Timothy Thomas Fortune
Timothy Thomas Fortune | |
---|---|
Born |
Marianna, Florida, U.S. | October 3, 1856
Died |
June 2, 1928 71) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | (aged
Alma mater | Stanton High School for Negroes |
Occupation | Orator, author, publisher, and African American civil rights leader |
Political party | Republican |
Religion | Methodist[1] |
Timothy Thomas Fortune (October 3, 1856 – June 2, 1928) was an orator, civil rights leader, journalist, writer, editor and publisher. He was the highly influential editor of the nation's leading black newspaper The New York Age, and was the leading economist in the black community. He was a long-time adviser to Booker T. Washington and the ghost writer, and the editor of Washington's first autobiography, The Story of My Life and Work.[2] Fortune’s philosophy of militant agitation on behalf of the rights of black people laid one of the foundations of the Civil Rights Movement.
Early life
He was born into slavery[3] in Marianna, Jackson County, Florida, to Emanuel and Sarah Jane Fortune. He started his education at Marianna's first school for African Americans after the Civil War. His family moved to Jacksonville where he attended Stanton High School for Negroes. He worked both as a page in the state senate and as apprenticed printer at a Jacksonville newspaper during the time that his father, Emanuel, was a Reconstruction politician in Florida. At one time Fortune also worked at the Marianna Courier and later the Jacksonville Daily-Times Union. These experiences would be the start of a career wherein he would go on to have his work published in over twenty books and articles and in more than three hundred editorials. In 1874 he was mail route agent and then he was promoted to customs inspector for the eastern district of Delaware but only held this position for a few months before resigning in order to attend Howard University.[4]
Although he was mostly self-taught prior to his college enrollment in 1875, Fortune was admitted to study law. He changed his major to journalism after two semesters before leaving school altogether to begin work, in 1876, at the People's Advocate, a newspaper in Washington, D.C. About that same time he married Carrie C. Smiley.[5]
New York journalist
Fortune moved to New York City in 1879 and began a process whereby over the next two decades he would become known as editor and owner of a newspaper named first the Globe, then the Freeman, and finally the New York Age.[5]
Upon arrival in New York, Fortune began working as a printer and worked at The Weekly Witness. In 1880 he became journalist and editor of The Rumor run by George Parker and William Walter Sampson. This journal soon changed its name to The New York Globe.[5] The Globe closed in November 1884 after a dispute with co-editor William B. Derrick,[6] and one week later, on November 22, Fortune published the first issue of his New York Freeman. In the late 1880s, Fortune was considered the greatest black newspaper writer in America.[5] That same year he published a book entitled Black and White: Land, Labor, and Politics in the South. That book, along with his 1885 pamphlet, The Negro in Politics, openly challenged Frederick Douglass's dictum that "the Republican Party is the ship, all else the open sea.". In 1885, The Freeman took the new name of The New York Age[4] and set out to become "The Afro-American Journal of News and Opinion". In 1890 he was elected chairman of the executive committee of the National Afro-American Press Association at their meeting in Indianapolis.[4]
In Chicago on January 25, 1890, Fortune co-founded the militant National Afro-American League to right wrongs against African Americans authorized by law and sanctioned or tolerated by public opinion.[4] The league fell apart after four years. When it was revived in Rochester, New York, on September 15, 1898, it had the new name of the "National Afro-American Council", with Bishop Alexander Walters as its first President and Fortune as a prominent member. Walters was followed as president by Fortune, who held the position from 1902-1904. Fortune was succeeded by William Henry Steward. Booker T. Washington played a dominant role on the Council and it included a number of important leaders including W. E. B. Du Bois who went on to form the NAACP and anti-lynching activist Ida B. Wells.[7] The League and the Council would play a vital role in setting the stage for the Niagara Movement, NAACP and other civil rights organizations to follow. Fortune was also the leading advocate of using "Afro-American" to identify his people. Since they are "African in origin and American in birth", it was his argument that it most accurately defined them.
With Fortune at the helm as co-owner with Emanuel Fortune, Jr. and Jerome B. Peterson, the New York Age became the most widely read of all Black newspapers. It stood at the forefront as a voice agitating against the evils of discrimination, lynching, mob violence, and disenfranchisement. Its popularity was due to Fortune's editorials which condemned all forms of discrimination and demanded full justice for all African Americans. Ida B. Wells's newspaper Memphis Free Speech and Headlight had its printing press destroyed and building burned as the result of an article published in it on May 25, 1892. Fortune then gave her a job and a new platform from which to detail and condemn lynching. His book The Kind of Education the Afro-American Most Needs was published in 1898. He published Dreams of Life: Miscellaneous Poems in 1905. After a nervous breakdown, Fortune sold the New York Age to Fred R. Moore in 1907, who continued publishing it until 1960. Fortune published another book, The New York Negro in Journalism, in 1915.
In 1900 he campaigned for William McKinley, and he was politically active in the Republican party.[4] However, he was noted for criticizing corruption in both parties and advocating good principals for all.[5]
Fortune and the Negro World
Fortune went to work as an editor at the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League's house organ, the Negro World, in 1923. At its height the Negro World had circulation of over 200,000. With distribution throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, and in Central America it may have been the most widely distributed newspaper in the world at that time. During his tenure at the Negro World, Fortune rubbed shoulders with such literary luminaries as Zora Neale Hurston, W. A. Domingo, Hubert Harrison, and John E. Bruce, among others.
Fortune moved to Red Bank, New Jersey in 1901, where he built his home, Maple Hill.[8] The house was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 8, 1976 and the New Jersey Register of Historic Places on August 16, 1979.[9]
Fortune died in 1928 at the age of 71 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
References
- ↑ William J. Simmons, Henry McNeal Turner, Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising, G. M. Rewell & Company, 1887, p785-791
- ↑ Charlotte D. Fitzgerald, "The Story of My Life and Work: Booker T. Washington’s Other Autobiography," The Black Scholar (2001) 21#4 pp 35–40
- ↑ "Biographies: T. Thomas Fortune". PBS.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Culp, Daniel Wallace (1902). Twentieth century Negro literature; or, A cyclopedia of thought on the vital topics relating to the American Negro. Atlanta: J. L. Nichols & Co. p. 226.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Irvine Garland Penn, The Afro-American Press and Its Editors, Willey & Company, 1891, p133-138
- ↑ Boyd, Herb. The Black Pres: A Long History of Service and Advocacy, Crisis, March 1991, Vol 98, No 3, 1991
- ↑ Justesen, Benjamin R. Broken Brotherhood: The Rise and Fall of the National Afro-American Council. SIU Press, 2008. p82
- ↑ Horner, Shirley. "ABOUT BOOKS", The New York Times, October 3, 1993]. Accessed December 19, 2007. "Timothy Thomas Fortune, a pioneering black journalist, who went on to start The New York Age, once the nation's leading black newspaper, moved to Red Bank in 1901. His Red Bank home, W. Burgen place, is a National Historic Landmark."
- ↑ NEW JERSEY - Monmouth County, National Register of Historic Places. Accessed November 21, 2007.
Further reading
- Curry, Tommy J. "The Fortune of Wells: Ida B. Wells-Barnett’s Use of T. Thomas Fortune’s Philosophy of Social Agitation as a Prolegomenon to Militant Civil Rights Activism," Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society: A Quarterly Journal in American Philosophy (2012) 48#4 pp 457–82 in Project MUSE
- Nelson, Claudia D. "The Men that Influenced Ida B. Wells-Barnett: Jim Wells, T.Thomas Fortune, and Frederick Douglass," Making Connections: A Journal for Teachers of Cultural Diversity (2006) 10#1 pp 25–44.
- Thornbrough, Emma Lou. T. Thomas Fortune: Militant Journalist (1972), the standard scholarly biography
Primary sources
- Alexander, Shawn, ed. T. Thomas Fortune, the Afro-American Agitator: A Collection of Writings, 1880-1928 (2010)
External links
- Soldiers without Swords Biographies
- Tuskegee's point-man, Timothy Fortune
- Ida B. Wells-Barnett
- The Reader's Companion to American History
- T. Thomas Fortune House
- Letter from T. Thomas Fortune to George Myers
- After Reconstruction: Problems of African Americans in the South
- An Army of Lions: The Civil Rights Struggle Before the NAACP
- Works by Timothy Thomas Fortune at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Timothy Thomas Fortune at Internet Archive