Black History Month - Ida Bell Wells-Barnett
Mood:
a-ok
Topic: Feminism

Ida Bell Wells-Barnett was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi on July 16th, 1862, just before Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Her parents were born into slavery, but were freed at the end of the Civil War. Her father supported the family as a carpenter.
When Ida was 14, both of her parents and Stanley, her 10-month old brother, died of a yellow fever epidemic sweeping the South. After the funeral, it was decided that the remaining members of the family (6 siblings total) would be sent to live with other relatives scattered across the country. Not wanting to be separated from the rest of her family, Ida decided to drop out of high school and find employment instead. She ended up working at black grade schools as a teacher, and convinced her grandmother Peggy Wells to stay with the family and look over them while she was at work.
In 1880, Ida moved to Memphis, TN, and attended college at Fisk University, a noted school in the area. She became an outspoken feminist (before the term existed) and political writer.
During the summer of 1883, while riding on a Chesapeake, Ohio and Southwestern Railroad train, a railroad conductor ordered her to move from a less-crowded train to the all-black "Jim Crow" car, which was overcrowded, after a white male passenger had asked her to give up her seat. She refused, and was forcibly moved into the Jim Crow car by the conductor and two other men. On her return home, she hired an attorney to sue the railroad. After the first lawyer was paid off by the defendants, she hired a well-known white attorney to help her win her case. At the end of 1884, she won the case, but this decision was struck down three years later by the Tenessee Supreme Court.
Galvanized by her experiences, she became a writer for the Evening Star, writing articles about her experiences living under Jim Crow. In 1889, she began working for Free Speech, a magazine promoting desegregation.
In 1892, she organized a successful boycott of white businesses -- and an exodus of black families -- in Memphis after three of her black friends (who owned a grocery store) were lynched due to their store being more profitable than the white-owned grocery store in her area. The owners of the white grocery store made up a story about the owners of the black-owned store (Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell, and Henry Stewart) raping a white woman, and a mob of white men got them taken out of the local jail and to an open field, where they were lynched.
Ida, horrified by the events that took place, put forth the following to her readers: "[There is] 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". Ironically enough, Ida too was threatened with violence, and she later bought a gun to protect herself with. Just three months after the lynchings took place, the offices of the Free Speech (which were housed in a local church) were burnt down.
After moving to New York City (and later to Chicago less than a year later), she wrote magazine and newspaper articles, pamphlets and treatises on racism. She later became the head of the Anti-Lynching League.
Ida married attorney Ferdinand L. Barnett in 1893, and the couple had 4 children. She continued advocating for desegregation and equality for both blacks and for women, and gained the admiration of Frederick Douglass and members of the Suffragette community. Like a lot of women advocating for social justice while trying to bring their own children up in a better world, she was often wanting for more and more time, but in the end, Ida's determination led her to great success, and she was invited to travel the country and to the UK, where she spoke on lynchings and equality on invitation by Catherine Impey, a Quaker.
During her trips abroad, Ida gained support for anti-lynching policy. While many in Europe were reluctant to believe such things were going on at first, an invitation to speak at Pembroke Chapel in Great Britain changed all of this. After her engagement, the reverend, C.F. Aked, decided to attend The New York World's Fair, where he saw reports on lynchings.
Ida Wells-Barnett died on March 25, 1931 in Chicago, IL.