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    The Horrors of Lynching in the South by Ida B. Wells Ida Bell Wells mentioned three assumed reasons the Black man was targeted with such barbaric treatment. The first assumed reason states that the black man was accused of participating in insurrections and riots. The second assumed reason was the black man had the right to vote and to become a citizen of the United States. The final assumed reason states that the black man had to be killed to avenge assaults on women. Ida B. Wells also states the

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    SOUTHERN HORRORS In the late 19th century‚ Ida B. Wells dedicated most of her life to spreading the word about the horrific nature of lynching in the American South. Wells was a journalist‚ teacher‚ rights activist‚ and a public speaker. As an African American woman in the south during this time‚ Ida B. Wells was able to use her status as journalist to expose to the general public the true facts of lynching cases that suggested black wrongdoings. Wells used cases from all over America to convey

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    Ida B. Wells Anti-Lynching Campaign Ida B. Wells was a well-established journalist who lived during the late 19th century and the early 20th century. She was born in Mississippi in 1862 to James and Elizabeth Wells‚ who were enslaved until the Emancipation Proclamation. When Ida was 16‚ both of her parents and her youngest brother were killed by a yellow fever epidemic. Ida took the responsibility of looking after and providing for her five remaining siblings. Wells moved to Memphis with

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    1. Ida B. Wells wrote the primary source Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases. This article was published in October 1892. On the Encyclopedia Britannica Online I read that Ida B. Wells attended Rust University‚ which was a freedmen’s school‚ in Holly Springs‚ Mississippi. She started teaching when he was only 14 years old! Later she moved to Memphis‚ Tennessee and she taught there as well. While living and teaching in Tennessee she attended Fisk University‚ which is in Nashville‚ she was

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    Ida Wells Born July 16‚ 1862 Holly Springs‚ Mississippi Died March 25‚ 1931 (aged 68) Chicago‚ Illinois Education Freedman ’s School‚ Rust College‚ Fisk University Occupation Civil rights & Women ’s rights activist Spouse Ferdinand L. Barnett Parents James Wells and Elizabeth "Izzy Bell" Warrenton Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16‚ 1862 – March 25‚ 1931) was an African-American journalist‚ newspaper editor and

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    This quote was stated by Ida B. Wells. Wells was born in Holly Springs‚ Mississippi‚ in 1862 and died in Chicago‚ Illinois‚ in 1931 at the age of 69. When Wells was young‚ the epidemic " Yellow Fever"‚ ravaged through Mississippi‚ killing her parents and her youngest sibling. She became a teacher in order to support her remaining family. Despite the racism she had faced during her teaching career‚ her first act of defiance towards discrimination was in Memphis‚ 1884. Wells was ordered to leave her

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    Ida B. Wells: Courageous Success Introduction The Harlem Renaissance was a time period that began after World War I and lasted until the middle of the 1930’s depression‚ this era refers to a time of written and artistic creativity among African Americans. During this movement creativity was brought‚ but unfortunately so was discrimination and crimes that often occurred. A woman named Ida B. Wells was commonly referred to as the fearless crusader‚ suffragist‚ women’s right advocate‚ journalist

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    struggled with issues surrounding the equality of its citizens. Ida Bell Wells-Barnett‚ also known as Ida B. Wells‚ worked tirelessly throughout her entire life fighting for civil rights as well as suffrage for women. Ida B. Wells expressed her opinion countess times though powerful powerful articles that were read across the country‚ effectively spreading the ideas about social and political issues that she felt most strongly about. Each of Ida B. Wells’s movements contributed to the extreme impact she

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    Lynching’s role was played in terms of race‚ class‚ and gender in New South Capitalism in that it nearly exclusively was targeted towards one group: black males who were a threatening rising class having gained freedom and as well by acquiring value in property. Lynching was a defense to an established White Male status quo. Ida B. Wells and her writings address these issues as an African American watching this occur. Wells calls it needless bloodshed‚ meant to both repress her people from rising

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    normal lives‚ but then came the increase of lynching. After the war‚ the Southern economy was in ruins‚ and lynching had allowed white southerners to express their hatred and discontent towards the situation and African Americans were the vulnerable targets for their pent-up anger (Notes). In Southern Horrors‚ Feimster introduces Rebecca Felton‚ who was a wealthy slave owner‚ and Ida B. Wells‚ a slave born women‚ and how each woman viewed this idea of lynching drastically diverse from each other due

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