Timeline
Explore the timeline above to learn more about the conflict. Each page features at least one document that is crucial to understanding what happened and why it matters. You will also find brief in-line annotations that help fill in the gaps in the story.
The pages linked to the timeline also appear in the list below.
This page has paths:
- How to Use This Resource The Center for Women's History and Leadership
- Truth-Telling: Frances Willard and Ida B. Wells Josh Honn
Contents of this path:
- Frances Willard and the "Race Problem"
- Frances Harper and Black Women in the WCTU
- Ida B. Wells, Temperance, and "Race Progress"
- Ida B. Wells and "Lynch-Law"
- The WCTU and Lynching, 1893
- Ida B. Wells Abroad
- Willard and Somerset Respond
- Other Responses
- The WCTU and Lynching, 1894
- 1894 WCTU Convention: The Aftermath
- The WCTU and Lynching, 1895
- Postscript: Frances Willard
- Postscript: Ida B. Wells
- Postscript: Frances Harper and Black Women in the WCTU