Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this foruma biography of the day--ida b. wells-barnett
Ida B. Wells
Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 March 25, 1931) was an African American journalist, newspaper editor and, with her husband, newspaper owner Ferdinand L. Barnett, an early leader in the civil rights movement. She documented lynching in the United States, showing how it was often a way to control or punish blacks who competed with whites. She was active in the women's rights and the women's suffrage movement, establishing several notable women's organizations. Wells was a skilled and persuasive rhetorician, and traveled internationally on lecture tours.[1]
Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1862,[2] just before President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Her father James Wells was a carpenter and her mother was Elizabeth "Lizzie" Warrenton Wells. Both parents were enslaved until freed under the Proclamation, one year after she was born.[3]
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In March 1892, racial tensions were rising in Memphis. Violence was becoming the norm. Her three friends, Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell, and Henry Stewart, owned the People's Grocery Company. It was doing well and was seen as competitive with a white-owned grocery store across the street. While Wells was out of town in Natchez, Mississippi, a white mob invaded her friends' store. During the altercation, three white men were shot and injured. Moss, McDowell, and Stewart were arrested and jailed. A large lynch mob stormed the jail cells and killed the three men.
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The murder drove Wells' to research and document lynchings and their causes. She began investigative journalism, looking at the charges given for the murders. She officially started her anti-lynching campaign. She spoke on the issue at various black womens clubs, and raised more than $500 to investigate lynchings and publish her results. Wells found that blacks were lynched for such reasons as failing to pay debts, not appearing to give way to whites, competing with whites economically, being drunk in public. She published her findings in a pamphlet entitled "Southern Horrors: Lynch Laws in All Its Phases". She wrote an article that suggested that, unlike the myth that white women were sexually at risk of attacks by black men, most liaisons between black men and white women were consensual. While she was away in Philadelphia, a mob destroyed the offices of the Free Speech and Headlight on May 27, 1892 in retaliation for her controversial articles, three months after her three friends were lynched.
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In 1892 she published a pamphlet titled Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases, and A Red Record, 18921894, which documented research on a lynching. Having examined many accounts of lynching based on alleged "rape of white women," she concluded that Southerners concocted rape as an excuse to hide their real reason for lynchings: black economic progress, which threatened not only white Southerners' pocketbooks, but also their ideas about black inferiority.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_B._Wells
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)Last edited Sat Mar 31, 2012, 10:23 PM - Edit history (1)
and after I found a bio on her I wondered why I hadn't heard of her before. Truly an amazing woman.
niyad
(113,315 posts)happens. women are dismissed, ignored, ridiculed, and eventually buried. which is why we seem to have to reinvent the wheel every fifty years or so.
think about rebecca west--who died in 1982. did we hear about her? or so many others who actually lived into our own lifetimes?
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)It just feels like a sharp stab each time I find out by accident about notable women.
niyad
(113,315 posts)go to the national women's history project
www.nwhp.org--click on resources, then click on biographies. have fun.