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Ida B. Wells (1862 - 1931) Ida B. Wells, born on this day in 1862, was a radical journalist and civil rights activist. "If labor is withdrawn capital will not remain...The white man's dollar is...

Ida B. Wells (1862 - 1931)

Wed Jul 16, 1862

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Image: Ida B. Wells Barnett, in a photograph by Mary Garrity from c. 1893 [Wikipedia]


Ida B. Wells, born on this day in 1862, was a radical journalist and civil rights activist. "If labor is withdrawn capital will not remain...The white man's dollar is his god, and to stop this will be to stop outrages in many localities."

Born into slavery on July 16th, 1862, Wells was freed by the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. After moving to Memphis, Tennessee, Wells began working as a teacher and wrote for the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight newspaper, which she also co-owned. Her reporting covered incidents of racial injustice.

In the 1890s, Wells documented lynching in her works "Horrors" and "The Red Record". Her documentation undermined the white supremacist claim that lynching was something only done to criminals, and her analysis exposed lynching as a means of killing and intimidating black people whose competition was threatening white power.

Wells' work was carried nationally in black-owned newspapers, gaining prominence and earning the ire of white supremacists. On May 21st, 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."

Following this statement, Wells was denounced as a "Black scoundrel" in the press and an angry white mob burned down the Free Speech offices while she was out of town. A group of local white businessmen located Rev. Nightingale, the founder of the Free Speech, assaulted him and forced him at gunpoint to sign a letter retracting Wells' editorial. Wells never returned to Memphis.

Wells was also active in the women's suffrage movement, however her unrelenting advocacy for racial justice clashed with contemporary, predominantly white suffrage organizations.

In 1893, Wells and Frances Willard, President of the white Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), were traveling separately to Britain on lecture tours. Wells publicly criticized Willard for remaining silent on the issue of lynching and blaming black people for a lack of success with her reform campaign in the American South.

In 1909, Wells co-founded The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) along with figures such as W.E.B. Du Bois and Mary White Ovington.

In the late 1920s, Wells began writing her autobiography but didn't finish the book before dying of kidney failure in 1931 at age 68. The text was posthumously edited and published by her daughter Alfreda Barnett Duster as "Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells."

"If labor is withdrawn capital will not remain. The Afro-American is thus the backbone of the South. The white man's dollar is his god, and to stop this will be to stop outrages in many localities."

- Ida B. Wells


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