the historic Beale Street Baptist Church where Wells produced the Free Speech newspaper 165 Representation in media edit In 1949 the anthology radio drama Destination Freedom recapped parts of her life in the episode Woman with a Mission written by Richard Durham 166 The PBS documentary series American Experience aired on December 19 1989 season 2 episode 11 one hour Ida B Wells A Passion for Justice written and directed by William Greaves The documentary featured excerpts of Wells memoirs read by Toni Morrison 167 viewable via YouTube In 1995 the play In Pursuit of Justice A One Woman Play About Ida B Wells written by Wendy D Jones born 1953 and starring Janice Jenkins 168 was produced It draws on historical incidents and speeches from Wells autobiography and features fictional letters to a friend It won four awards from the AUDELCO Audience Development Committee Inc an organization that honors Black theater 169 In 1999 a staged reading of the play Iola s Letter written by Michon Boston nee Michon Alana Boston born 1962 was performed at Howard University in Washington D C under the direction of Vera J Katz b 170 including then student Chadwick Boseman among the cast The play is inspired by the real life events that compelled a 29 year old Ida B Wells to launch an anti lynching crusade from Memphis in 1892 using her newspaper Free Speech 171 Wells life is the subject of Constant Star 2002 a widely performed musical drama by Tazewell Thompson 172 who was inspired to write it by the 1989 documentary Ida B Wells A Passion for Justice 69 Thompson s play explores Wells as a seminal figure in Post Reconstruction America 172 Wells was played by Adilah Barnes in the 2004 film Iron Jawed Angels The film dramatizes a moment during the Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913 when Wells ignored instructions to march with the segregated parade units and crossed the lines to march with the other members of her Illinois chapter 173 Selected publications editThe Arkansas Race Riot Manuscript 1920 via Northern Illinois University Digital Library Mob Rule in New Orleans Robert Charles and His Fight to Death the Story of His Life Burning Human Beings Alive Other Lynching Statistics 1900 The Red Record Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynching in the United States 1895 Southern Horrors Lynch Law in All Its Phases New York New York Age Print 1892 via Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Manuscripts Archives and Rare Books Division New York Public Library Crusade for Justice The Autobiography of Ida B Wells 1970 via The University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences See also editFrederick Douglass Booker T Washington Harriet Tubman List of civil rights leaders List of suffragists and suffragettes List of women s rights activists Timeline of women s suffrage Black feminismBibliography editAnnotations edit 48th Illinois General Assembly Regular Biennial Session May 7 1913 Senate Bill 63 State Senator Hugh Stewart Magill Jr 1868 1958 from Princeton sponsored a limited women s suffrage bill The Illinois Senate the Upper House passed it May 7 1913 by a vote of 29 to 15 three more than the required majority June 11 1913 The House posed a stiffer challenge right up to the day of the vote The Illinois House of Representatives the Lower House passed it June 11 1913 by a vote of 83 to 58 June 26 1913 Governor Edward F Dunne signed the bill June 26 1913 in Springfield The signing ceremony was filmed for the movies Vera J Katz nee Vera Joy Weintraub born 1936 is Professor Emerita from Howard University Department of Theater Arts where she taught acting and directing for 32 years from 1969 to about 2001 Like many of the writers cited in this article Katz has devoted much of her career to fighting bigotry Hentoff March 28 1994 Notes edit Giddings Encyclopedia 2013 a b c Dickerson Giddings Paula 1984 1 To Sell My Life as Dearly as Possible Ida B Wells and the Antilynching Campaign When and Where I Enter The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America Moses Wilson Jeremiah The Golden Age of Black Nationalism 1850 1925 New York Oxford University Press p 109 Wells Papers Univ Chicago a b c Pulitzer 2020 McKinney a b McMurry Matthews Dasha a b c d e Giddings Sword Among Lions 2008 pp 5 10 a b Black Patti Carr a b Mitchell p D13 Heather Lea pp 4 amp 7 section A Bay p 67 Yaeger October 21 2015 Franklin pp 61 63 65 Fradin amp Fradin p 21 Chesapeake O amp S R Co v Wells 1887 p 5 a b c Wells Duster 1970 p xviii Wells Duster 1970 pp 23 24 Cardon a b Peavey amp Smith pp 46 49 a b c d e Giddings Sword Among Lions 2008 pp 178 180 183 207 Wells Duster 1970 p 52 Horrible but True January 16 1892 p 1 Douglass Frederick 1892 p 25 Wormser a b c d Wells Southern Horrors 1892 pp 3 5 Staples Brent July 10 2021 How the White Press Wrote Off Black America The New York Times Retrieved April 1 2022 Schechter p 70 A Bright Woman p 1 section 2 Sheriff p 63 footnote 46 Schechter p 79 Sheriff pp 63 64 Goings Baker Wells Southern Horrors 1892 Cairnes p 343 a b Wells Red Record p 8 Wells Red Record Wells Red Record p 9 Wells Red Record p 12 Wells Red Record p 71 Murphy Benjamin J June 1 2021 Multiplied without Number Lynching Statistics and Visualization in Ida B Wells Mark Twain and W E B Du Bois American Literature 93 2 195 226 doi 10 1215 00029831 9003554 ISSN 0002 9831 S2CID 233966886 Wells Red Record p 82 a b Key Findings p 4 Johnston amp Oliver p 24 Thompson p 238 Allen full citation needed a b Curry Wells Southern Horrors 1892 p 23 Johnson Nicholas Negroes and the Gun The Black Tradition of Arms Washington Post Retrieved September 22 2022 Totten Gary Spring 2008 Embodying Segregation Ida B Wells and the Cultural Work of Travel African American Review 42 1 47 60 JSTOR 40301303 Zackodnik p 264 Public Notices Aberdeen Press and Journal April 24 1893 Quakers Bay p 4 Duster Michelle p 13 a b Wells Duster 1970 p 125 Elliott p 242 Lynch Law in the Southern States St Andrews Citizen May 6 1893 p 2 Lynch Law in the Southern States The Scotsman April 29 1893 p 8 Busby p 150 McBride Enright Considerable interest was felt Bradford Weekly Telegraph British Newspaper Archive June 30 1894 p 4 col 4 Retrieved December 23 2022 On the Road Anti Lynching Lectures Around the U S and Abroad A Voice for Justice The University of Chicago Library www lib uchicago edu Retrieved March 9 2022 a b Washington Linn a b Myrick Harris Paisana p 197 Smith David Zackodnik pp 268 270 Mary Jo Deegan ed 1991 Women in sociology a bio bibliographical sourcebook New York Greenwood Press p 436 ISBN 0 313 26085 0 OCLC 22181691 Miss Wells June 13 1895 Ritchie p 165 Schechter p 176 Jordan Brucella Wiggins pp 195 196 Duster Alfreda Tichi p 340 note 16 Nettles Arionne Alyssa Seymour p 333 Palmer pp 106 107 Du Bois 1940 p 224 Wells Duster 1970 p 322 DuRocher Kristina 2016 Ida B Wells Social Activist and Reformer Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 1 317 66219 8 OCLC 957700358 Biography Rooney amp Lemerand p 650 Doenecke pp 358 359 Schechter pp 94 95 Wells Douglass Penn Barnett 1893 Portwood Bonfiglio p C2 Smith Jessie Carney Phelps Shirelle eds 2003 Jones Mary Jane Richardson Notable Black American Women Vol 3 Detroit Gale Research ISBN 0 8103 4749 0 OCLC 24468213 Schultz Rima Lunin Adele Hast eds 2001 Women building Chicago 1790 1990 a biographical dictionary Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33852 5 OCLC 44573291 National Association of Colored Women s Clubs Honoring Ida B Wells National Afro American Council Wells Duster 1970 p 258 Pinar 2009 pp 77 79 Gyimah p 977 Schechter p 14 Schechter p 199 Wagner Pinar 2001 Willard Truth Telling Schechter p 102 Wells Red Record p 84 Mann p 12 Wells Chicago Daily News 1911 Schechter p 194 Illinois Senate Journal 1914 Illinois House Journal 1914 Grossman Alpha Suffrage Record 1914 p 1 Bay Schechter p 205 Boissoneault Bay p 290 Flexner amp Fitzpatrick p 318 Stillion Southard p 85 a b c DeCosta Willis McCluskey p 8 Stansell p 127 NABJ Northwestern University CCWH 2012 Type Investigations University of Louisville New York County Lawyers Association Wells Barnett Museum Wells Barnett Museum home page Wikimapia National Women s Hall of Fame Burleigh p 2 section 6 Asante Chicago Literary Hall of Fame USPS Women stamps p 3 USPS African American stamps p 2 Sama p 11 section 14 Portrait University of Memphis Flowers King Oona Cruickshank Jalabi Berenson Cavna a b c Our Creation Story Brown DeNeen L Slevin Danielle Linton amp Dickerson Pavithra Pratt amp Byrne I Am Birmingham Klinger Collins Sam P K p 24 Mississippi Writers Trail Greene Young Jenny January 26 2021 PPS changes Wilson HS name to honor Ida B Wells Barnett Portland Oregon KOIN Archived from the original on February 3 2021 Retrieved January 11 2022 United States Mint Announces 2025 American Women Quarters Program Coins United States Mint October 17 2023 Retrieved October 17 2023 Shaw A Monument To Journalist Civil Rights Activist Ida B Wells Is Unveiled In Chicago NPR July 2021 Retrieved August 7 2021 Memphis Unveils New Ida B Wells Monument Southern Hollows Podcast Retrieved August 7 2021 MacDonald J Fred ed 1989 Richard Durham s Destination Freedom New York Praeger p x ISBN 0 275 93138 2 Brody Jones Viagas Hentoff March 28 1994 Perkins amp Stephens a b Gates Anita Stetz References to linked inline notes edit Books journals magazines academic papers online blogs Allen James E 2011 1994 Without Sanctuary Photographs and Postcards of Lynching in America Santa Fe Twin Palms Publisher Print Book 1st ed July 31 1999 OCLC 936079991 Book 10th ed February 1 2000 OCLC 994750311 751138477 ISBN 978 0 944092 69 9 Book 11th ed 2011 OCLC 1075938297Exhibitions film digital Roth Horowitz Gallery 160A East 70th Street Manhattan January 14 2000 February 12 2000 Andrew Roth and Glenn Horowitz gallery co owners Witness Photographs of Lynchings from the Collection of James Allen and John Littlefield organized by Andrew Roth New York Historical Society March 14 2000 October 1 2000 OCLC 809988821 Without Sanctuary Lynching Photography in America curated by James Allen and Julia HottonAndy Warhol Museum September 22 2001 February 21 2002 The Without Sanctuary Project curated by James Allen co directed by Jessica Arcand and Margery King Martin Luther King Jr National Historical Park May 1 2002 December 31 2002 Without Sanctuary Lynching Photography in America OCLC 782970109 curated by Joseph F Jordan PhD ne Joseph Ferdinand Jordan Jr born 1951 Douglas H Quin PhD born 1956 exhibition designer National Park Service MLK site team Frank Catroppa Saudia Muwwakkil and Melissa English RiasThe 2002 short film Without Sanctuary directed by Matt Dibble ne Matthew Phillips Dibble born 1959 and produced by Joseph F Jordan PhD ne Joseph Ferdinand Jordan Jr born 1951 accompanied the 2002 2003 exhibition by the same name Without Sanctuary at the Martin Luther King Jr National Historical Park co sponsored by Emory University Digital format 2008 OCLC 1179211921 439904269 Overview Movie Photos Forum Official website part of collection at the Robert W Woodruff Library at Emory UniversityAlpha Suffrage Record The March 18 1914 The Alpha Suffrage Club PDF inaugural newsletter Vol 1 no 1 Chicago Alpha Suffrage Club Retrieved October 26 2020 via Living History of Illinois and Chicago Neil Gale Curator Asante Molefi Kete 2002 Ida B Wells Barnett 100 Greatest African Americans A Biographical Encyclopedia Amherst New York Prometheus Books pp 110 309 311 ISBN 1 57392 963 8 LCCN 2002018993 OCLC 1018143510 Baker Lee D February 2012 Ida B Wells Barnett Fighting and Writing for Justice PDF eJournal USA U S Department of State 16 6 6 8 ISSN 1949 7644 OCLC 700047682 Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2021 Retrieved March 1 2015 Bay Mia 2009 To Tell the Truth Freely The Life of Ida B Wells Hill amp Wang ISBN 978 0 8090 1646 4 OCLC 1032224630 Retrieved September 15 2011 Berenson Tessa C July 16 2015 Today s Google Doodle Celebrates Journalist Ida B Wells Birthday Time com online ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved January 14 2019 Ida B Wells Biography January 16 2020 April 27 2017 Retrieved November 7 2020 Black Patti Carr February 2001 Ida B Wells A Courageous Voice for Civil Rights Mississippi History Now online publication Mississippi Historical Society Retrieved February 13 2019 Boissoneault Lorraine January 21 2017 The Original Women s March on Washington and the Suffragists Who Paved the Way Smithsonian online ISSN 0037 7333 Retrieved November 20 2017 Danielle Britni March 8 2018 The New York Times Is Finally Giving Ida B Wells Her Due Essence Retrieved March 31 2019 Brody Richard July 27 2020 What to Stream Ida B Wells A Passion for Justice Goings on About Town Movies The New Yorker Vol 96 no 21 p 8 Retrieved November 12 2020 OCLC 877711126 all editions ISSN 0028 792X Busby Margaret ed 1992 Ida B Wells Barnett Daughters of Africa Jonathan Cape Ballantine Books p 150 ISBN 0 345 38268 4 LCCN 93 90470 OCLC 925350164 Retrieved November 1 2020 via Internet Archive Cardon Dustin February 27 2018 Ida B Wells Jackson Free Press blog Jackson Mississippi Retrieved February 14 2019 Note the article is not in the print edition back issues at ISSUU Cairnes John Elliott August 1865 The Negro Suffrage Macmillan s Magazine 12 68 334 343 CCWH November 9 2012 Ida B Wells Graduate Student Fellowship Columbia Maryland Coordinating Council for Women in History Retrieved February 22 2017 awarded annually since 1999 Chesapeake Ohio amp Southwestern Railroad Company v Ida B Wells Supreme Court of Tennessee April Term 1887 Southwestern Reporter Vol 4 May 16 1887 August 1 1887 St Paul West Publishing Company 5 1886 Retrieved May 12 2012 via Internet Archive her persistence was not in good faith Ida B Wells chicagoliteraryhof org Chicago Literary Hall of Fame November 15 2011 Retrieved October 17 2017 inducted during the Second Annual Ceremony at the Harold Washington Library November 15 2011 the article includes a video Cruickshank Matt July 16 2015 Ida B Wells 153rd Birthday Google Doodle Retrieved January 14 2019 Google Doodles Archive Curry Tommy J Fall 2012 The Fortune of Wells Ida B Wells Barnett s Use of T Thomas Fortune s Philosophy of Social Agitation as a Prolegomenon to Militant Civil Rights Activism Transactions of the Charles S Peirce Society Charles Sanders Peirce Society 48 4 456 482 doi 10 2979 trancharpeirsoc 48 4 456 LCCN 0009 1774 OCLC 844279727 S2CID 145734549 DeCosta Willis Miriam March 1 2018 October 8 2017 Ida B Wells Barnett Tennessee Encyclopedia online Tennessee Historical Society Retrieved February 13 2019 Doenecke Justus Drew 2002 Wells Barnett Ida 1862 1931 In Commire Anne Klezmer Deborah Morgan Barbara eds Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Vol 16 Vict X Yorkin Publications pp 352 360 ISBN 0 7876 4075 1 LCCN 99 24692 OCLC 593847777 Retrieved November 7 2020 via Internet Archive Also accessible online Wells Barnett Ida via encyclopedia com Retrieved November 7 2020 Douglass Frederick 2002 Letter from Frederick Douglass to Ida B Wells October 25 1892 In Gabbidon Shaun L Greene Helen Taylor Young Vernetta Diane eds African American Classics in Criminology and Criminal Justice Sage Publications p 25 ISBN 978 0 7619 2433 3 OCLC 5559711186 Du Bois William Edward Burghardt 1970 1940 Dusk of Dawn An Essay Toward an Autobiography of a Race Concept New York Schocken Books 1970 Harcourt Brace amp Company 1940 ISBN 978 3 8472 0182 3 LCCN 65 14825 OCLC 552187560 Retrieved October 28 2020 via Internet Archive verification needed Duster Alfreda Terkel Studs September 3 1971 Alfreda Wells discusses her mother Ida B Wells Barnett and her book Crusade for Justice verbal transcript and sound recording radio transcript Chicago Studs Terkel Radio Archive at WFMT Duster Michelle 2010 Ida From Abroad The Timeless Writings of Ida B Wells From England in 1894 self published Chicago Benjamin Williams Publishing LLC currently South Holland Illinois BW Publishing ISBN 978 0 9802398 9 8 OCLC 608235660 Elliott Mark Emory 2006 Color Blind Justice Albion Tourgee and the Quest for Racial Equality from the Civil War to Plessey v Ferguson New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 537021 8 LCCN 2006011311 Related articles Albion Mourgee and Plessey v Ferguson OCLC all editions Enright Mairead March 8 2018 Gender and Legal History in Birmingham and the West Midlands Ida B Wells and the Birmingham Connection Enright s blog at the University of Birmingham Retrieved February 14 2019 Flexner Eleanor Fitzpatrick Ellen Frances 2000 1959 1975 1996 Century of Struggle The Woman s Rights Movement in the United States enlarged ed Cambridge Massachusetts amp London Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 10653 6 LCCN 96 5651 OCLC 634643994 via Internet Archive Fradin Dennis B Fradin Judith Bloom 2000 Ida B Wells Mother of the Civil Rights Movement Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 21 ISBN 0 395 89898 6 OCLC 64586878 Franklin Vincent P 1995 Living Our Stories Telling Our Truths Autobiography and the Making of African American Intellectual Tradition Oxford University Press pp 61 65 ISBN 978 0 689 12192 0 OCLC 31606548 Giddings Paula J 2008 Ida A Sword Among Lions Ida B Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching Amistad Press ISBN 978 0 06 197294 2 OCLC 865473600 Giddings Paula J 2013 Wells Barnett Ida B 1862 1931 In Mason Patrick Leon ed Encyclopedia of Race and Racism Vol 4 S Z 2nd ed MacMillan Reference USA an imprint of Gale pp 265 267 ISBN 978 0 02 866024 0 Retrieved March 8 2017 Giddings Paula J 2008 Wells Barnett Ida B 1862 1931 In Moore John Hartwell ed Encyclopedia of Race and Racism Vol 3 S Z 1st ed MacMillan Reference USA an imprint of Gale pp 207 219 ISBN 978 0 02 866023 3 LCCN 2007024359 Retrieved October 18 2020 via Internet Archive Goings Kenneth W October 7 2019 October 8 2017 Memphis Free Speech Tennessee Encyclopedia Tennessee Historical Society Retrieved November 5 2020 Gyimah Miriam C 2008 Wells Barnett Ida B In Boyce Davies Carole ed Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora Origins Experiences and Culture ABC Clio pp 976 978 ISBN 978 1 85109 700 5 LCCN 2008011880 Retrieved February 14 2019 Honoring Ida B Wells With Chicago s First Monument to an African American Woman BPI Business and Professional People for the Public Interest Chicago October 22 2015 Retrieved April 23 2020 Johnston Hank Oliver Pamela Elaine eds 2020 Racialized Protest and the State Resistance and Repression in a Divided America Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 367 26353 9 LCCN 2020008052 OCLC 1159575442 Retrieved November 9 2020 Jones Wendy D Wendy Jones AALBC com autobiography Tampa Florida AALBC com LLC African American Literature Book Club Retrieved November 3 2020 The article is a short autobiography connected to the author s 2017 book An Extraordinary Life Josephine E Jones nee Josephine Ebaugh 1920 2017 the author s mother I come from a family of storytellers My mother and my grandmother Anna Mae Ebaugh nee Nance 1888 1982 were my first teachers Jordan Brucella Wiggins 2003 Ida B Wells Catherine Impey and Trans Atlantic Dimensions of the Nineteenth Century Anti Lynching Movement PhD dissertation history Eberly College of Arts and Sciences Department of History Morgantown West Virginia University Retrieved November 17 2020 OCLC 52488224 1158307686 Key Findings Lynching in America Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror PDF eBook 3rd ed Montgomery Alabama Equal Justice Initiative 2017 OCLC 1160165955 Retrieved November 9 2020 Citing Tolnay Stewart Emory Beck Elwood Meredith 1992 A Festival of Violence An Analysis of Southern Lynchings 1882 1930 University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06413 5 LCCN 94 7396 OCLC 1015166019 Retrieved November 9 2020 Quoting Raper Arthur Franklin 1936 The Mob Still Rides A Review of the Lynching Record 1931 1935 Atlanta Georgia Commission on Interracial Cooperation OCLC 1130312430 King Oona Parris Matthew August October 2014 Baroness Oona King on Ida B Wells BBC Radio 4 audio archive of a radio broadcast Great Lives Series 34 Episode 3 of 9 Bristol Retrieved May 30 2020 Klinger Jerry July 15 2019 Jewish Group Helps Dedicate Ida Wells Barnett Marker San Diego Jewish World Retrieved July 17 2019 Mann Susan A Summer 2011 Pioneers of U S Ecofeminism and Environmental Justice Feminist Formations Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 23 2 1 25 doi 10 1353 ff 2011 0028 ISSN 2151 7363 JSTOR 41301654 OCLC 752343699 S2CID 146349456 Matthews Dasha February 21 2018 Ida B Wells Suffragist Feminist and Leader info umkc edu University of Missouri Kansas City Retrieved October 8 2019 McBride Jennifer 1999 c 1998 Ida B Wells Crusade for Justice online Webster University Retrieved January 30 2013 McCluskey Audrey Thomas 2014 A Forgotten Sisterhood Pioneering Black Women Educations and Activists in the Jim Crow South Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 1138 4 OCLC 883647209 Retrieved October 28 2020 McKinney Megan August 19 2018 Ida B Wells The Drive in Her Name A Long Wait for a Distinguished Lady online Vintage Chicago Classic Magazine Retrieved October 26 2020 McMurry Linda O 1998 To Keep the Waters Troubled The Life of Ida B Wells Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513927 3 Retrieved November 25 2018 Mississippi Writers Trail November 7 2019 Historical Marker Ida B Wells Jackson Mississippi Arts Commission Retrieved June 16 2020 Mitchell Judylynn November 11 1979 Daughter of Slave Fights for Racial Justice The Daily Times Vol 56 no 343 Salisbury Maryland p D13 Retrieved October 26 2020 via Newspapers com Myrick Harris Clarissa July 2002 online version June 30 2002 Against All Odds Smithsonian 33 4 70 77 Retrieved November 12 2020 ISSN 0037 7333 OCLC 718515121 all editions OCLC 96987499 all editions NABJ Ida B Wells Award www nabj org National Association of Black Journalists NABJ Retrieved February 22 2017 National Afro American Council NKAA Notable Kentucky African Americans Database encyclopedic entry Lexington University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections OCLC 54673947 Retrieved November 2 2020 National Association of Colored Women s Clubs Encyclopaedia Britannica online August 4 2017 Retrieved April 23 2020 National Women s Hall of Fame November 15 1988 Ida B Wells Barnett Seneca Falls New York Retrieved November 22 2018 Selected in 1986 posthumously inducted in a ceremony at the Margaret Woodbury Strong Museum in Rochester on November 15 1988 Nettles Arionne Alyssa November 4 2019 Ida B Wells Lasting Impact on Chicago Politics and Power WBEZ Chicago local production NPR affiliate Retrieved November 15 2020 New York County Lawyers Association February 25 2020 18th Annual Ida B Wells Barnett Award Reception Retrieved November 3 2020 via YouTube Ida B Wells Award Northwestern University Archived from the original on July 2 2019 Retrieved February 22 2017 Our Creation Story Chapel Hill Ida B Wells Society for Investigative Reporting UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media Retrieved February 16 2018 via idabwellssociety org Paisana Joanne Madin Vieira 2016 Mendes Joao Ribeiro ed Playing the Transatlantic Card The British Anti Lynching Campaigns of Ida B Wells PDF Diacritica ejournal Series Philosophy and Culture Cosmopolitan Challenges 500 Anos de Utopia Homenagem a Rene Girard ed Printed in Vila Nova de Famalicao Portugal by the University of Minho 30 2 187 203 eISSN 2183 9174 ISSN 0870 8967 OCLC 1187195460 Retrieved November 12 2020 Palmer Stephanie C 2009 Wells Barnett Ida B In Finkelman Paul ed Encyclopedia of African American History 1896 to the Present From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty First Century Vol 5 Oxford University Press pp 107 108 doi 10 1093 acref 9780195301731 013 46339 ISBN 978 0 19 516779 5 LCCN 2008034263 OCLC 828073382 Pavithra Mohan August 8 2018 How These Women Raised 42k in a Day for an Ida B Wells Monument Fast Company Blog Retrieved January 14 2019 Peavey Linda Smith Ursula April 2019 A Determined Quest for Equality How Ida B Wells Battled Jim Crow in Memphis Memphis monthly magazine Contemporary Media 44 1 46 49 Retrieved October 25 2020 Alternate link via ISSUU a version of this story was published in the June 1983 issue of Memphis Perkins Kathy A Stephens Judith Louise Judith Stephens Lorenz eds 1998 Strange Fruit Plays on Lynching by American Women Bloomington amp Indianapolis Indiana University Press pp 366 408 ISBN 0 253 33356 3 LCCN 97 29605 OCLC 751143552 Retrieved November 6 2020 via Internet Archive link via Google Books Perkins among other things was in 2007 inducted into the College of Fellows of the American Theatre see CV Stephens retired as Professor of Humanities and Theatre at Penn State Schuylkill where she had been an educator since 1977 Michon Boston 1962 pp 366 367 Iola s Letter 1994 pp 368 408Pinar William Frederick January 2001 8 White Women and the Campaign Against Lynching Frances Willard Jane Addams Jesse Daniel Ames Counterpoints Vol 163 The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America Lynching Prison Rape amp the Crisis of Masculinity Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang 163 487 554 ISSN 1058 1634 JSTOR 42977758 OCLC 5792541764 Pinar offers a description of the accusations made between Willard and Wells in England in 1894 Pinar William Frederick 2009 The Worldliness of a Cosmopolitan Education Passionate Lives in Public Service Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 84485 1 LCCN 2008046092 OCLC 846131889 Portrait of Ida B Wells April 6 2006 A Celebration of Ida B Wells i Institute of Politics amp ii Women and Public Policy Program co sponsors The Institute of Politics at Harvard University archived video of a forum 1 08 15 Cambridge Harvard Kennedy School Forum John F Kennedy Jr Forum Retrieved February 22 2017 the video relates to the unveiling of several new portraits installed at the Kennedy School including a poster reproduction of a painting of Ida B Wells painted by Patricia Watwood commissioned by the school for 20 000 and installed April 2006 in the Fainsod Room of the Littauer Building next Winston Churchill s portrait Portwood Shirley J Winter 2000 2001 Reviewed Work The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in the World s Columbian Exposition The Afro American Contribution to Columbian Literature by Ida B Wells Frederick Douglass Irvine Garland Penn Ferdinand Barnett Robert W Rydell Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society book review 93 4 457 459 ISBN 978 3 8472 0182 3 ISSN 1522 1067 JSTOR 40193465 OCLC 5542906749 Review of the 1893 work The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in the World s Columbian Exposition The Afro American Contribution to Columbian Literature by Ida B Wells Frederick Douglass Irvine Garland Penn and Ferdinand Barnett Re published 1999 Robert W Rydell ed Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press Announcement of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize Winners Special Citation Ida B Wells The Pulitzer Prize May 4 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 For her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching Quakers Against Racism Catherine Impey and the Anti Caste Journal Quakers of the World OCLC 607352452 Retrieved November 11 2018 Ritchie Donald A 2007 1997 Part 3 Society s Critics 1900 1945 Ida B Wells Barnett American Journalists Getting the Story Oxford University Press pp 164 166 ISBN 978 0 19 532837 0 LCCN 96 29208 OCLC 1099791041 Retrieved October 26 2020 via Internet Archive Rooney Terrie M Lemerand Karen E eds 1998 Ida B Wells Barnett Contemporary Heroes and Heroines Vol 3 Gale Research pp 644 651 ISBN 978 0 7876 2215 2 OCLC 38956591 Retrieved November 9 2020 via Internet Archive Also accessible online Ida B Wells Barnett via the Christian Broadcasting Network Retrieved November 7 2020 Schechter Patricia January 14 2003 Ida B Wells Barnett and American Reform 1880 1930 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 7546 9 Retrieved October 26 2020 Seymour James B Jr 2006 Wells Barnett Ida B In Finkelman Paul ed Encyclopedia of African American History 1896 to the Present From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty First Century Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 333 334 doi 10 1093 acref 9780195301731 013 46339 ISBN 978 0 19 516777 1 LCCN 2005033701 OCLC 607234039 Sheriff Stacey Ellen December 2009 Rhetoric and Revision Women s Arguments for Social Justice in the Progressive Era PhD Department of English Pennsylvania State University OCLC 783231213 Retrieved October 26 2020 Stansell Christine 2010 The Feminist Promise 1792 to the Present New York The Modern Library pp 126 128 ISBN 978 0 8129 7202 3 LCCN 2009026662 OCLC 770464849 Retrieved February 16 2017 via Internet Archive Stetz Margaret Diane Spring 2018 Re Embodying Ida B Wells A Figure of Resistance in American Popular Culture Americana The Journal of American Popular Culture 1900 to Present online Hollywood 17 1 ISSN 1553 8931 Retrieved November 3 2020 Stillion Southard Belinda A 2011 Militant Citizenship Rhetorical Strategies of the National Woman s Party 1913 1920 Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 281 7 LCCN 2011005218 OCLC 892519712 Thompson Mildred Isabelle 1990 Ida B Wells Barnett An Exploratory Study of an American Black Woman 1893 1930 Black Women in United States History Vol 15 Brooklyn Carlton Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 926019 21 8 LCCN 90 1399 OCLC 21035436 Retrieved November 9 2020 via Internet Archive this book Vol 15 of a 16 vol set is an adaptation of Thompson s 1979 PhD dissertation at George Washington University OCLC 78529680 Tichi Celelia 2011 Chapter 7 Civic Passions Seven Who Launched Progressive America end notes Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 7191 1 LCCN 2009011634 OCLC 1055332079 Retrieved October 28 2020 via Internet Archive webcast via Library of Congress Introduction Truth Telling Frances Willard and Ida B Wells version 9 ed Evanston Illinois Frances Willard House Museum and Archives Retrieved October 24 2020 Type Investigations Fellowship Ida B Wells Fellowship www typeinvestigations org New York Type Investigations formerly The Investigative Fund the investigateive newsroom of the Type Media Center Retrieved November 29 2018 Ida B Wells Award University of Louisville Retrieved February 22 2017 Ida B Wells Conference University of Memphis Retrieved May 4 2020 USPS Women stamps May 2020 2015 USPS Historian ed Women Subjects on United States Postage Stamps PDF Postal History Black Heritage United States Postal Service pp 1 8 Archived from the original PDF on March 21 2021 Retrieved November 3 2020 USPS African American stamps May 2020 August 2013 USPS Historian ed African American Subjects on United States Postage Stamps PDF Postal History United States Postal Service pp 1 6 Retrieved November 3 2020 Viagas Robert December 1 1995 AuDelCo Award Winners Playbill online Retrieved January 31 2018 See AUDELCO Wagner Ella et al eds March 14 2019 Truth Telling Frances Willard and Ida B Wells Introduction Frances Willard House Museum and Archives Evanston Illinois Retrieved March 18 2019 Wells Barnett Museum Ida B Holly Springs Mississippi The Ida B Wells Memorial Foundation Retrieved February 17 2017 Wells Barnett Museum Ida B Holly Springs Mississippi The Ida B Wells Memorial Foundation Retrieved February 22 2017 Wells Ida Bell 1970 Duster Alfreda ed Crusade for Justice The Autobiography of Ida B Wells University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 89344 8 LCCN 73108837 OCLC 8162296586 Retrieved September 8 2019 via Internet Archive Wells Ida B 1894 1892 1893 The Red Record Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States 1892 1893 1894 Chicago Donohue amp Henneberry Retrieved November 23 2020 via Frederick Douglass Papers Library of Congress Manuscript Division OCLC 26846545 all editions Library of Congress Manuscript Mixed Material www wbr loc wbr gov wbr item wbr mfd wbr 40021 Also transcribed by Project Gutenberg e book No 17977 released February 8 2005 Wells Ida B Papers 1884 1976 Joseph Regenstein Library University of Chicago Special Collections 1978 OCLC 19496699 Retrieved March 21 2015 Wells Ida B Douglass Frederick Penn Garland I Bernett Ferdinand Lee 1893 Wells Ida B ed The Reason Why The Colored American Is Not in the World s Columbian Exposition Chicago Miss Ida B Wells 128 S Clark Street OCLC 702372532 Retrieved October 26 2020 via University of Pennsylvania Libraries LCCN mfd 25023 Wells Ida B 1892 Southern Horrors Lynch Law in All Its Phases New York New York Age Print Archived from the original on January 8 2021 Retrieved August 21 2020 via Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Manuscripts Archives and Rare Books Division New York Public Library Wikimapia Ida B Wells Homes Chicago Illinois wikimapia org Retrieved May 12 2012 Willard Frances October 23 1890 The Race Problem Miss Willard on the Political Puzzle of the South New York Voice weekly pro prohibition newspaper Vol 7 New York Astor Place Funk amp Wagnalls Company OCLC 32278752 via Frances Willard House Museum and Archives Chicago the article is an interview with Willard by the New York Voice when she was in Atlanta in October 1890 for WCTU s annual convention wherein she stated The grog shop is its center of power The safety of woman of childhood of the home is menaced in a thousand localities at this moment so that men dare not go beyond the sight of their own roof tree permanent dead link Yaeger Lynn October 21 2015 The African American Suffragists History Forgot Vogue online Retrieved May 5 2018 Zackodnik Teresa Christine July August 2005 Ida B Wells and American Atrocities in Britain Women s Studies International Forum ScienceDirect Elsevier 28 4 259 273 doi 10 1016 j wsif 2005 04 012 ISSN 0277 5395 OCLC 936719646 Retrieved February 17 2010 News media A Bright Woman St Joseph Daily News Vol 17 no 9 St Joseph Missouri June 11 1895 p 7 OCLC 13745156 Retrieved October 26 2020 via Newspapers com also LCCN sn86063691 Bonfiglio Jeremy Dean February 19 2012 Great Grandson of Influential Civil Rights Pioneer Ida B Wells Keeps Her Legacy Alive The Herald Palladium Vol 127 no 50 St Joseph Michigan pp 1 2 section C ISBN 978 3 8472 0182 3 OCLC 669922511 Retrieved October 26 2020 via Newspapers com Brown DeNeed L April 26 2018 Ida B Wells Lynching Museum Memorial Honors Woman Who Fought Lynching The Washington Post Retropolis a history blog online Retrieved April 27 2018 Burgess Katherine October 26 2020 Ida B Wells was driven out of Memphis in 1892 She might soon have her own statue there USA Today Retrieved November 4 2020 One of the loudest voices speaking out against Wells in Memphis was Edward Ward Carmack editor of the Memphis Commercial the predecessor of The Commercial Appeal He demanded that White citizens retaliate against the Black wench for her writings against the lynchings Burleigh Nina August 21 1988 Hall of Fame Will Induct 10 Chicago Tribune Vol 142 no 234 p 2 section 6 ISSN 1085 6706 Retrieved June 30 2019 via Newspapers com Cavna Michael July 16 2015 Here s Why Google Doodle Salutes Fearless Peerless Word Warrior Ida B Wells The Washington Post online Retrieved January 14 2019 Chase William Calvin ed October 22 1892 Miss Ida B Wells A Lecture 3 column tombstone style advertisement The Washington Bee weekly newspaper Saturdays Vol 11 no 19 Washington D C Bee Publishing p 3 ISSN 1940 7424 LCCN sn84025891 OCLC 10587828 Retrieved November 10 2020 via Chronicling America Collins Sam P K April 4 10 2019 D C s Newest Middle School Named After Ida B Wells Education The Washington Informer Vol 54 no 25 ISSN 0741 9414 via ISSUU Digitized print edition The online edition here is dated March 26 2019 Dickerson Caitlin March 9 2018 March 8 2018 Padnani Amisha Amy Bennett Jessica eds Ida B Wells Who Took on Racism in the Deep South With Powerful Reporting on Lynchings online Women We Overlooked in 167 Years of New York Times Obituaries The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 22 2018 Gates Anita July 23 2006 Theater Review A Pageant Based on History With Songs That Yearn The New York Times National ed p 14 section CN Retrieved June 22 2010 Greene Morgan May 4 2020 Ida B Wells Receives Pulitzer Prize Citation The Only Thing She Really Had Was the Truth Chicago Tribune online ISSN 1085 6706 Retrieved May 5 2020 Grossman Ron June 23 2013 Illinois Women Win the Right to Vote Chicago Tribune online ISSN 1085 6706 Retrieved November 17 2018 Heather Lea Patricia March 30 2017 Letter to the Editor Ida Wells an inspiring heroine for International Women s Day Addison County Independent Vol 71 no 13 Middlebury Vermont Archived from the original on November 4 2020 Retrieved October 26 2020 Hentoff Nat March 28 1994 One Teacher s Struggle to Overcome Bigotry Pasadena Star News p A10 Retrieved November 6 2020 via Newspapers com Horrible but True Cleveland Gazette Vol 9 no 23 January 16 1892 p 1 via Ohio Historical Society permanent dead link Birmingham Blue Plaque Unveiled to Commemorate Civil Rights Activist Ida B Wells I Am Birmingham digital only news Birmingham England Adam Yosef February 14 2012 Retrieved November 4 2020 Jalabi Raya July 16 2015 Ida B Wells African American Activist Honored by Google The Guardian online London Retrieved January 14 2019 Linton Caroline Dickerson Caitlin March 8 2018 We Want to Address These Inequities of Our Time NYT Starts New Series Featuring Overlooked Obituaries CBS News online video amp text Retrieved March 31 2019 Miss Ida B Wells About to Marry The Washington Post June 13 1895 ISSN 2641 0702 LCCN sn82014727 OCLC 8787120 Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved May 9 2008 Pratt Gregory Byrne John Lolly Bowean July 25 2018 Ida B Wells Gets Her Street City Council Approves Renaming Congress in Her Honor Chicago Tribune online ISSN 1085 6706 Retrieved July 28 2018 Rogers Phil April 11 2018 Great Granddaughter of Ida B Wells Looks to Erect Memorial NBC Chicago Retrieved November 3 2020 Sama Dominic February 4 1990 Issues Honor Ida B Wells Judicial System Chicago Tribune Vol 143 no 35 Final ed p 11 section 14 Retrieved November 11 2020 via Newspapers com Shaw Nichole June 30 2021 Unveiling of Ida B Wells Monument in Bronzeville met with joy excitement appreciation and humbleness Chicago Sun Times Retrieved July 3 2021 Slevin Peter July 10 2018 History Movement to Honor Anti Lynching Crusader and Journalist Ida B Wells in Chicago Is Gaining Momentum and Is Long Overdue Good Black News News aggregator and blog of Facebook www wbr goodblacknews wbr org Retrieved July 13 2018 Originally published June 20 2018 in The Lily of The Washington Post link which in turn was an adaptation of a story in The Washington Post by Peter Slevin published June 15 2015 titled You Can t Just Gloss Over This History The Movement to Honor Ida B Wells Gains Momentum Smith David November 11 2018 Ida B Wells The Unsung Heroine of the Civil Rights Movement The Guardian online US ed London Retrieved November 11 2018 Washington Linn February 14 2019 Ida Wells Barnett Honored in Birmingham England The Chicago Crusader online Retrieved February 17 2019 Wells Ida B 1911 The Negro s Quest for Work Chicago Daily News OCLC 11473657 all editions Reprinted by the New York Call July 23 1911 The Negro s Quest for Work LCCN sn83 30226 OCLC 9448923 all editions Transcribed and published by The Black Worker 1900 to 1919 Vol 5 Foner Philip Sheldon 1910 1994 Lewis Ronald L eds Part I Economic Condition of the Black Worker at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Temple University Press pp 38 39 via JSTOR j ctvn1tcpp 5 OCLC 1129353605 all editions Wormser Richard The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow Jim Crow Stories Ida B Wells Forced Out of Memphis 1892 www thirteen org WNET Retrieved November 27 2018 Government and genealogical archives Flowers Mary E February 12 2012 House Resolution 770 Ida B Wells Day in the State of Illinois House Journal Ninety Seventh General Assembly PDF Illinois House of Representatives 104th Legislative Day Regular amp Perfunctory Session pp 7 8 Retrieved November 9 2020 presented to Michelle Duster great granddaughter of Ida B Wells for efforts to protect her legacy Journal of the Senate of the 48th General Assembly of the State of Illinois Illinois Senate Regular Biennial Session ed Springfield Illinois State Journal Co 1914 Retrieved November 9 2020 via Internet Archive Journal of the House of Representatives of the 48th General Assembly of the State of Illinois Illinois House of Representatives Regular Biennial Session ed Springfield Illinois State Journal Co 1914 Retrieved November 9 2020 via HathiTrust General references not linked to notes edit Buechler Steven Michael 1990 Women s Movements in the United States Woman Suffrage Equal Rights and Beyond New Brunswick New Jersey and London Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 1558 0 LCCN 89 49083 OCLC 925227511 Campbell Karlyn Kohrs November 1986 Style and Content in the Rhetoric of Early Afro American Feminists Quarterly Journal of Speech Routledge on behalf of the National Communication Association 72 4 434 445 doi 10 1080 00335638609383786 eISSN 1479 5779 ISSN 0033 5630 LCCN 56053730 OCLC 4659161765 Davis Elizabeth Lindsay 1922 The Story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women s Clubs 1900 1922 Chicago Illinois Federation of Colored Women s Clubs OCLC 830433285 Retrieved November 5 2020 via Internet Archive Portraits from the book have been digitized and are archived at the New York Public Library Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division NYPL b11507686 click on Digital Gallery Effinger Crichlow Marta 2014 2000 Chapter 1 Tell My People to Go West Ida B Wells Staging Migrations Toward an American West From Ida B Wells to Rhodessa Jones Boulder University Press of Colorado pp 19 60 ISBN 978 1 60732 311 2 OCLC 867020572 JSTOR j ctt83jhx6 The author published a PhD dissertation under the same title in 2000 at Northwestern University OCLC 1194713125 Gere Anne Ruggle Robbins Sarah Ruffing Spring 1996 Gendered Literacy in Black and White Turn of the Century African American and European American Club Women s Printed Texts Signs 21 3 643 678 doi 10 1086 495101 ISSN 0097 9740 JSTOR 3175174 OCLC 4639157083 S2CID 143859735 Hendricks Wanda Ann 1998 Gender Race and Politics in the Midwest Black Club Women in Illinois Bloomington amp Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33447 3 LCCN 98 3091 OCLC 38520618 McCammon Holly J March 2003 Out of the Parlors and Into the Streets The Changing Tactical Repertoire of the U S Women s Suffrage Movements Social Forces University of Oxford Press 81 3 787 818 doi 10 1353 sof 2003 0037 ISSN 0037 7732 OCLC 703594031 S2CID 143456172 Parker Maegan F Spring 2008 Desiring Citizenship A Rhetorical Analysis of the Wells Willard Controversy Women s Studies in Communication 31 1 56 78 doi 10 1080 07491409 2008 10162522 ISSN 0749 1409 OCLC 347075486 S2CID 143574671 Royster Jacqueline Jones ed 2016 1997 Southern Horrors and Other Writings The Anti Lynching Campaign of Ida B Wells 1892 1900 2nd ed Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 1 319 04904 1 OCLC 930997497 Further reading editBaker Lee D April 1996 Ida B Wells Barnett 1862 1931 and Her Passion for Justice Duke University Retrieved December 9 2007 In Franklin Vincent P 1995 Living Our Stories Telling Our Truths Autobiography and the Making of African American Intellectual Tradition Oxford University Press Ida B Wells 1862 1931 Biography Davidson James West They say Ida B Wells and the Reconstruction of Race Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 19 516021 5 OCLC 237042761 Dray Philip Yours for Justice Ida B Wells The Daring Life of a Crusading Journalist Peachtree 2008 Illinois During the Gilded Age 1866 1896 DeKalb Illinois Historical Digitization Projects at the Northern Illinois University Libraries OCLC 62124756 Retrieved March 28 2008 Ida B Wells 1862 1931 The Writing of Ida B Wells A Red Record Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States 1892 1893 1894 About Ida B Wells and Her Writings Schechter Patricia Ann PhD Portland State University Biography of Ida B Wells The Anti Lynching Pamphlets of Ida B Wells 1892 1920 Video In the videos Schechter talks about Wells experiences and legacy archive link Archived May 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine via Wayback Machine Archived from the original on July 19 2008 14 files archived in RealMedia format Retrieved March 28 2008 Lutes Jean Marie 2007 Front Page Girls Women Journalists in American Culture and Fiction 1880 1930 Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7412 5 Retrieved July 16 2015 Wells Ida B 1995 Decosta Willis Miriam ed The Memphis Diary of Ida B Wells An Intimate Portrait of the Activist as a Young Woman illustrated revised ed Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 7065 3 Foreword by Mary Helen Washington Afterword by Dorothy Sterling Memoirs travel notes and selected articles Shay Alison July 16 2012 Remembering Ida B Wells Barnett Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Archived from the original on August 1 2013 Retrieved September 29 2012 via Wayback Machine This work was originally posted on a blog that was part of UNC s Long Civil Rights Movement Project The LCRM Project JSTOR 3660172 It was funded by the Andrew W Mellon Foundation and UNC for five years from 2008 to 2012 and its published works were a collaboration of i the UNC Special Collections Library ii the University of North Carolina Press and iii the Southern Oral History Program in UNC s Center for the Study of the American South A fourth partner during the project s first three years was the Center for Civil Rights of UNC s School of Law dd dd Silkey Sarah Lynn 2015 Black Woman Reformer Ida B Wells Lynching and Transatlantic Activism Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 5378 4 OCLC 1005870470 Summerville Raymond M 2021 Eternal Vigilance is the Price of Liberty The Proverbs and Proverbial Sayings of Ida B Wells Barnett Proverbium 38 315 360 ISSN 0743 782X Retrieved February 18 2022 Wells Ida B 1893 Lynch Law History Is a Weapon website Wells Ida B April 27 2018 Lynching is color line murder the blistering speech denouncing America s shame The Guardian London Retrieved October 8 2020 Republication of Lynching Our National Crime Wells speech delivered during the 1909 National Negro Conference published in the book Proceedings of the National Negro Conference 1909 pp 174 179 New York May 31 and June 1 book is accessible via Internet Archive Works by Ida B Wells at Project Gutenberg External links editIda B Wells at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Works by Ida B Wells at Project Gutenberg Works by Ida B Wells at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Norwood Arlisha Ida B Wells National Women s History Museum 2017 Ida B Wells Papers 1884 1976 Joseph Regenstein Library University of Chicago Library Special Collections Research Center OCLC 19496699 Wells Ida B family photo University of Chicago Library Special Collections Research Center Photo Archive Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Mississippi nbsp Chicago nbsp Illinois nbsp United States nbsp Journalism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ida B Wells amp oldid 1207361671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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