An Online Reference Guide to African American History
Quintard Taylor
Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History
University of Washington, Seattle
Black journalist Philip Alexander Bell was born in 1808 in New York City and cut his political teeth in early abolitionist politics in the Northeast. Bell attended Colored Citizens Conventions as early as 1830 and established his first newspaper, the Weekly Advocate, in 1837 after working for William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator. After migrating to San Francisco, California in 1860, Bell maintained his connections with important abolition leaders such as Garrison and Frederick Douglass by reporting on black political and economic opportunities in the West.Sources:
Douglas Henry Daniels, Pioneer Urbanites: a Social and Cultural History of Black San Francisco (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1980); Frank H. Goodyear, “Beneath the Shadow of her Flag”: Philip A. Bell’s The Elevator and the Struggle for Enfranchisement, 1865-1870,” California History 78 (1999), 26-39, 71-73.
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