What it is
How it came to be
How many it sold
Why it resonated
Impact today
Historical content researched and generated by Gemini 2.5 Pro.
Loading History's Best Sellers...
Ida B. Wells's 'The Red Record,' published in 1898, stands as a monumental piece of investigative journalism and a foundational text in the fight for civil rights. Emerging in an era when lynching had become a pervasive and brutal tool of racial terror in the American South, Wells courageously compiled irrefutable evidence to expose the systemic nature of these extrajudicial killings. Her work directly challenged the prevailing narratives that sought to justify lynching as a necessary response to Black criminality, particularly the myth of Black men assaulting white women. By meticulously detailing cases and statistics, Wells not only documented the horrors but also provided a critical, data-driven framework for understanding the true motives behind this violence, marking it as a strategic effort to maintain white supremacy.