Chicago Sun-Times

Ida B. Wells finally receives top honor with street name

- MARY MITCHELL mmitchell@suntimes.com | @MaryMitche­llCST

Ida B. Wells, the anti-lynching crusader, journalist, civil rights activist and suffragist — who could have been killed because of any one of those pursuits — has finally gotten her due.

On Monday, the street once known as Congress Parkway officially became Ida B. Wells Drive. The name change brings to fruition a piece of the dream Wells’ great-granddaugh­ter, Michelle Duster, had: that Wells’ legacy would be honored in the city she called home.

At the renaming ceremony that took place in the Winter Garden of the Harold Washington Library, Duster had to take a moment.

“I hope you don’t mind taking five seconds to just breathe in what has actually happened. I’ve had to do that several times today. I really am trying to not be overwhelme­d,” she said.

Although others spoke eloquently about Wells’ accomplish­ments, no one was more moving than Duster, who has led a decadeslon­g campaign to raise money for a monument of her great-grandmothe­r.

“Ida B. Wells had the drive and the tenacity to dedicate almost 50 years of her life fighting for African-Americans to have equal opportunit­ies to seek life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness in this country. ... She had the drive and determinat­ion to speak truth to power in her quest for equal justice,” Duster told the audience.

She also pointed out that Wells traveled all over the country and abroad speaking out against racial injustice.

“Ida B. Wells lived in Chicago for the last 35 years of her life. She married, worked and raised her four children in this city, and I happen to be the fourth generation of Chicagoans, and there’s two generation­s after me — so we are Chicago, Duster said.

When the Chicago Housing Authority began the demolition of the Ida

B. Wells homes in 2002, it essentiall­y wiped out the only monument to the civil rights leader.

With the street renaming, Wells is now the first African-American woman to have a downtown street named after her.

The honor did not come without a fight, however.

There was pushback from the Italian-American community when it first was proposed that Balbo be renamed for the civil rights leader.

Alds. Sophia King (4th) and Brendan Reilly (42nd), co-sponsors of the ordinance, came up with a compromise that was passed in July to rename Congress Parkway.

Given the huge impact Wells had nationally and internatio­nally (she was a founding member of several organizati­ons, including the NAACP), it is mind-boggling that it has taken nearly 90 years for her legacy to be memorializ­ed.

Yet at Monday’s renaming ceremony, the timing seemed perfect.

That the official celebratio­n comes during Black History Month is especially gratifying.

Those of us who grew up in or around the sprawling Ida B. Wells public housing complex that ran from King Drive to Cottage Grove and from Pershing Road to 37th Street were aware that Wells was famous, though most of us couldn’t tell you what she was famous for.

I don’t think we even knew she was black, since black history wasn’t part of the history lessons taught in the classroom.

The lineup of speakers at Wells’ street renaming ceremony was a black history lesson in itself.

Patricia Brown Holmes, chair of Harriet’s Daughters, a group advocating for employment and wealth opportunit­ies for African-American communitie­s, was the youngest African-American woman to serve as an associate judge on the Circuit Court of Cook County in 1999.

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton is the first black woman elected to that position.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is the first African-American and woman chosen to lead the county Democratic Party and was the first woman elected president of the Cook County Board of Commission­ers.

And Nikole Hannah- Jones, an investigat­ive reporter for the New York Times, founded the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigat­ive Reporting in 2016 and was a Genius Grant winner in 2017.

Coincident­ally, officials with the Ida B. Wells Monument project recently announced that they had met their goal of raising $300,000 for the central sculpture that will be located in Bronzevill­e.

Hopefully, Monday’s street renaming celebratio­n will help build the momentum needed to complete that project.

Wells died in 1931, “but her spirit and legacy lives on,” her greatgrand­daughter said.

“Ida B. Wells Drive reminds everyone that regardless of where you start in life, or what their gender, race, religion or ability may be, it is possible to make their voice heard and to impact change,” Duster said.

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel hugs Michelle Duster, great-granddaugh­ter of Ida B. Wells, next to Ald. Sophia King after the Ida B. Wells Drive street sign was unveiled at Monday’s ceremony at Harold Washington Library.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES Mayor Rahm Emanuel hugs Michelle Duster, great-granddaugh­ter of Ida B. Wells, next to Ald. Sophia King after the Ida B. Wells Drive street sign was unveiled at Monday’s ceremony at Harold Washington Library.
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Ida B. Wells

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