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The Red Record
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
6 posts | 5 read | 15 to read
A shocking and powerful account of lynching written by activist, journalist, and former slave Ida B. Wells In the postbellum American South, lynching was a frightfully common occurrence, perpetrated so frequently that most Southern politicians and leaders turned a blind eye to the practice. This vicious form of vigilante justice was in truth a thinly veiled racist justification for murderous violence. In 1892 alone, more than two hundred African Americans were lynched, with alleged offenses ranging from attempted stock poisoning to insulting whites. The Red Record tabulates these scenes of brutality in clear, objective statistics, allowing the horrifying facts to speak for themselves. Alongside the tally, author Ida B. Wells describes actual occurrences of lynching, and enumerates the standard rationalizations for these extrajudicial killings, her original intent for the pamphlet to shame and shock the apathetic publicand spark change. This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
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It only took us approximately 127 years from Ida B Wells‘s Red Record to actually passing an anti-lynching law. To paraphrase MLK Jr. ‘The arc of the moral universe is (indeed) long (and depressingly slow) , but it (eventually…give or take a century) bends toward justice.‘

We need to do better

ravenlee I will never understand how this wasn‘t a given…and yet, I understand it all too well. 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @ravenlee Right! How is that not a given! But I remember them trying to pass this not long after Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd, and it NOT Passing because ‘reasons‘🙄 2y
Suet624 💕💕💕 2y
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Bookwomble 🤯 - The lawmakers had other, more important, issues to deal with than racially-aggravated vigilante murder for the past 150 years? 🤷🏻‍♂️ 2y
Megabooks 💯💯💯 great but we need to do better. I‘d also like to see stronger voting rights laws. I cannot make my dad understand why everyone can‘t necessarily get a driver‘s license/ID but why it is still legal for them to vote. Sorry that came up yesterday around the table. We need to do better on behalf of our BIPOC Americans!! 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Megabooks yes! I‘ve had this discussion myself many times…that and mail in ballots. My friend in Massachusetts doesn‘t understand why everyone can‘t easily get a photo ID to vote, but I live in rural PA, where there is no public transportation and the nearest DMV is over an hour drive from where I live and is only open 1 day a week, on a week day. So every disabled or elderly person here would need to find someone willing to take the day ⤵️ 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ↪️off of work and wait in line with them all day. We have a very high senior citizen population in my area, many of them women, who would also struggle to get the documentation they need to get an ID. Here you need your original birth certificate, proof of any name change in between, and utility bills sent to your current residence in your name. Many don‘t have access to that. Bills were always in their husbands or then children‘s name, ⤵️ (edited) 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa Birth and marriage records long lost and impossible to just request when you were born at home, or the church that married you long closed and disappeared along with any records. But in a much smaller and more urban state like hers, there are many more DMV‘s much easier to get to, open more hours, records better kept and easier to get access to….. maybe they require less proof too 🤷‍♀️ (edited) 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa The problem always seems to be that everyone always assumes their life story and ability to access info is universal to everyone everywhere. 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Megabooks maybe some of that will help you to explain it to him.. AARP is probably still considered neutral in most circles (not lame stream media 🙄) 2y
Megabooks Yes, I live in a medium-sized town. Fortunately the DMV is open more often but is difficult to access if you‘re disabled, as all three in my family are. We also have the transport issues too although we do have a limited bus system for disabled people, but it covers 7 counties. Fortunately we as a family have access to our own accommodated vehicles but I‘m trying to convince dad that it is not true for everyone. I think everywhere has the Real ID 2y
Megabooks Issues now. Our backyard neighbor, who is 90, had to bring her marriage certificate to a husband that‘s been dead for 15 years. Fortunately she kept it. Just ridiculous! Thank you for the links!! 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Megabooks and she‘s lucky to still have it and be able to find it… if there has ever been a fire in the home (or in my area a historic fire at one of the county courthouses) those things can be very hard to replace, not to mention seniors who live in nursing homes and don‘t have any of their older personal items with them anymore or who might struggle to remember names and places to request documents…. What was the name of that lawyer who ⤵️ 2y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa Represented you in that divorce 50 years ago. I can‘t even imagine. I‘m only 48 and was asked recently to list every address I‘ve ever lived at…. I honestly cannot recall the address the street addresses I lived at while in college, I could probably drive you there, but the house number on the street that I was at for 6 months in 1995-ish, nope. 2y
53 likes17 comments
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Nebklvr
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
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Ida B Wells was a woman on a mission. A mission to prove the brutality and misinformation of the South. She used hard facts to hold up a mirror to lawlessness during her antilynching campaign and made many powerful enemies. While some editing snafus are noted, they are few and I would certainly read her call for equal justice as we realize we still haven‘t managed to provide it to all of our citizens.

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Kshakal
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Pretty ❤️❤️❤️ 5y
vkois88 Love the spine for Love In Art 😍 5y
Kshakal @vkois88 me too!!! 5y
53 likes3 comments
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TheNextBook
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
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So, this is a short extremely relevant, painful read. Why? Because it lays out very bare that in the US if you were Black you could be lynched by a mob, in front of a raving crowd and no one would be punished for it! Because your life doesnt matter. Extremely relevant when you look at the BlackLivesMatter movement, white supremacist marching in Charlottesville, players taking a knee and the fact that 2017 has been a dumpster fire!

TrishB 😔😔 7y
DivineDiana I do so wish there was another choice besides like. Difficult read. So sad. 😞 It is said that “Knowledge is Power”. Your Book List is a good start. (edited) 7y
61 likes4 stack adds2 comments
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TheNextBook
The Red Record | Ida B. Wells
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Back to my "must read" list. I'm not sure how this will go down in my emotional state because today I am just frustrated but I really want to read this. It's not a long read and honestly I just need her strength and to read her words.

Tamra Depressing. 😑 7y
TheNextBook @Tamra and necessary. I'm 10 pages in and well aware that what she is dicussing most people aren't aware of and would never acknowledge. Everything she discussed then leads exactly to where we are today in the US. 7y
Tamra @TheNextBook I am and have been for awhile, reading Stamped From the Beginning, which does the same. I can only read bits & pieces bc it is depressing and incredibly dense. Have you read it? 7y
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TheNextBook @Tamra I've seen it and I need to add it to my list. It's so hard trying to read through these books knowing how bad things have become and how little things have changed. That's the worst part. 7y
Tamra @TheNextBook totally! It frightens me. 7y
TheNextBook @Tamra I'm terrified. And it's not like I wasn't aware that this type of racism still exist. I've always known. I just never imagined I would see Nazis and the KKK brazenly walking the streets and proudly talking about ethnic cleanising. 7y
DivineDiana @TheNextBook Neither did I. 7y
42 likes4 stack adds7 comments
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KrisConstantReader
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This Ebook is free today, it looks great.

51 likes1 stack add