The people must know before they can act, and there is no educator to compare with the press.
So proclaimed Ida B. Wells-Barnett, who fearlessly shined a light with words on the abominable dark days after slavery and into the 20th century.
Journalist, publisher, author, activist and suffragist leader, Ida B.โs spirit soars. July 16 marks the 157th anniversary of her birth. Blood, sweat and ink sealed her legacy and the future of a nation still struggling to be whole.
Ida B. revered the Black press as an organizing tool. Though her newspaper The Memphis Free Speech was destroyed by racist mobs, she was never silenced. During her life, she would publish three newspapers and authored โSouthern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phasesโ and โThe Red Record,โ investigative reports that remain definitive sources on racist violence more than 100 years later.
Small in stature but huge in courage, Wells, an emancipated slave, joined a cadre of Black contemporaries โ scholars, activists and thought leaders โ who pledged to change the trajectory of bondage and demand that Black women have a voice.
They defy the clichรฉs and caricatures planted in popular culture with their searing voices. Their cadence would not be paraphrased or translated into the often quoted โAinโt I A Womanโ reprise. But forever burdened by their womanhood and Blackness, their path โ then and now โ is littered with obstacles.
Educator and writer Mary Church Terrell observed, โNobody wants to know a colored womanโs opinion about her own status [or] that of her group. When she dares express it, no matter how mild or tactfulโฆ, it is called โpropaganda,โ or is labeled โcontroversial.’โ
Poet, teacher and Baltimore abolitionist Frances Ellen Harper was among the suffragists who pleaded the case for linked fate unity.
โWe are all bound up together in one great bundle of humanity,โ she said. โSociety cannot trample on the weakest and feeblest of its members without receiving the curse in its own soul.โ
These Founding Sisters forged civil rights organizations with Black men, sororities and service clubs with their women peers, and joined โwokeโ white women against lynching and disenfranchisement and for education and economic development.
It was Ida B. and a coterie of Black women publishers, writers, and teachers of the era who led themovement for universal suffrage even when Black women were shunned and excluded.
Nonetheless, womenโs suffrage, deeply rooted in abolitionism, is depicted in a single dimension as the jumpstart for the white feminist/voting rights movement.
Regarded as social reformers, White suffragist โ many of them supporters of abolition โ confronted a fork in the road, conflicted between the โNegro questionโ and universal suffrage.
With passage of the 15th Amendment in 1870 granting Black men voting rights, universal suffrage would be sacrificed on the altar of patriarchy and white supremacy. Defended or oversimplified, the words of Susan B. Anthony, crowned the mother of womenโs suffrage, illustrate the entrenched stranglehold of whiteness.
Though she counted abolitionist Frederick Douglas as an admired cohort, Anthonyโs contradictions can only be measured today in the context of racism and exclusion.
โI would sooner cut off this right arm of mine before I would ever work for or demand the ballot for the black man and not the woman,โ she said. One might conclude that she was seduced by the divide-and-conquer tactics of the male proponents of the 15th Amendment. But Anthonyโs view was widely embraced by the white womenโs suffrage movement.
Her friend and suffrage leader Elizabeth Cady Stanton, arguing against the 15th Amendment, protested: โItโs better to be the slave of an educated white man than of a degraded Black one.โ
One year away from the centennial of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote, how much ground have we gained as women and a nation? How much of the conversation about gender equality denies the overlapping impact of white nationalism, patriarchy, and privilege? Where and when do the voices of Black and brown women enter?
But first and foremost, when do Black women get the recognition that they have earned in their unbroken march to freedom?
Our compass should be guided by that path forged by Ida B. Wells and other courageous Black women whose intersectional quest to make America stand upright changed the world.
This opening salvo embraces Suffrage. Race. Power. Spurred by my collaboration with a small collective of women that is Black-led, cross-generational, and supported by โwokeโ white women, weโve named ourselves โFounding Sisters.โ This space will offer regular installments that honor our Founding Sisters of the last centuries and spotlight the unfinished business of Suffrage. Race. Power.
To kick it off: Happy birthday, Ida B.!
Gwen McKinney is president and founder of McKinney & Associates Public Relations, for which she is responsible for translating the vision of โpublic relations with a conscienceโ into a sustained, bold and tested suite of communications services and activities. She is also the founder and lead collaborator for Suffrage.Race.Power.

