Ida B. Wells, journalist and civil rights activist in the 19th century. (Credit: WikiMedia Commons)
She Exposed the Darkest Aspects of American History
Ida B. Wells investigated lynchings in the South and campaigned for justice.
Editors Note: In honor of Women’s History Month, we’re sharing profiles of influential women in journalism.
In 1895, Ida B. Wells, a young Black journalist, published a harrowing and groundbreaking anti-lynching pamphlet, The Red Record. Widely regarded as one of the first comprehensive investigations into the brutal reality of lynching, she wrote, “The way to right wrongs is to turn the light of truth upon them.” Wells would spend the rest of her life shining a light on some of the darkest aspects of American history.
Born into slavery in 1862, Wells would become one of the country’s most fearless journalists. She grew up in Mississippi and came of age during Reconstruction, a period that briefly promised expanded rights for formerly enslaved people, but was instead marked by racial injustice and violence.
When the Civil War ended in 1865, Wells and her parents were emancipated, according to historical accounts. Her parents became active in politics and encouraged their children to attend school as a path toward advancement. In 1878, a yellow fever epidemic killed both of her parents and one sibling, leaving 16-year-old Wells responsible for her six remaining brothers and sisters. To keep her family together, she worked as a rural schoolteacher.
In the 1880s, Wells moved to Memphis, where she continued teaching and began writing articles under the pen name “Lola.” Her early journalism focused on education, racial equality and the daily struggles of Black Americans in the post-Reconstruction South. A defining moment came in 1884, when she was forcibly removed from a first-class train car despite holding a valid ticket, according to the New York Historical. Wells sued the railroad company and initially won her case in a local court, though the decision was later overturned by the Tennessee Supreme Court. The experience further motivated her to challenge racial injustice through the press.
By the early 1890s, Wells had become co-owner and editor of the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight, a Black newspaper that gave voice to the concerns of the African American community. In 1892, three local Black businessmen—Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell and Henry Stewart—were lynched by a white mob after their successful grocery store competed with a white-owned business. Moss had been a close friend of Wells. The brutality of their deaths profoundly affected her and marked a turning point in her career.
In response, Wells launched an investigative campaign against lynching. At a time when many white newspapers justified lynchings as punishment for crimes—especially alleged assaults on white women—Wells meticulously gathered data, examined case records and interviewed witnesses. She argued that lynching was not a form of justice, but rather a calculated system of racial control. The “old threadbare lie that Negro men rape white women” was deliberately repeated to justify mob violence, she asserted.
Wells’s reporting resulted in violent backlash. While she was traveling in the North, a white mob destroyed the offices of her newspaper and threatened her life. Unable to return safely to Memphis, she relocated to Chicago. From there, she published two pamphlets, Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases (1892) and The Red Record (1895), emphasizing the role of the independent press, nothing that in the South, “those who commit the murders write the reports.” Her use of data and documentation was particularly groundbreaking.
In 1895, she married attorney Ferdinand Barnett and eventually had four children. Balancing motherhood and her career, she continued to write and organize in Chicago, according to the University of Chicago Library. There, she worked on issues such as housing discrimination, education and employment opportunities for Black residents, becoming a founding member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Wells was also an active participant in the women’s suffrage movement. She insisted that the fight for women’s voting rights must include Black women and challenged segregation within the movement itself. In 1913, during the Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington, D.C., organizers asked Black women to march at the back. Wells refused. Instead, she joined the Illinois delegation mid-procession, publicly asserting her right to stand alongside white suffragists. Wells made it clear that she was committed to confronting injustice wherever it appeared—even within reform movements.
Wells died in 1931 at the age of 68. Though she was largely unrecognized by the broader American public in her time, her legacy has grown in recent years and she is now widely acknowledged as a central figure in the early civil rights movement – and one of America’s first investigative journalists. In 2020, she received a posthumous special citation from the Pulitzer Prize Board for her courageous reporting on lynching. Although federal anti-lynching legislation would not pass during her lifetime, her activism laid the intellectual and moral foundation for future civil rights campaigns. ◼️