Wednesday, March 11, 2015

A00017 - A'Lelia Walker, Daughter of Madame C. J. Walker



A'Lelia Walker, original name Lelia McWilliams   (b. June 6, 1885, Vicksburg, Mississippi —d. August 16, 1931, Long Branch, New Jersey),  was a businesswoman associated with the Harlem Renaissance as a patron of the arts who provided an intellectual forum for the African American literati of New York City during the 1920s.
Walker grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, and attended Knoxville College in Tennessee before going to work for her mother, Madame C.J. Walker (Sarah Breedlove Walker), who had made a fortune in the hair-care business. When her mother died in 1919, Walker inherited the business and the lavish family estate, Villa Lewaro, in Irvington, NewYork. In the 1920s, Walker entertained writers and artists at Villa Lewaro and at her apartment and her town house in New York City. Her regular guests at the town house -- which she named The Dark Tower after Countee Cullen's column by that name --included Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, James Weldon Johnson, Jean Toomer, and other writers associated with the Harlem Renaissance.  

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

A00016 - Ida Wells Barnett, Journalist and Anti-lynching Crusader

Ida B. Wells Barnett (also known as Ida Bell Wells) (b. July 16, 1862, Holly Springs, Mississippi - d. March 25, 1931, Chicago, Illinois) was and African American journalist who led an anti-lynching crusade in the United States in the 1890s.

Ida Wells was born into slavery.  She was educated at Rust University, a freedmen's school in her native Holly Springs, Mississippi, and at age 14 began teaching in a country school.  She continued to teach after moving to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1884 and attended Fisk University in Nashville during several summer sessions.  In 1887, the Tennessee Supreme Court, reversing a Circuit Court decision, ruled against Wells in a suit she had brought against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad for having been forcibly removed from her seat after she had refused to give it up for one in a "colored only" car.  Using the pen name Iola, Wells in 1891 also wrote some newspaper articles critical of the education available to African American children.  Her teaching contract was not renewed.  She thereupon turned to journalism, buying an interest in the Memphis Free Speech.  In 1892, after three friends of hers had been lynched by a mob.  Wells began an editorial campaign against lynching that quickly led to the sacking of her newspaper's office.  She continued her anti-lynching crusade, first as a staff writer for the New York Age and then as a lecturer and organizer of antilynching societies.  She traveled to speak in a number of major United States cities and twice visited Great Britain for the cause.  In 1895, she married Ferdinand L.Barnett, a Chicago lawyer, editor, and public official, and adopted the name Wells-Barnett.  From that time she restricted her travels, but she was very active in Chicago affairs.  Wells-Barnett contributed to the Chicago Conservator, her husband's newspaper, and to other local journals; published a detailed look at lynching in A Red Record (1895); and was active in organizing local African American women in various causes, from the anti-lynching campaign to the suffrage movement.  She founded what may have been the first black woman suffrage group, Chicago's Alpha Suffrage Club.

From 1898 to 1902, Wells-Barnett served as secretary of the National Afro-American Council, and in 1910 she founded and became the first president of the Negro Fellowship League, which aided newly arrived migrants from the South.  From 1913 to 1916 she served as a probation officer of the Chicago municipal court.  She was militant in her demand for justice for African Americans and in her insistence that it was to be won by their own efforts.  Although she took part in the 1909 meeting of the Niagara Movement, she would have nothing to do with the less radical National Association for the Advancement of Colored People that sprang from it.  Her autobiography, Crusade for Justice, was published posthumously in 1970.