Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases by Ida B. Wells
On October 5, 1892, the journalist Ida B. Wells delivered a powerful and incisive denunciation of lynching to a room of prominent African American women in New York City’s Lyric Hall. Wells had spent months investigating the systematic torture and murder of Black Americans in the South. Her reporting, published in the Memphis newspaper she co-owned, showed that Black men were lynched not for alleged assaults on white women, but for registering to vote or failing to show deference to white Southerners. After a white mob burned down her newspaper office, Wells moved north and joined an intellectual community of Black women educators, activists, and journalists in Brooklyn and New York City. Her groundbreaking speech to those supporters led to the publication of Southern Horrors only a few weeks later.
: Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in…
The New York Public Library believes that this item is in the public domain under the laws of the United States, but did not make a determination as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. This item may not be in the public domain under the laws of other countries. Though not required, if you want to credit us as the source, please use the following statement, "From The New York Public Library," and provide a link back to the item on our Digital Collections site. Doing so helps us track how our collection is used and helps justify freely releasing even more content in the future.