4.8 • 642 Ratings
🗓️ 16 February 2023
⏱️ 19 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hi, I'm Ariane Nuttles, journalist and professor at Northwestern University. |
0:05.5 | In 1893, legendary activist and journalist Ida B. Wells came to Chicago on a mission. |
0:12.9 | The World's Fair was happening that summer. |
0:15.5 | Millions of people were expected to visit, and anybody with a product to sale, a constituency to celebrate, or a message |
0:23.0 | to promote wanted to be there. Prominent African American leaders applied for space |
0:29.6 | to celebrate their achievements since the end of slavery. But the fair planners denied them. |
0:35.9 | So Wells traveled here to speak out. |
0:38.5 | She was working with well-established black leaders like Frederick Douglass. |
0:42.9 | Back then, pamphlets were a key tool in political protests and campaigns. |
0:48.3 | Their pamphlet argued that Black Americans' work be recognized. |
0:52.4 | In Wells' words, |
0:53.3 | They have contributed a large share to American prosperity and civilization. |
0:58.0 | The labor of one half of this country has always been and is still being done by them. |
1:04.0 | But there was a problem. They didn't have the money to print the pamphlet. |
1:08.0 | Frederick Douglass had said he was going to get the funding, and he was trying the more traditional |
1:11.9 | way of getting some newspapers to sponsor and all that kind of stuff, and he was having a lot |
1:16.6 | of problems with it. |
1:17.6 | That's Michelle Duster. |
1:18.6 | She's the great granddaughter of Ida B. Wells. |
1:21.6 | I just think it's funny. |
1:22.6 | She's like, step aside. |
1:23.6 | Let me show you how to do this. Wells went directly to Chicago's black community |
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