Wednesday, November 13, 2019
National Association For The Advancement Of Colored People Essay
 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People           Born from the Niagara Movement, led by William E. B. DuBois, the NAACP  has had a volatile birth and a lively history (Beifuss 17:E4). The impetus for  the creation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People  came in the summer of 1908. Severe race riots in Springfield, Illinois,  prompted William English Walling to write articles questioning the treatment of  the Negro. Reading the articles, Mary White Ovington and Dr. Henry Moskowitz  were compelled to meet with Walling. Consequently, the three along with a group  of black and white citizens had considered the present state of the Negro,  disfranchised in the South and taxed while going unrepresented in the  government, a national conference needed to be held to answer the "Negro  Question" (Jenkins). It was then that the idea of NAACP was created.       February 12, 1909, Lincoln's birthday, a conference to review the  progress that the nation made since Emancipation Proclamation and to celebrate  Lincoln's birthday took place; Thereupon, a statement, now known as "The Call",  was released. This statement reiterated the treatment of the black race since  1865. Many notable figures in history signed "The Call" , e.g., Ida Wells  Barnett, Jane Adams, W.E.B. DuBois and John Dewey. In a matter of two months,  another conference was held. As a result of that conference, the NAA...                      
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