Her main efforts were concentrated in areas of “citizenship, education and interracial cooperation”(We Seek to Know, pg 95). Her efforts were acknowledged by leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. who noted “she understood that if we could break through the illiteracy, we could break into mainstream…
She was able to reduce lynchings and mob violence by her writings, protests, and organizations. She was a very determined person and was able to help women getting the right to vote. She also helped be a role model for many to that later helped fight for the justice of African Americans. I believe if Ida B. Wells did not stand up for lynchings and mob violence in America our country would be completing different. I think our country would still be fighting a lot more discrimination and racial prejudice attacks and murders without the help from Ida B.…
She made an association that still help thousand, if not millions of people to this day. Not only this, but she saved thousands of life just in the Civil War. She is the “Angel of the Battlefield.” “I have an almost complete disregard of precedent, and a faith in the possibility of something better. It irritates me to be told how things have always been done.…
The entire Angela Davis lecture was phenomenal. She discussed so many topics and interacted with the audience, which turned the lecture into a fun experience and not only informative but also very entertaining to listen to and watch. I would grade the lecture with an A. I love how she related everything from the past to present because in reality not much has changed when it comes to racism and slavery and the challenges we face as not only African American but also being an African American woman. One of my favorite parts was how she ended the lecture with a question and answer portion and how many of the students were not afraid to ask very challenging questions and of course her response was just as in depth.…
While working as a teacher, she began to fight for a change in America because working conditions were poor. Her fighting led to her being one of the most influential women of the Civil Rights Era, because she fought for working conditions and equal rights on transportation, she created the anti-lynching campaign, spoke about rapes, and encouraged blacks to…
Ida B. Wells & The Reconstruction of Race The Reconstruction, also known as the period after the Civil War, lasted from 1865-1877 and was one of the most significant eras in American history. In addition to the South attempting to rejoin the Union, a woman named Ida B. Wells was an activist against lynching and led the early Civil Rights Movement during the reconstruction. In his novel, ‘They Say’ Ida B. Wells and the Reconstruction of Race, James West Davidson invites readers to experience the life of African Americans during the Reconstruction and why Ida B. Wells crusaded against lynching. Ida B. Wells was born on July 16, 1862 in Holly Springs, Mississippi raised by the well-respected James and Elizabeth Wells. The Wells became former…
Intro Mary Eliza Mahoney was the first African American woman to be trained as a professional nurse. She was one out of only four of the 42 applicants to the nursing program to receive the coveted diploma in 1879 (Chayer, 1971). Mary was born and alive in 1845 during the times of slavery, The Civil war, and the abolition movement (Darraj, 2005). Background Mary was born May 7th, 1845 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. It was also rumored that she was really born in Roxbury, Massachusetts but she is known for growing up mainly in the Boston area.…
Ida Rawls is my great grandmother also know as “Big Ma.” She’s been in our lives for as long as I could remember. When I was born, I made a different bond toward Big Man that nobody else had. I only wanted her when I cried and I always wanted to be at her house instead of my mom’s. Ida is almost 91 years she was born in 1926.…
Angela Davis is undoubtedly one of the most prominent representations of black feminist thought. The UCLA professor joined the movement for women’s rights and Black liberties in the early 1970s according to the documentary on the History Channel simply titled, Angela Davis. The independent thinker vehemently expressed her disdain for anti-feminist policies imposed on American women. Davis grew up in a segregated south with an educated mother, a rarity for women of color. She acquired an appreciation for Communist ideologies after uniting with groups that promoted Black liberation such as the Black Panther Party along with the Student nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).…
Lugenia Burns Hope was a twentieth-century civil rights activist and social reformer who worked steadfastly to rebuild black communities using grassroots politics and community ties. Hope was no stranger to hard work. From an early age, Hope worked full time at organizations like Hull House— a settlement organization founded by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr dedicated to providing European Immigrants with amenities such as daycare services, libraries, employment and education. Her infectious fervor, innovative thinking and strong leadership skills advanced the field of social work and contributed greatly to racial and gender equality.…
A woman who fought for freedom; a woman who fought for rights, Daisy Lee Gatson Bates used her strength to argue against the negative words and threats spoken by many racists. During my research on this fearful civil activist, Daisy Bates was an African American who wanted to end racial segregation, for it is a topic she strongly disagreed to. She truly is an amazing person who was not afraid to speak her words and face serious obstacles. Therefore, Bates influenced change not only in her community, however in the entire world.…
Harriet Jacobs was bron into slavery in 1813 near Edenton, North Carolina. But she never knew she was a slave until she was six years old which coincidentally was around the same times her mother died. Margaret Horniblow, who was Jacobs 's mistress, took her in and cared for her, teaching her to write, read, and sew. When the mistress died, Jacobs was willed to Horniblow 's niece. Her new mistress 's father, Dr. James Noecom, also, known as Dr. Flint, subjected Jacobs to aggressive and unrelenting harassment.…
Her and many other leaders protested about the rights of African Americans in the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition that happened in Chicago. In 1896, she helped created and introduced the National Association of Colored Women (NACW). She hoped that these organizations would give black women and African Americans a chance to use their votes to help against the racial injustice. “Although Ida B. Wells was one of the founding members of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), she was also among the few Black leaders to explicitly oppose Booker T. Washington and his strategies; she was viewed as one the most radical of the so-called "radicals" who organized the NAACP and marginalized from positions within its leadership.…
The Voice of a Leader: Maya Angelou Maya Angelou is most recognized for her Civil Rights-inspired poetry. Though she is much more than just a poet, she was a play-write, actor, professor, singer and dancer (Gillespie, M., Butler, R. J., & Long, R. A., 2008). She held many positions in her life and in all of them she stood out as a leader. In a time when women, like her, were not meant to do much of anything, Maya Angelou stepped out from the crowd to become an inspiring activist and recognized icon.…
As the 1960’s dawned in the United States and gave rise to the second wave of feminism, many activists, as well as society as a whole, began to explore the ways that women were being restricted from possible opportunities. This included opportunities for social advancement, employment, and independence that were investigated by the President’s Commission on the Status of Women and later various state commissions. Meanwhile, the African-American people of the country had already identified ways that society was impeding on their freedom and fought back using various forms of protest as well as organizations like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Mary King was a young woman who joined the staff of the Student…