Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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On March 25, 1931, civil rights activist and journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett died in Chicago. During her career, she documented lynchings in the South, championed universal suffrage and published dozens of articles and pamphlets denouncing racism, classism and misogyny.

And yet, Chicago Daily News reporters wrote so little about Wells-Barnett during her lifetime. From 1903, when her name first appears in print, to the time of her death, WellsBarne­tt’s name only popped up in short blurbs informing the public about upcoming lectures or new committees and clubs Wells-Barnett would join or lead. No one wrote a profile on the busy activist or sought her reactions to the news of the day.

Wells-Barnett’s obituary, written by Frank L. Hayes on the day of her death, would become the longest article — almost a full column long on the seventh page — documentin­g her myriad accomplish­ments.

Hayes cited Wells-Barnett as

“one of the early advocates of racial equality,” noting her long history of activism both stateside and abroad. Her passing closed a full career, he said.

Born in Mississipp­i in 1862, Wells-Barnett moved to Memphis as an adult and worked as the editor of the Memphis Free Speech, where she reported on lynchings. Hayes wrote that “stormy incidents during her editorship of the paper in 1892 had much to do with arousing her lifelong passion against lynching,” and she received death threats for her antilynchi­ng reports and editorials. When the South became too dangerous for her, the civil rights activist headed to Chicago “about world’s fair time,” Hayes said, and continued her crusade. In fact, “her admirers” credited her as the main reason that Illinois had not seen one single lynching since her arrival. “Mrs. Barnett went before Charles S. Deneen in 1919 when he was governor, and asked him to refuse reinstatem­ent to a sheriff of Alexander County who had failed to prevent the lynching of a [Black person] there. After hearing all the testimony, Gov. Deneen refused reinstatem­ent to the sheriff,” Hayes wrote.

The message became clear to sheriffs statewide: Either enforce anti-lynching laws or lose your job.

Wells-Barnett also launched a number of clubs for young people and women, including the first Black women’s club, Hayes said. Many of the clubs expanded to other cities, and the Colored City Federation of Women’s Clubs grew out of the Black women’s club in Chicago.

While her campaigns for civil rights never ceased, Wells-Barnett led an active personal life. In 1895, she married lawyer and activist Ferdinand Lee Barnett Sr., a man Hayes described as “probably the first [Black person] to hold important public office in Chicago.” Barnett served as assistant state’s attorney during the Deneen administra­tion. The two had four children, plus two sons from Barnett’s previous marriage.

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Ida B. Wells-Barnett

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