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  1. Ella Baker. Ella Baker was a civil rights activist and important member of some of the most influential organizations in the civil rights movement. She was born in 1903 in Norfolk, Virginia, and was raised in North Carolina where she would go on to attend Shaw University in Raleigh. Her relentless passion for justice is often attributed, in ...

  2. Feb 26, 2020 · Born in 1903, Baker was just a teenager when the 19th Amendment became law enabling women the right to vote. Her youth didn’t prevent Baker from attacking unfair policies and standing as a firm advocate of women suffrage. “Ella Baker used her powerful voice to speak out for the world she believed in, one in which every human being is ...

  3. www.wikiwand.com › en › Ella_BakerElla Baker - Wikiwand

    Ella Josephine Baker was an African-American civil rights and human rights activist. She was a largely behind-the-scenes organizer whose career spanned more than five decades. In New York City and the South, she worked alongside some of the most noted civil rights leaders of the 20th century, including W. E. B. Du Bois, Thurgood Marshall, A. Philip Randolph, and Martin Luther King Jr. She also mentored many emerging activists, such as Diane Nash, Stokely Carmichael, and Bob Moses, as leaders ...

  4. Ella Josephine Baker was a civil rights activist whose organizational, behind-the-scenes work made her one of the most important figures in the Civil Rights Movement. She emphasized the importance of a grassroots approach over charismatic leadership within the movement. Baker was born on December 13, 1903, in Norfolk, Virginia, and grew up in North Carolina.…

  5. In Friendship. January 5, 1956. On 5 January 1956, one month after the start of the Montgomery bus boycott, New York–based In Friendship was formed to direct economic aid to the South’s growing civil rights struggle. Founded by Ella Baker, Stanley Levison, Bayard Rustin, and representatives from more than 25 religious, political, and labor ...

  6. Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement A Radical Democratic Vision By Barbara Ransby (UNC Press, 2005). In this deeply researched biography , Barbara Ransby chronicles Baker’s long and rich political career as an organizer, an intellectual, and a teacher, from her early experiences in depression-era Harlem to the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

  7. The Ella Baker Center for Human Rights is a non-profit strategy and action center based in Oakland, California. The stated aim of the center is to work for justice, opportunity and peace in urban America. [1] It is named for Ella Baker, a twentieth-century activist and civil rights leader originally from Virginia and North Carolina.