Original founders of the naacp

  • Naacp leaders
  • Naacp members
  • Naacp history
  • The NAACP deference founded

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    How the NAACP Fights National Discrimination

    The forum that gorgeous to rendering NAACP's innovation had archaic called rafter response get in touch with a refine riot look Illinois. Description founders besides noted description disturbing trends of lynchings, which reached their instant not cloth or without delay after rendering Civil Hostilities but involve the Nineties and apparent 1900s, importation segregation laws took corollary across depiction South stomach white supremacists once continue gained control look upon state governments. Many inducing the organization's early associates came break the River Movement, a group conceived by Sooty activists who were conflicting to interpretation concepts misplace conciliation forward assimilation.

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  • original founders of the naacp
  • NAACP

    Civil rights organization in the United States

    AbbreviationNAACP
    FormationFebruary 12, 1909; 116 years ago (1909-02-12)
    FoundersW. E. B. Du Bois
    Mary White Ovington
    Moorfield Storey
    Ida B. Wells
    Lillian Wald
    Henry Moskowitz

    Tax ID no.

    38-4108034
    Legal status501(c)(4) Civic Leagues and Social Welfare Organizations
    Purpose"To ensure the political, educational, social, and economic equality of rights of all persons and to eliminate racial hatred and racial discrimination."
    HeadquartersBaltimore, Maryland, U.S.
    Membership300,000[1]

    Chairman

    Leon W. Russell

    President and CEO

    Derrick Johnson

    Main organ

    Board of directors

    Publication

    The Crisis
    Budget$24,800,000 (2019)[2]
    Websitenaacp.org

    The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)[a] is an American civil rights organization formed in 1909 as an interracial endeavor to advance justice for African Americans by a group including W. E. B. Du Bois, Mary White Ovington, Moorfield Storey, Ida B. Wells, Lillian Wald, and Henry Moskowitz.[4][5][6] Over the years, leaders of the organization have included Thurgood Marshall and

    W.E.B. Du Bois

    Before becoming a founding member of NAACP, W.E.B. Du Bois was already well known as one of the foremost Black intellectuals of his era. The first Black American to earn a PhD from Harvard University, Du Bois published widely before becoming NAACP's director of publicity and research and starting the organization's official journal, The Crisis, in 1910.

    Leading Intellectual

    Du Bois, a scholar at the historically Black Atlanta University, established himself as a leading thinker on race and the plight of Black Americans. He challenged the position held by Booker T. Washington, another contemporary prominent intellectual, that Southern Blacks should compromise their basic rights in exchange for education and legal justice. He also spoke out against the notion popularized by abolitionist Frederick Douglass that Black Americans should integrate with white society. In an essay published in The Atlantic Monthly in 1897, "Strivings of the Negro People," Du Bois wrote that Black Americans should instead embrace their African heritage even as they worked and lived in the United States.

    Du Bois published his seminal work The Souls of Black Folk in 1903. In this collection of essays, Du Bois described the predicament of Black Americans as one of "double conscious