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How the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Began

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About This Book

A firsthand account describes the origins of a national civil-rights organization formed in reaction to a Northern race riot and pervasive discrimination. After a magazine article warned of escalating race violence, the author and two colleagues met in New York with other reformers to plan a public campaign. They issued a Lincoln’s birthday call for a national conference and enlisted prominent supporters to publicize it. That call condemned Southern disfranchisement, segregation in public life, and violent attacks on black citizens, and urged a broad coalition of citizens to defend equality before the law. The narrative follows those founding meetings and the association’s first months of organization and advocacy.

About the Author

Ovington, Mary White portrait

Mary White Ovington

Mary White Ovington was an American author and social activist known for her contributions to literature and civil rights. She played a significant role in the early 20th-century movement for racial equality and was a co-founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Ovington's notable works include "Half a Man: The Status of the Negro in New York," which explores the challenges faced by African Americans in urban settings. Her writings reflect her commitment to social justice and her efforts to advocate for the rights of marginalized communities.

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