9, no. The … This updated edition includes a new foreword by Eve L. Ewing, new images, and a new afterword by Ida B. Wedding invitation to marriage of Ida B. Ellen Richardson, the Benefactress of Stephen Douglas," The Daily Inter-Ocean, May 28, 1894: 4, negative photostat, "Ida B. Wells began contributing articles to newspapers in 1887. Wells, "Lynch Law in the United States," Birmingham Daily Post, annotated by Ida B. Publication Date: 5/13/2020 "Ida B. Following the death of both her parents of yellow fever in 1878, Ida, at age 16, began teaching in a one-room schoolhouse in rural Mississippi. Item 13: Mrs. Delores Johnson Farrow, "Side Lights or Shadows on the Recent Race Riots at East St. Louis, Illinois," The Broad Ax, Chicago, July 28, 1917, on Farrow's trip to East St. Louis with Wells, photocopy, 1 p. Item 14: Obituary, "Mrs. Ida Barnett, Colored Leader, 62, Dies Suddenly," The Chicago Tribune, March 25, 1931, carbon copy of typescript, 1 p. Item 1: "A Darky Damsel Obtains a Verdict for Damages Against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad," Memphis Appeal-Avalanche, December 25, 1884, typescript, 4 p. Item 2: "Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Tennessee," Shelby County, April Term, 1887: 613-615, 631, regarding appeal and overturn of Railroad v. Wells case, photocopy, 3 p., and typescript, 3 p. Item 1: "Good Homes, Low Rents," brochure and preliminary application (detached) for apartments in Ida B. Book Condition: New. promotional flyer issued by the Ida B. Ida B. The collection is open for research. Wells Homes, undated, Item 2: "Let's Make History!" Wells Abroad. Item 1: "Marriage Bells," The New York Age, November 1892, photocopy, 1 p. Item 2: "Lynch Law in All its Phases," (address at Tremont Temple in the Boston Monday Lectureship, February 13, 1893), photocopy, no source, 8 p. Item 3: "The Reign of Mob Law: Iola's Opinion of Doings in the Southern Field," New York Age, February 18, 1893, combined with "The Lynchers Wince," New York Age, September 19, 1891, holograph copy, 6 p., with typescript, 3 p. Item 4: "Lynch Law in the United States: to the Editor of the Daily Post," Birmingham Daily Post, May 14, 1894, [annotated by Ida B. nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/nineteen/nkeyinfo/aarwellsexrpt.htm 1 (July 1892): 40-44, photocopy. The Bishop of Manchester on American Lynching," The Daily Inter-Ocean, April 28, 1894: 10; pasted on verso: "Ida B. "No student of black history should overlook Crusade for Justice. Wells, Second Edition (Negro American Biographies and Autobiographies) PDF EPUB by Ida B. Ferdinand Barnett to Mrs. Potter Palmer, February 23, 1892, photocopy, 1p. Assorted clippings: photograph with caption, "DePaul University Co-eds as Great Ladies of Chicago," Chicago Daily News, April 11, 1969; "Yesterday in Negro History," Jet, March 25, 1965, p. 11; photograph with caption, "A Dramatic Feature..." with Mrs. Alfreda Duster posing as her mother Ida B. Wells (Negro American Biographies and Autobiographies) By Wells, Ida B. Inclusion of such materials does not constitute an endorsement of their content by the University of Chicago. McCormick" to Ida B. Emma Lou Thornbrough to Alfreda Duster, January 2, 1970, 1p. "Crusade for Justice" Excerpt. Wells and Fannie J. Thompson, July 19, 1888, 1p. I, no. Preface, two versions, (5 p.); Chapters I through VI, (30 p.), Chapters VII through XVI (42 p.); "Shipmates on first voyage to England... Chapter 5 of my first writing" in pencil; newspaper clippings, circa 1926, IBW typescript, Preface and Chapters I through XVI, AMD typescript, same as Box 1, Folder 11-14 with some editing; Preface (with footnotes) through Chapter XVI, AMD typescript, Chapters XLVI-XLVII; footnotes for some chapters, some marked "not done", AMD typescript from IBW typed original, 16 chapters, AMD typescript, another version, 16 chapters, AMD typescript, Chapters XXXVII-XLVI plus summary, outline, and introduction, "Old Copies of the Introduction," includes two by AMD, one by Jan Olsen (assistant to AMD), AMD typescript, with annotations "for verification of facts requested by Dr. Franklin. 1969], photocopy, 1 p. Anonymous, "Ida B. Summary: Editor's ForewordIntroductionPreface1. Accessed December 11, 2014. Wells in "Great Women of Chicago" pageant, 1950, 18 x 23.2 cm, Photo 25: "Great Women of Chicago," group photograph of the pageant players, 1950, 19.3 x 24 cm, Photo 26: Scene from "Great Women of Chicago," featuring the characters of Mary McDowell, Jane Addams, Harriet [Kittum], Ella Flagg Young, Flora J. Cooke, and Ida B. Item 3: "Lynch Law in the United States: Protest by Birmingham Audiences," The Birmingham Daily Post, May 17, 1894, annotated by Ida B. Item 3: Press release, Chicago Housing Authority, September 3, 1940, typed carbon copy, 2 p. Item 4: Alfreda M. Duster, Chicago, to Mr. A.E. The Bishop of Manchester on American Lynching," The Daily Inter-Ocean, April 28, 1894: 10, negative photostat, with photocopy of fragment of same article, "Ida B. Much of the information on the original folder headings has been retained, including information in quotation marks taken from Alfreda M. Duster's folder heading notes. with envelope. Historic Black Memphians, exhibition catalog, [after 1978], including entry on Ida B. 62 MB Format : PDF, Kindle Download : 936 Read : 503 Get This Book --Alfreda M. Duster Ida B. Wells, The Reason Why the Colored American is Not in the World's Columbian Exposition. 1910, 13.6 x 8.5 cm, Photo 8: Maureen Moss Browning, foster daughter of Ida B. The Mob's Summary Execution of the Three Negro Prisoners," The Memphis Commercial, March 10, 1892, negative photostat and positive photostat, G.E. Wells, portrait photograph, ca. Wells, photograph of engraved illustration from J. Garland Penn, Afro-American Newspapers and their Editors, 16.5 x 11.5 cm, Photo 4: Ida B. Wells-Barnett with first-born son, Charles Barnett, ca. Pamphlet. Wells, respectively. Anonymous, clippings, "Chicago Fair Portrays Life of Ida Wells," with "Negro History This Week," Atlanta Daily Word, July 1968, and untitled, Supplement to the Chicago Tribune, February 1968: 62, photocopy, 1 p. Anonymous, "Great Chicagoans," (20th of series), no source, [ca. Wells sued the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad for forcing Black people to ride in segregated and inferior carriages. Wells to Frederick Douglass, May 10, 1894, photocopy, 4p. Wells (1862-1931) was one of the foremost crusaders against black oppression. Folder 1 through 8 contain the original manuscript versions of Crusade for Justice, 77 pages. Born into slavery, she lost both parents at the age of sixteen and supported five siblings by teaching school. University of Chicago Library Wells, Second Edition (Negro American Biographies and Autobiographies) by Ida B. She led the fight to elect Chicago's first Black alderman and congressman, Oscar DePriest, and herself ran (unsuccessfully) for state senator of Illinois in 1930. with holograph annotations, 2 p. Item 5: Ida B. Wells-Barnett, The Negro Fellowship League, Chicago, Illinois, to Charles W. Chestnutt, Cleveland, Ohio, May 18, 1915, photocopy of T.L.S., 1 p. Item 6: Ida B. Wells-Barnett, May 29, 1916, photocopy of T.L.S., 1 p. Item 7: [Ida B. Ida B. Studying Sound: A Theory and Practice of Sound Design, Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America, The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese Folklore. Ida B. Wells, the Colored Advocate, Welcomed Home," The Daily Inter-Ocean, August 8, 1894: 2, photostat, 3 p., and photocopy, 3 p. Item 10: "Ida J. Books to Borrow. She used these articles as a political tactic to further her cause; something she continued to do all her life. Wells (Negro American Biographies and Autobiographies) was one of popular books. Wells, Ida B. Wells in foreground, 1963, 23.5 x 19 cm. Wells. 1 (March 18, 1914), original document mounted on cardboard, 1 p., with photocopy. Wells Woman's Club, to name the new C.H.A. Wells, May 14, 1894, 1p. Entries begin in Holly Springs, Mississippi, December 29, 1885, and end in Woodstock, Tennessee, September 12, 1887, 213 p. Norman B. Press,] -- Ida B. Wells. Wells-Barnett, Ida B. Wells and the versions produced by her daughter, Alfreda M. Duster. A+ Customer Service! pdf: Download File. Ed. The collection is open for research. Ida B. Emma Lou Thornbrough to Alfreda Duster, May 4, 1970, 1p. Wells Abroad. Ida B. Wells Abroad. Wells to Judge Tourgee, May 15, 1897, photocopy, 1p. Ida B. William M. Tuttle, Jr.; Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. University of Chicago Press, 1991. 154-155. Brand New, Unread Copy in Perfect Condition. The images presented here may include materials reflecting the attitudes, language, and stereotypes of an earlier time period. : Belknap Press of Harvard University P Wells: A Courageous Voice for Civil Rights.” History Now. [sic] Wells Speaks," no source, September 2, no year, photocopy of fragment, 1 p. Item 11: Henry Davenport Northrop, Joseph R. Gay, and I. Garland Penn, The College of Life or Practical Self-Educator: A Manual of Self-Improvement of the Colored Race (Chicago: Chicago Publication and Lithograph Co., 1895): 99 ff, summarizing life of Ida B. The use of the initials "AMD" and "IBW" in the inventory refer to Alfreda M. Duster and Ida B. Wells to Frederick Douglass, April 6, 1894, photocopy, 8p.