Philip Alexander Bell (1808-1889)

January 30, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Susan Bragg

Philip Alexander Bell

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Black journalist Philip Alexander Bell was born in 1808 in New York City, New York and cut his political teeth in early abolitionist politics in the Northeast.ย  Bell attended Colored Citizens Conventions as early as 1830 and established his first newspaper, the Weekly Advocate, in 1837 after working for William Lloyd Garrisonโ€™s Liberator.ย  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.

In 1862, Bell joined forces with Peter Anderson to edit the Pacific Appeal, one of the first major black newspapers in California, but he and Anderson soon clashed.ย  By 1865, Bell established his own weekly newspaper, the Elevator, under the slogan, โ€œEquality Before the Law.โ€ย  The Elevator demanded California legislators approve the proposed Reconstruction-era constitutional amendments acknowledging black citizenship and suffrage rights.ย  Bell also regularly editorialized on behalf of expanding black childrenโ€™s educational opportunities.ย  California state legislators repeatedly rejected efforts to grant African Americans greater civil rights, but the ratification of the 14th and 15th Amendments allowed black male Californians voting rights in 1870.

Initially a strong supporter of the Republican Party, Bell organized the independent Equal Rights League in 1876 to lobby politicians across party lines to support African American opportunities.ย  Although Peter Anderson charged Bell with seeking patronage perks, and most blacks continued to support the Republican Party, Bell remained a powerful figure within black California until his death in 1889.

About the Author

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Susan Bragg is an Assistant Professor at Georgia Southwestern State University in Americus, Georgia. Before that she was a Visiting Professor of History at the State University of New York at Binghamton. Her University of Washington dissertation examined gendered discourses in early 20th century NAACP activism. She has also written extensively on 19th Century African Americans in California. She has published articles in California History among other journals. Her article โ€œโ€™Anxious Foot Soldiersโ€™: Sacramentoโ€™s Black Women and Education in Nineteenth-Century Californiaโ€ appeared in Quintard Taylor and Shirley Moore, eds., African American Women Confront the West, 1600-2000 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2003).

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Bragg, S. (2007, January 30). Philip Alexander Bell (1808-1889). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/bell-philip-alexander-1808-1889/

Source of the Author's Information:

Douglas Henry Daniels, Pioneer Urbanites: a Social and Cultural History of Black San Francisco (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1980); Frank H. Goodyear, โ€œBeneath the Shadow of her Flagโ€:ย  Philip A. Bellโ€™s The Elevator and the Struggle for Enfranchisement, 1865-1870,โ€ California History 78 (1999), 26-39, 71-73.

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