Philip Alexander Bell Explained

Philip Alexander Bell
Birth Date:1808
Birth Place:New York City
Death Place:San Francisco
Nationality:American
Occupation:Newspaper editor
Years Active:1830-1889
Known For:Opposition to slavery, support for black citizenship and suffrage in the United States
Notable Works:Weekly Advocate, Pacific Appeal, The Elevator

Philip Alexander Bell (1808–1889) was a 19th-century American newspaper editor and abolitionist. Born in New York City, he was educated at the African Free School[1] and became politically active at the 1832 Colored Convention. He began his newspaper career with for William Lloyd Garrison's anti-slavery newspaper The Liberator and became an outspoken voice on a variety of social and political of issues of the day including abolition, suffrage, and the protection of fugitive slaves.

In 1837, he founded The Weekly Advocate newspaper, edited by Samuel Cornish. The paper was later renamed The Colored American and co-owned by Charles Bennett Ray. In 1860, he moved to San Francisco where he became co-editor of the African-American newspaper The Pacific Appeal. After the Civil War he founded and edited The San Francisco Elevator during the Reconstruction Era.[2] [3] [4] [5]

Bell died on April 24, 1889.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: P.A. Bell: Abolitionist. 2021-02-23. www.lincolnshrine.org.
  2. Book: Perry, E.L. . Alexander . L. . Encyclopedia of African American History . ABC-CLIO . American Ethnic Experience . 2010 . 978-1-85109-769-2 . February 13, 2017 . 324.
  3. George William Gore, Negro Journalism: An Essay on the History and Present Conditions of the Negro Press, University Microfilms, 1922
  4. Lara Langer Cohen, Jordan Alexander Stein, Early African American Print Culture, University of Pennsylvania Press, Sep 6, 2012
  5. Jan Batiste Adkins, African Americans of San Francisco, Arcadia Publishing, 2012
  6. Book: Beasley, Delilah. The Negro Trail Blazers of California. 1919. Los Angeles. 252. Delilah Beasley.