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Ida B. Wells and Anti-Lynching Activism
An address about Ida B. Wells’ speaking tour in England, adopted by a group of African American citizens in St. Paul, Minnesota, 1894.

An address about Ida B. Wells’ speaking tour in England, adopted by a group of African American citizens in St. Paul, Minnesota, 1894.

Citation Information
“Pamphlet, ‘Ida B. Wells in England, An Address,’” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/a76fa8c3f335b8d81461f43fecfcf5bd.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of Chautauqua County Historical Society via Empire State Digital Network.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 9 of 13 in the Primary Source Set Ida B. Wells and Anti-Lynching Activism

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A legal brief for Ida B. Wells’ lawsuit against Chesapeake, Ohio, and Southwestern Railroad Company before the state Supreme Court, 1885.
A portrait of Ida B. Wells, ca. 1893.
The cover page for Southern Horrors: Lynch Law In All Its Phases (1892), the first pamphlet by Ida B. Wells dedicated to exposing lynching.
The cover page for A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States, 1892-1893-1894 by Ida B. Wells.
An illustration with portraits of African American leaders, including Ida B. Wells-Barnett, ca. 1900.
A political cartoon by Thomas Nast titled “The Union as it Was,” published in Harper’s Weekly October 24, 1874.
Lynching announcements from New Orleans States and Jackson Daily News reproduced in The Crisis, August 1919.
(Warning: graphic material) A photograph showing the aftermath of a public lynching in Columbus, Georgia, June 1, 1896.
An address about Ida B. Wells’ speaking tour in England, adopted by a group of African American citizens in St. Paul, Minnesota, 1894.
A letter from A. M. Middlebrook to Albion Tourgée about a lynching to be held in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, Sept. 28, 1894.
A letter from Ida B. Wells to Albion Tourgée, Nov. 27, 1894.
A portrait of Ida B. Wells-Barnett, 1920s.
The introduction to The Tragedy of Lynching, produced by the Commission on Interracial Cooperation, 1933.

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