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In reply to the discussion: A Lynching Memorial Is Opening. The Country Has Never Seen Anything Like It. [View all]malaise
(292,595 posts)32. Check this -Ida B Wells: the unsung heroine of the civil rights movement
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/apr/27/ida-b-wells-civil-rights-movement-reporter
<snip>
The pioneering African American reporter counted, investigated and reported lynchings in America as no one had done before
Lynching is color-line murder: Ida B Wells-Barnetts blistering 1909 speech
Today, a simple marker on a street corner in Memphis, Tennessee commemorates the Peoples Grocery lynching. In 1892 three black men, co-owners of a store giving white businesses a run for their money, were attacked, fought back and were arrested. They never stood trial. A white mob broke into the jail, dragged them away and lynched them.
The murders were grieved by their friend Ida B Wells, an African American teacher, journalist, civil rights pioneer and suffragist about whom it was once said: She has plenty of nerve; she is as smart as a steel trap, and she has no sympathy with humbug.
Wells was galvanised to count, investigate and report lynchings in America as no one had done before, hurling her 5ft frame into hostile territory with all the fearlessness of a war reporter.
For a century she has languished as an unsung heroine, overshadowed by more familiar giants of the civil rights movement. In recent years, however, her crusading activism and muckraking techniques are being rediscovered. A society for investigative reporting bears her name; the New York Times which once branded her a slanderous and nasty-minded mulattress just published a belated obituary, and there are moves to name a street after her in New York and build a monument in Chicago.
One has to ask: Would I have the courage to do that? There was no help going to come for you, no protection from the law
Nikole Hannah-Jones
I consider her my spiritual grandmother, says Nikole Hannah-Jones, an investigative journalist covering civil rights. She was was a trailblazer in every way ... as a feminist, as a suffragist, as an investigative reporter, as a civil rights leader. She was just an all-around badass.
<snip>
The pioneering African American reporter counted, investigated and reported lynchings in America as no one had done before
Lynching is color-line murder: Ida B Wells-Barnetts blistering 1909 speech
Today, a simple marker on a street corner in Memphis, Tennessee commemorates the Peoples Grocery lynching. In 1892 three black men, co-owners of a store giving white businesses a run for their money, were attacked, fought back and were arrested. They never stood trial. A white mob broke into the jail, dragged them away and lynched them.
The murders were grieved by their friend Ida B Wells, an African American teacher, journalist, civil rights pioneer and suffragist about whom it was once said: She has plenty of nerve; she is as smart as a steel trap, and she has no sympathy with humbug.
Wells was galvanised to count, investigate and report lynchings in America as no one had done before, hurling her 5ft frame into hostile territory with all the fearlessness of a war reporter.
For a century she has languished as an unsung heroine, overshadowed by more familiar giants of the civil rights movement. In recent years, however, her crusading activism and muckraking techniques are being rediscovered. A society for investigative reporting bears her name; the New York Times which once branded her a slanderous and nasty-minded mulattress just published a belated obituary, and there are moves to name a street after her in New York and build a monument in Chicago.
One has to ask: Would I have the courage to do that? There was no help going to come for you, no protection from the law
Nikole Hannah-Jones
I consider her my spiritual grandmother, says Nikole Hannah-Jones, an investigative journalist covering civil rights. She was was a trailblazer in every way ... as a feminist, as a suffragist, as an investigative reporter, as a civil rights leader. She was just an all-around badass.
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A Lynching Memorial Is Opening. The Country Has Never Seen Anything Like It. [View all]
niyad
Apr 2018
OP
I read about this this morning on CNN. Long overdue. I would love to visit it some day. nt
Kirk Lover
Apr 2018
#10
Ms. Wells was truly one amazing, courageous person. have admired her for many years.
niyad
Apr 2018
#24
have you read Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz" "An Indigenous eople's HIstory of the United States"?
niyad
Apr 2018
#43
had not thought of that, but a most excellent point. if you do get there, we would like
niyad
Apr 2018
#44