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  1. Ferdinand Lee Barnett (February 18, 1852 – March 11, 1936) was an American journalist, lawyer, and civil rights activist in Chicago, beginning in the late Reconstruction era. Born in Nashville, Tennessee , during his childhood, his African-American family fled to Windsor, Ontario , Canada, just before the American Civil War .

  2. 23 de ene. de 2017 · Ferdinand Lee Barnett, the husband of Ida B. Wells. University of Chicago Library, Special Collections Research Center. By the time Ms. Wells married Ferdinand L. Barnett in Chicago, she...

  3. 14 de nov. de 2007 · Ferdinand Barnett, Ida B. Wells and Their Family, 1917. Born in Nashville, Tennessee on February 18, 1852, and educated at the law school later affiliated with Northwestern University, Ferdinand Lee Barnett was an attorney, writer, lecturer, and the editor and founder of Chicago’s first black newspaper, the Chicago Conservator .

  4. 10 de feb. de 2017 · Black Experience Black History Education Icon Profiles. Ferdinand Lee Barnett, publisher, lawyer, civil rights activist. by Herb Boyd February 10, 2017. For several weeks I’ve been mulling...

  5. Balancing Personal and Professional Lives. Ida B. Wells met her match in Mr. Ferdinand Lee Barnett, a prominent attorney, activist, feminist, and fellow journalist, as publisher of The Conservator, the first African American newspaper in Chicago. Still, her career remained of the utmost importance; she even postponed their wedding three times ...

  6. Ferdinand Lee Barnett (February 18, 1852 – March 11, 1936) was an American journalist, lawyer, and civil rights activist in Chicago, beginning in the late Reconstruction era.

  7. founded that year by Ferdinand Lee Barnett, who is best known today as the husband of Ida B. Wells, the militant and courageous leader of the early anti-lynching struggle. Barnett stated that the fundamental reason for the failure of whites to capitalize Negro was to show dis-respect, to indicate a stigma, and to fasten on a badge of inferiority.