American Decades
Wells-Barnett, Ida B. 1862-1931
JOURNALIST FOR RACIAL JUSTICE
Early Adversity.
When a yellow fever epidemic claimed the lives of sixteen-year-old Ida Wells's parents, she determined to keep her brothers and sisters together. She taught in a one-room school near Holly Springs, Mississippi. She soon moved the family to Memphis, in order to take a teacher's examination and find a better job. Riding the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad to her job, she refused to sit in the smoky, dingy car reserved for African Americans and filed suit against the railroad for not providing "separate but equal" accommodations. Wells won her case and $500 in damages, but in 1887 the Supreme Court of Tennessee reversed the decision. As a teacher, she began to write for the black church weekly Living Way under the pseudonym "Iola" and soon realized that she loved journalism.
A Crusader for Equality.
Encouraged by the eminent Frederick Douglass, in 1889 Wells...
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1900's Media
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Book Publishing
- City Life and the Two Journalisms
- The Galveston Flood
- The Heyday of the Foreign Language Press
- "Let Munsey Kill It!": The Birth of the Newspaper Chain
- The New York Journal and the Assassination of William Mckinley
- Patent-Medicine Advertisements
- The Murder of Stanford White
- The Race to the North Pole
- The San Francisco Earthquake and Fire
- Sunday Color Comics
- Theodore Roosevelt Sues Joseph Pulitzer for Libel
- The Wireless Telegraph
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Media, 1900–1909
