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Ida B. Wells Barnett 
Major Works & Positions
- Evening Star columnist
- Living Way (1887)
- Elected Secretary For Afro-American Press Association (1889)
- Invited to become editor of and partner of the Free Speech and Headlight (1889)
- New York Age (June7,1892)
- The Reason Why the Colored American is not in the World Columbian Exposition
- Chicago Conservator (1893)
- Crusade for Justice
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Biography of Ida B. Wells Barnett
Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi.
Numerous sources incorrectly list her birthplace as Holly Springs,
Misssouri, however. Born a slave along with her parents near
the end of the Civil War, her father was a carpenter and her
mother was a famous cook. She was the oldest of four boys and
four girls. She received her education at Rust College, a freemen's
high school and industrial school. In 1887 yellow fever left
her and her sisters and brothers without their parents, and
she managed with her father's savings to support their family.
(Notable Black American Women 1232)
When
she was forced to give up her first class seat on the Chesapeake
Railroad car in 1884, she filed a lawsuit against the company
and became the first Southern black to appeal to a state court
since the Supreme Court's Civil Rights case in 1883. The lower
court ruled in Barnett's favor, but the decision was reversed
by the Tennessee Supreme Court in 1887. She decided to tell
the story of her lawsuit in the black church weekly, The
Living Way. In 1887 she was made the secretary of the
Afro- American Press Association, and she was the first woman
representative to attend conclave. She became part-owner of
the Memphis Free Speech in charge of the editorial
operations.(African American Civil Rights 37)
Ida B.Wells began a crusade against lynching, which caused a white mob to destroy her newspaper office. She was asked by Timothy Thomas Fortune to work at his newspaper office to continue her anti-lynching campaign. She organized the Woman Loyal in Brooklyn, N.Y, the first black woman anti-lynching club and established similar anti-lynching clubs in Boston, Massachusett, Washington, D.C. and other cities. She organized the first black women’s suffage group, and in 1909 she was among the blacks and whites who founded the NAACP.( African- American Civil Right 37)
On
March 21, 1931, Wells-Barnett became ill and was rushed to the
Daily Hospital. On March 23 she was found to be suffering
from uremic poison. On March 25 at the age sixty- nine, she
passed away and was buried in Chicago's Oakwood Cemetery. As
a black American leader of the nineteenth and twentieth century,
the life of Barnett has been memorialized. In 1941 the Chicago
Housing Authority opened the Ida B. Wells Housing Project, and
in 1950 the city of Chicago named her one of twenty-five outstanding
women in the city's history. (Notable Black American
Women 1237)
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Summary of Crusade for Justice
by Lavon Williams (SHS)
Ida
B. Wells (1862- 1931), born prior to the Emancipation Proclamation,
was left alone to rear eight children after her parents' death.
In the early 1880's, she moved to Memphis where she became a
school teacher in the rural part of Shelby County, Tennessee.
On May 4, 1884, Wells was traveling by train to Woodstock, Tennessee,
where her school was located. She purchased a first class ticket
and the train conductor ordered her to move to the smoking car.
She refused, and the conductor asked several white passengers
to remove her from the car. When she returned to Memphis,
she filed a lawsuit against the railroad company. It was the
first time a Southern black had filed an appeal to a state court
since the United States Court declared unconstitutional the
Civil Rights Act in 1875. She won the lawsuit, but the railroad
appealed and the Supreme Court reversed the decision of the
lower court.
Photo above: Lavon Williams
Wells was disappointed because she had great hopes for her people.
During the same year, she passed the qualifying examinations
and became a teacher. In 1887 she wrote the article about her
suit against the railroad. She became part owner of the city's
only Afro-American Journal, Free Speech and Headlight.
The article criticized the Memphis Board of Education for Separate
Inferior Negro schools and that led to her dismissal in
1891. She became a full-time journalist, encouraging boycotts
and urging blacks to leave Memphis.
In
1892 she denounced the lynching of three young black businessmen.
Her editorial office was wrecked after the article. She then
began working at the New York Age
and began to write against the South. She moved to Chicago
in 1895 where she published A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics
and Alleged Cause of Lynching in the United States 1892-1894.
The book represented the first serious recording of
lynching. Wells married African-American rights advocate
Ferdinand Barnett, and the couple published the Chicago
Conservator. They were considered pillars of the
black community of Chicago. Ida B. Wells-Barnett had several
children, including Ida B. Wells, Jr. Barnett established
the first black women's suffrage group called the Alpha Suffrage
Club, which demanded the right to vote. She was also one of
the founders of the Niagara Movement. It evolved into the NAACP.
She began speaking out for "federal anti-lynching laws, universal
suffrage, quality education, and an end to discrimination and
segregation." In 1913 Wells was the first black probation
officer with Chicago Municipal Court. Chicago's Housing
Authority named one of its lowest income housing developments
after her in 1941. Ida Wells died in 1931 of illness. Later
(in 1970) Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography
of Ida B. Wells was edited by her daughter and was published.
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Related
Websites
Cambridge
University University Press American Biography gives info on
Wells-Barnett but incorrectly lists birthplace as Holy
Springs, Missouri, instead of Holly Springs, Mississippi.
Bibliography list for study of Wells-Barnett.
(1864-1931)
Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi, months
before the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, says Women
in History site.
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Bibliography
- "African- American Civil Rights. " Westport: Greenwood Press, 1992.
- "Black Americans" New York, NY: Facts of Files, Inc, 1992.
- "Extraordinary Black Americans" Canada: Childrens Press, 1989.
- "Notable Black American Women" Detroit, Mi: Gale Research, 1992.
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