Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi, months before the signing
of the Emancipation Proclamation.
She was the oldest of eight children. When her parents died in
1880 as a result of a yellow fever plague in Holly Springs, Wells took it upon
herself to become a teacher in Holly Springs in order to support her younger
siblings.
In spite of hardship, Wells was able to complete her studies at
Rust College and in 1888 became a teacher in Memphis, Tennessee.
While living in Memphis, Wells became an editor and co-owner of a
local black newspaper called "The Free Speech and Headlight." She wrote her
editorials under the pen-name "Iola."
When a respected black store owner and friend of Barnett was
lynched in 1892, Wells used her paper to attack the evils of lynching and
encouraged the black townsmen of Memphis to go west.
While attending an editor's convention in New York, Wells received
word not to return to Memphis because her life would be in danger. Wells took
her cause to England to gain support and earned a reputation as a fiery orator
and courageous leader of her people.
Upon returning to the United States, she settled in Chicago and
formed the Women's Era Club, the first civic organization for African-American
women. The name was later changed to the Ida B. Wells Club in honor of its
founder.
She never forgot her crusade against lynching, and, in 1895 Wells
published "A Red Record," which recorded race lynching in America.
In June of 1895 she married Ferdinand Barnett, a prominent Chicago
attorney. Wells-Barnett kept active until the birth of her second son, Herman.
She resigned as president of the Ida B. Wells Club and devoted her time to
raising her two young sons and subsequently her two daughters.
However, by the start of the 20th century the racial strife in the
country was disturbing. Lynching and race riots abounded across the nation.
In 1909, Barnett was asked to be a member of the "Committee of
40," which established the groundwork for the organization now known as the
NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), the oldest
civil rights organization in the country.
Wells-Barnett continued her tireless crusade for equal rights for
African-Americans until her death in 1931.
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