American Decades
Trotter, William Monroe 1872-1934
THE GUARDIAN OF BOSTON
Background.
William Monroe Trotter's James Monroe Trotter, was an imposing man. A musician and soldier, he had succeeded Frederick Douglass as recorder of deeds in the District of Columbia and so had been one of the highest-ranking black officials in nineteenth-century America. William Monroe Trotter, who usually went by his middle name, was born on a farm in Ohio but grew up in Hyde Park, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston. The only black in his high school class, he was elected class president. He entered Harvard in 1891. After college he worked negotiating real estate mortgages and seemed destined to become one of Boston's most successful businessmen.
Call to Action.
But in 1901 Trotter launched a news-paper devoted to the cause of civil rights for blacks. He was moved to start his paper by the rising tide of racial hatred in the country. He blamed Booker T. Washington for this...
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1900's Law and Justice
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Dilemma of Second-Class Citizens: Race Riots and Civil Disorder
- Insanity and Guilt: The Trials of Harry Thaw
- The Insular Cases: The Constitution Follows The Flag
- Labor on Trial: The Murder of Frank Steunenberg
- Lochner v. New York (1905)
- Lynching and Lawlessness
- Prohibition and the Temperance Movement
- Reviving the Sherman Act: The Northern Securities Case
- Women, Louis Brandeis, and the Law: Muller v. Oregon (1908)
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1900–1909
