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  2. Aug 2, 2018 · In July 2018, Chicago named a street after her. That same month, activists raised $300,000 to erect a monument to Wells-Barnett, who remained politically active in Chicago until she died in...

    • Becky Little
  3. Pioneering journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett battled sexism, racism, and violence, particularly working to shed light on the conditions of African Americans throughout the South. Read her story on womenshistory.org.

  4. In 1974, the Chicago home of Ida B. Wells and Ferdinand Barnett, at 3624 S. Martin Luther King Drive, was added to the National Register of Historic Places and named a National Historic Landmark.

  5. In 1941, the Public Works Administration (PWA) built a Chicago Housing Authority public housing project in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago; it was named the Ida B. Wells Homes in her honor. The buildings were demolished in August 2011 due to changing demographics and ideas about such housing.

  6. Nov 3, 2019 · When Ida B. Wells moved to Chicago at the age of 32, she was already a world-renowned anti-lynching crusader, civil rights activist and investigative journalist.

  7. In 1897, Wells established the first Black kindergarten in Chicago. A few years prior, Wells had established a civic organization for Black women that would later be called the Ida B. Wells Club – the first club of its kind, according to historian Anne Meis Knupfer.

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