Hundreds of people fight for women’s and civil rights but nobody can do what Ida B Wells did. Ida B Wells grew up in Holly Springs, Mississippi. She had to balance raising her siblings after losing her parents to yellow fever and teaching to be able to support her family. She fought for anti-lynching, civil rights, and women’s rights. Wells changed the thoughts and ideas of hundreds of people over the course of her life never showing weakness. She had to overcome the stereotype of being a colored woman in order to achieve her dreams. Ida B Wells should be honored on the next stamp because of her involvement with women’s rights, her leadership with civil rights, and her perseverance through it all. Ida B Wells should be honored on the next …show more content…
She wanted her word to spread around the world so, “Wells-Barnett traveled internationally, shedding light on lynching to foreign audiences” (Norwood). This proves that Wells should be on the next stamp because of how she wanted to stop the lynching. She thought it was cruel to kill based on an alleged crime instead of something being one-hundred percent true. This also proves that she was willing to go to different places to fight for justice. Since she knew how to properly put out the evidence of why lynching was wrong and had valid claims. Due to the lynching of one of her friends, Thomas Moss, she was determined to get justice for him instead of leaving it be (Boomer). Once people noticed Wells, she became well-known around the area and she started to change people's minds and really make a difference. This shows Wells's drive and is proof that hard work does pay off. She believed in something and wanted a change so she worked hard to have results. She was able to reach people all over America with her points. So many people heard her concerns and wanted to help the cause. The word of her organization spread like wildfire to places that she wouldn’t even expect. Many people were against her word and thought she was completely out of line with being a colored …show more content…
Accessed 13 May 2019. Boomer, Lee. “Life Story: Ida B. Wells.” Women & the American Story, wams.nyhistory.org/modernizing-america/fighting-for-social-reform/ida-b-wells/. “Ida B. Wells (U.S. National Park Service).” Www.nps.gov, www.nps.gov/people/idabwells.htm#:~:text=African%2DAmerican%20 journalist%20and%20 activist. Norwood, Arlisha. “Ida B. Wells-Barnett.” National Women’s History Museum, Arlisha R. Norwood, 2017, www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/ida-b-wells-barnett. “Mattel Unveils Barbie Doll That Honors Black Journalist and Suffragist Ida B. Wells.” Washington Post, The, Jan.