1 00:00:00,640 --> 00:00:02,239 There's something irresistible about 2 00:00:02,239 --> 00:00:03,119 underdog stories, 3 00:00:03,119 --> 00:00:04,329 where remarkable people rise 4 00:00:04,329 --> 00:00:05,509 from humble beginnings 5 00:00:05,509 --> 00:00:08,308 to do incredible things against all the odds. 6 00:00:08,308 --> 00:00:10,630 But few stories are as dramatic as that of 7 00:00:10,630 --> 00:00:11,910 Ida B. Wells. 8 00:00:11,910 --> 00:00:13,989 A woman who was born a slave in Mississippi, 9 00:00:13,989 --> 00:00:15,369 in the midst of the Civil War, 10 00:00:15,369 --> 00:00:17,533 and became a daring investigative reporter 11 00:00:17,533 --> 00:00:19,511 and civil rights crusader, 12 00:00:19,511 --> 00:00:20,490 who would one day be called 13 00:00:20,490 --> 00:00:22,569 "the loudest and most persistent voice for truth" 14 00:00:22,569 --> 00:00:24,620 in an era of injustice. 15 00:00:24,620 --> 00:00:25,959 From an early age, Wells carried 16 00:00:25,959 --> 00:00:28,321 exceptional burdens with exceptional courage. 17 00:00:28,321 --> 00:00:29,803 She became the head of her household 18 00:00:29,803 --> 00:00:31,419 at the age of 16 when both her parents 19 00:00:31,419 --> 00:00:33,581 died suddenly from yellow fever. 20 00:00:33,581 --> 00:00:35,789 In order to support her five brothers and sisters, 21 00:00:35,789 --> 00:00:37,672 she curtailed her education and started working 22 00:00:37,672 --> 00:00:39,834 as a school teacher in rural Mississippi. 23 00:00:40,204 --> 00:00:42,073 When she was 21 years old, 24 00:00:42,073 --> 00:00:43,301 Wells boarded a train to Memphis 25 00:00:43,301 --> 00:00:45,899 and seated herself in the first-class ladies car, 26 00:00:45,899 --> 00:00:47,880 only to be told that black women were restricted 27 00:00:47,880 --> 00:00:49,410 to second class. 28 00:00:49,410 --> 00:00:51,770 Not only did she bite the conductor who tried 29 00:00:51,770 --> 00:00:53,680 to remove her, she soon filed a discrimination 30 00:00:53,700 --> 00:00:55,970 lawsuit against the railroad company. 31 00:00:56,270 --> 00:00:57,430 She won the initial case, 32 00:00:57,430 --> 00:00:59,062 and while it was overturned on appeal, 33 00:00:59,062 --> 00:01:00,620 an article she wrote about the experience 34 00:01:00,620 --> 00:01:02,952 helped launch her career as a journalist. 35 00:01:03,252 --> 00:01:05,590 Wells' life changed forever in 1892, 36 00:01:05,590 --> 00:01:07,110 when her friend, Thomas Moss, was murdered 37 00:01:07,110 --> 00:01:08,450 by a white mob in Memphis 38 00:01:08,450 --> 00:01:10,221 along with two other black men. 39 00:01:10,221 --> 00:01:12,461 Their brutal killings inspired Wells to speak out 40 00:01:12,461 --> 00:01:14,169 against the horrors of lynching, 41 00:01:14,169 --> 00:01:16,084 an increasingly common tool of terror 42 00:01:16,084 --> 00:01:17,700 used against black people in the decades 43 00:01:17,700 --> 00:01:19,922 after the Civil War. 44 00:01:19,922 --> 00:01:21,611 Black men were often falsely accused of rape 45 00:01:21,611 --> 00:01:23,509 in order to justify their murders. 46 00:01:23,509 --> 00:01:24,709 But in a series of widely-read 47 00:01:24,709 --> 00:01:26,090 articles and pamphlets, 48 00:01:26,090 --> 00:01:28,061 Wells argued that lynching had little to do 49 00:01:28,061 --> 00:01:29,372 with protecting the honor of women, 50 00:01:29,372 --> 00:01:31,520 and everything to do with protecting the power of 51 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:33,351 southern white men. 52 00:01:33,351 --> 00:01:34,943 Like so many civil rights leaders who would 53 00:01:34,943 --> 00:01:36,430 follow in her footsteps, including the 54 00:01:36,430 --> 00:01:38,012 civil rights leaders of today, 55 00:01:38,012 --> 00:01:39,641 her criticisms were powerful because 56 00:01:39,641 --> 00:01:40,641 they took aim not just 57 00:01:40,641 --> 00:01:42,342 at the misdeeds of individuals, 58 00:01:42,342 --> 00:01:44,696 but at the unexamined institutions of racism 59 00:01:44,696 --> 00:01:46,061 and power behind them. 60 00:01:46,061 --> 00:01:48,091 Her groundbreaking analysis changed 61 00:01:48,091 --> 00:01:49,832 the national conversation around lynching, 62 00:01:49,832 --> 00:01:52,231 and ever her future mentor, Frederick Douglass 63 00:01:52,231 --> 00:01:53,231 called his writing on the subject 64 00:01:53,231 --> 00:01:55,492 "feeble" in comparison. 65 00:01:55,492 --> 00:01:56,841 Wells was the co-owner and editor of 66 00:01:56,841 --> 00:01:58,432 a black newspaper in Memphis. 67 00:01:58,432 --> 00:01:59,971 After one of her anti-lynching articles 68 00:01:59,971 --> 00:02:01,861 displeased the white community, 69 00:02:01,861 --> 00:02:04,151 an angry mob stormed the office of the paper 70 00:02:04,151 --> 00:02:05,602 and destroyed it. 71 00:02:05,602 --> 00:02:06,472 Faced with death threats, 72 00:02:06,472 --> 00:02:08,582 Wells started carrying a pistol in her purse, 73 00:02:08,802 --> 00:02:10,301 but refused to back down from her 74 00:02:10,301 --> 00:02:11,624 anti-lynching campaign. 75 00:02:11,624 --> 00:02:13,514 She said it was better to die 76 00:02:13,514 --> 00:02:14,844 fighting against injustice, 77 00:02:14,844 --> 00:02:17,833 than to die like a dog or a rat in a trap. 78 00:02:17,833 --> 00:02:19,893 After that, she relocated to New York, 79 00:02:19,893 --> 00:02:21,532 where she began to publish investigative 80 00:02:21,532 --> 00:02:23,055 journalism for an even larger audience, 81 00:02:23,055 --> 00:02:25,823 including pamphlets that collected statistical 82 00:02:25,823 --> 00:02:27,943 documentation of lynching in the South. 83 00:02:28,233 --> 00:02:29,803 Her popular anti-lynching speeches 84 00:02:29,903 --> 00:02:31,247 eventually took her to Britain, 85 00:02:31,247 --> 00:02:33,174 where white audiences seemed far more 86 00:02:33,174 --> 00:02:34,257 outraged than many of their 87 00:02:34,257 --> 00:02:35,100 American counterparts. 88 00:02:35,950 --> 00:02:37,643 Her overseas speaking tour inspired 89 00:02:37,643 --> 00:02:39,363 international condemnation of lynching, 90 00:02:39,363 --> 00:02:42,543 particularly from British newspapers and politicians. 91 00:02:42,673 --> 00:02:44,624 And elevated Wells to the most visible national 92 00:02:44,624 --> 00:02:46,564 leader in the anti-lynching movement. 93 00:02:47,204 --> 00:02:48,993 Although Wells often criticized herself 94 00:02:48,993 --> 00:02:51,034 for being stubborn and hot-tempered, 95 00:02:51,034 --> 00:02:53,103 those same qualities made her a fiery orator 96 00:02:53,103 --> 00:02:55,764 and a relentless crusader against injustice. 97 00:02:55,764 --> 00:02:57,404 Faced with death threats from southern Whites 98 00:02:57,404 --> 00:02:59,946 and criticism from moderate black reformers, 99 00:02:59,946 --> 00:03:01,614 who considered her too radical, 100 00:03:01,614 --> 00:03:03,594 Wells refused to compromise her ideals 101 00:03:03,594 --> 00:03:05,304 for the sake of comfort, convenience, 102 00:03:05,304 --> 00:03:07,026 or even personal safety. 103 00:03:07,476 --> 00:03:09,174 "The way to right wrongs is to turn 104 00:03:09,174 --> 00:03:10,167 the light of truth upon them," 105 00:03:10,167 --> 00:03:12,265 wrote Wells, who never failed to speak 106 00:03:12,265 --> 00:03:14,404 unpleasant truths even when it cost her friends 107 00:03:14,404 --> 00:03:15,865 or potential allies. 108 00:03:15,865 --> 00:03:17,704 Although surrounded by hostility and threats 109 00:03:17,704 --> 00:03:19,014 from people who wanted to punish 110 00:03:19,014 --> 00:03:20,014 her outspokenness because of 111 00:03:20,014 --> 00:03:21,514 her race and her gender, 112 00:03:21,514 --> 00:03:23,764 she refused to be silenced. 113 00:03:24,284 --> 00:03:25,885 Although she fought for women's rights, 114 00:03:25,885 --> 00:03:28,224 Wells was often disappointed by white suffragists 115 00:03:28,224 --> 00:03:30,136 who considered racial issues a distraction 116 00:03:30,136 --> 00:03:32,194 from the fight against sexism. 117 00:03:32,194 --> 00:03:34,375 Some even endorsed segregation. 118 00:03:34,375 --> 00:03:36,944 During the famous women's suffrage parade of 1913, 119 00:03:36,944 --> 00:03:39,176 when black women were told to walk at the back, 120 00:03:39,176 --> 00:03:41,424 Wells simply waited until the march started 121 00:03:41,424 --> 00:03:44,315 and defiantly joined her states' delegation. 122 00:03:44,315 --> 00:03:46,919 Similarly, she was frustrated by those in the 123 00:03:46,919 --> 00:03:49,004 black community who saw women's rights as 124 00:03:49,004 --> 00:03:51,486 unimportant to the fight against racism. 125 00:03:51,486 --> 00:03:53,809 Caught between the struggles of her race and her gender, 126 00:03:53,809 --> 00:03:56,656 Wells often felt like she fought alone. 127 00:03:58,056 --> 00:03:59,475 Although she had many suitors, 128 00:03:59,475 --> 00:04:01,775 and withstood enormous social pressure to marry, 129 00:04:01,775 --> 00:04:03,655 Wells remained single throughout her twenties. 130 00:04:03,655 --> 00:04:06,066 In her early 30s, she finally met her match 131 00:04:06,066 --> 00:04:07,574 in Ferdinand Barnett, 132 00:04:07,574 --> 00:04:09,765 a black lawyer who was equally passionate about 133 00:04:09,765 --> 00:04:11,985 social justice and a man who wholeheartedly 134 00:04:11,985 --> 00:04:13,445 supported her career. 135 00:04:13,445 --> 00:04:15,455 They married and had four children together 136 00:04:15,455 --> 00:04:17,186 and while Wells would eventually step down 137 00:04:17,186 --> 00:04:19,725 from her full-time position as a newspaper editor, 138 00:04:19,725 --> 00:04:21,435 she continued her work as a reformer 139 00:04:21,435 --> 00:04:24,096 until the day she died. 140 00:04:24,096 --> 00:04:26,906 When she passed away in 1931 at the age of 69, 141 00:04:26,906 --> 00:04:29,216 Ida B. Wells had profoundly changed the way that 142 00:04:29,216 --> 00:04:30,986 people had looked at race, gender, 143 00:04:30,986 --> 00:04:32,366 and violence in America. 144 00:04:32,366 --> 00:04:34,185 She transformed herself from a slave who was 145 00:04:34,185 --> 00:04:35,676 regarded as property, 146 00:04:35,676 --> 00:04:37,097 to someone once described as a 147 00:04:37,097 --> 00:04:39,905 woman who walked as if she owned the world.