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                        This course uses the life of Ida B. Wells as a focal
                        point for understanding Black history in the late
                        nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It will cover
                        anti-lynching campaigns, the rise of Jim Crow, the
                        history of early Black civil rights organizations and
                        women’s clubs, the Great Migration, the African American
                        experience during the World War I era, and the emergence
                        of New Negro leadership. A member of emancipation’s
                        first generation, Wells was born to enslaved parents
                        during the Civil War, and survived a rough childhood to
                        become a teacher, journalist, and trenchant social
                        critic. Best known for her crusade against lynching, she
                        was a social justice warrior whose long career as a
                        civil rights activist illustrates the many challenges
                        faced by African Americans during her lifetime.
                      
                      COURSE CONTENT
                      
                        - Twelve lectures
- 
                          Primary source readings to complement the lectures
                        
- 
                          A certificate of completion for 15 hours of
                          professional development credit
                        
                        Readings: The suggested readings for
                        each session will be listed in the “Resources” link on
                        the course site. You are not required to read or
                        purchase any print materials. The quizzes are based on
                        the lectures.
                      
                      
                        Course Access: After your purchase, you
                        may access your course by signing into the Gilder
                        Lehrman website and clicking on the My Courses link,
                        which can be found under My Account in the navigation
                        menu.
                      
                      
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                        selfpacedcourses@gilderlehrman.org.
                      
                      
                        LEAD SCHOLAR: Mia Bay
                      
                      
                        Mia Bay is the Paul Mellon Professor of American History
                        at the University of Cambridge. She is a scholar of
                        American and African American intellectual, cultural,
                        and social history whose recent interests include Black
                        women’s thought, African American approaches to
                        citizenship, and the history of race and transportation.
                        She has authored or edited seven books, including the
                        Bancroft Prize–winning Traveling Black: A Story of Race
                        and Resistance. Bay is also a frequent consultant on
                        museum and documentary film projects. Her recent public
                        history work includes working with the Smithsonian
                        Institution’s National Museum of African American
                        History and Culture (NMAAHC) on one of its inaugural
                        exhibitions and serving as a scholarly advisor to
                        the Library of Congress and NMAAHC’s Civil Rights
                        History Project.