Frustrated alike by reversals of hard-won rights and by accommodation to the injustice by the most prominent African-American leader in the United States, public intellectual W.E.B. Du Bois (pictured) and 29 other activists concluded a meeting at Niagara Falls 120 years ago this week with a ringing call to end racial discrimination and disenfranchisement.
That last
sentence contains two words that require additional explanation. By “Niagara
Falls,” I refer not to the wonderful waterfall in the United States but the one
over the border in Canada. That’s because the organizers’ hope for an American
site was immediately foiled by one of the conditions they were protesting:
unequal accommodations. Unable to find lodging, the group had to look north, to
the Erie Beach Hotel in Ontario.
In The Souls of Black Folk (1903), Du Bois argued that “the problem of the
Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line.” The struggle to erase the
color line would consume his attention for the remaining six decades of his
life.
But at
this point, it led to a sharper break with the educator he had till now
gingerly blamed for not pressing more aggressively to advance their race:
Tuskegee Institute President Booker T. Washington.
At the
simplest level, their differences involved economic (Washington) versus
political (DuBois) strategies. Washington’s emphasis on industrial-based
education, DuBois believed, siphoned money from liberal-arts program.
In his “Of Booker T. Washington and Others” section of The Souls of Black Folk, DuBois,
while crediting his sincerity and acknowledging his sensitive position vis-à-vis
whites, had outlined the damage he had done, noting that “so far as Mr.
Washington apologizes for injustice, North or South, does not rightly value the
privilege and duty of voting, belittles the emasculating effects of caste
distinctions, and opposes the higher training and ambition of our brighter
minds,—so far as he, the South, or the Nation, does this,—we must unceasingly
and firmly oppose them.”
Now, at
the Niagara meeting, he and other activists dissatisfied with Washington--a leader, they were increasingly coming to believe, was trying to crush his critics in the movement--presented a more wide-ranging, militant program of reform—a “Declaration of Principles” encompassing suffrage, education, justice, courts, public opinion, segregated
railroad cars, the military, Christian preachers’ acquiescence to curtailing civil rights, and labor unions.
The West,
unlike the other three regions of the country, was not represented at the
meeting. Neither were women, to their considerable consternation.
(Eventually,
when pressed by outraged female activists, DuBois offered a compromise for the
next meeting: women could attend, but without congregating with male
delegates—an ironic gender equivalent of “separate but equal.”)
The
Niagara organizers’ problems with Democrats were of long standing;
this was, after all, the party that won back the South through sustained
resistance to Reconstruction in the 1870s, then began to slip away at all the
gains won by blacks in the Civil War.
But their
anger was now also aroused by the Republican Party, which, despite assurances to the
contrary, had done nothing to advance the cause of civil rights in Congress.
The
following year, interest in the cause had grown, which the attendees now
meeting in Harpers Ferry, WV, the site of John Brown’s raid on a federal armory
that, the activists felt, was his “martyrdom.”
Such was
the segregationist state of American news, however, that the Niagara Movement
could only publicize the cause within the African-American community.
Lack of
financial support led to the dissolution of the movement by the end of the
decade. But it had achieved its purpose by setting an ambitious civil-rights agenda
and by throwing down a challenge to Washington.
In 1909
Niagara movement members joined forces with other civil-rights organizations
and white allies to form the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which presented a more high-profile platform for the cause.
In helping
to form the NAACP, DuBois insisted on a lesson he had learned through leading the
Niagara movement: the structure of the organization should be bottom-up rather
than top-down, including affordable fees to encourage membership. Such changes
would be helpful in rallying African-Americans to defend their rights and to
change white opinion.

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