William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (February
23, 1868 - August 27, 1963) was an American
civil rights activist, leader, Pan-Africanist,
sociologist, educator, historian, writer,
editor, poet, and scholar. He became a naturalized
citizen of Ghana in 1963 at the age of 95.
On Feb. 23, 1868, W. E. B. Du Bois was born
in Great Barrington, Mass., where he grew
up. During his youth he did some newspaper
reporting. In 1884 he graduated as valedictorian
from high school. He got his bachelor of
arts from Fisk University in Nashville, Tenn.,
in 1888, having spent summers teaching in
African American schools in Nashville's
rural areas. In 1888 he entered Harvard University
as a junior, took a bachelor of arts cum
laude in 1890, and was one of six commencement
speakers. From 1892 to 1894 he pursued graduate
studies in history and economics at the University
of Berlin on a Slater Fund fellowship. He
served for 2 years as professor of Greek
and Latin at Wilberforce University in Ohio.
In 1891 Du Bois got his master of arts and
in 1895 his doctorate in history from Harvard.
His dissertation, The Suppression of the
African Slave Trade to the United States
of America, 1638-1870, was published as No.
1 in the Harvard Historical Series. This
important work has yet to be surpassed. In
1896 he married Nina Gomer, and they had
two children.
In 1896-1897 Du Bois became assistant instructor
in sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.
There he conducted the pioneering sociological
study of an urban community, published as
The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study (1899).
These first two works assured Du Bois's
place among America's leading scholars.
Du Bois's life and work were an inseparable
mixture of scholarship, protest activity,
and polemics. All of his efforts were geared
toward gaining equal treatment for black
people in a world dominated by whites and
toward marshaling and presenting evidence
to refute the myths of racial inferiority.
As Racial Activist
In 1905 Du Bois was a founder and general
secretary of the Niagara movement, an African
American protest group of scholars and professionals.
Du Bois founded and edited the Moon (1906)
and the Horizon (1907-1910) as organs for
the Niagara movement. In 1909 Du Bois was
among the founders of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) and from 1910 to 1934 served it as director
of publicity and research, a member of the
board of directors, and editor of the Crisis,
its monthly magazine.
In the Crisis, Du Bois directed a constant
stream of agitation--often bitter and sarcastic--at
white Americans while serving as a source
of information and pride to African Americans.
The magazine always published young African
American writers. Racial protest during the
decade following World War I focused on securing
anti-lynching legislation. During this period
the NAACP was the leading protest organization
and Du Bois its leading figure.

In 1934 Du Bois resigned from the NAACP board
and from the Crisis because of his new advocacy
of an African American nationalist strategy:
African American controlled institutions,
schools, and economic cooperatives. This
approach opposed the NAACP's commitment
to integration. However, he returned to the
NAACP as director of special research from
1944 to 1948. During this period he was active
in placing the grievances of African Americans
before the United Nations, serving as a consultant
to the UN founding convention (1945) and
writing the famous "An Appeal to the
World" (1947).
Du Bois was a member of the Socialist party
from 1910 to 1912 and always considered himself
a Socialist. In 1948 he was cochairman of
the Council on African Affairs; in 1949 he
attended the New York, Paris, and Moscow
peace congresses; in 1950 he served as chairman
of the Peace Information Center and ran for
the U.S. Senate on the American Labor party
ticket in New York. In 1950-1951 Du Bois
was tried and acquitted as an agent of a
foreign power in one of the most ludicrous
actions ever taken by the American government.
Du Bois traveled widely throughout Russia
and China in 1958-1959 and in 1961 joined
the Communist party of the United States.
He also took up residence in Ghana, Africa,
in 1961.
Pan-Africanism
Du Bois was also active in behalf of pan-Africanism
and concerned with the conditions of people
of African descent wherever they lived. In
1900 he attended the First Pan-African Conference
held in London, was elected a vice president,
and wrote the "Address to the Nations
of the World." The Niagara movement
included a "pan-African department."
In 1911 Du Bois attended the First Universal
Races Congress in London along with black
intellectuals from Africa and the West Indies.

Du Bois organized a series of pan-African
congresses around the world, in 1919, 1921,
1923, and 1927. The delegations comprised
intellectuals from Africa, the West Indies,
and the United States. Though resolutions
condemning colonialism and calling for alleviation
of the oppression of Africans were passed,
little concrete action was taken. The Fifth
Congress (1945, Manchester, England) elected
Du Bois as chairman, but the power was clearly
in the hands of younger activists, such as
George Padmore and Kwame Nkrumah, who later
became significant in the independence movements
of their respective countries. Du Bois's
final pan-African gesture was to take up
citizenship in Ghana in 1961 at the request
of President Kwame Nkrumah and to begin work
as director of the Encyclopedia Africana.
As Scholar
Du Bois's most lasting contribution is
his writing. As poet, playwright, novelist,
essayist, sociologist, historian, and journalist,
he wrote 21 books, edited 15 more, and published
over 100 essays and articles. Only a few
of his most significant works will be mentioned
here.
From 1897 to 1910 Du Bois served as professor
of economics and history at Atlanta University,
where he organized conferences titled the
Atlanta University Studies of the Negro Problem
and edited or co-edited 16 of the annual
publications, on such topics as The Negro
in Business (1899), The Negro Artisan (1902),
The Negro Church (1903), Economic Cooperation
among Negro Americans (1907), and The Negro
American Family (1908). Other significant
publications were The Souls of Black Folk:
Essays and Sketches (1903), one of the outstanding
collections of essays in American letters,
and John Brown (1909), a sympathetic portrayal
published in the American Crisis Biographies
series.
Du Bois also wrote two novels, The Quest
of the Silver Fleece (1911) and Dark Princess:
A Romance (1928); a book of essays and poetry,
Darkwater: Voices from within the Veil (1920);
and two histories of black people, The Negro
(1915) and The Gift of Black Folk: Negroes
in the Making of America (1924).
From 1934 to 1944 Du Bois was chairman of
the department of sociology at Atlanta University.
In 1940 he founded Phylon, a social science
quarterly. Black Reconstruction in America,
1860-1880 (1935), perhaps his most significant
historical work, details the role of African
Americans in American society, specifically
during the Reconstruction period. The book
was criticized for its use of Marxist concepts
and for its attacks on the racist character
of much of American historiography. However,
it remains the best single source on its
subject.
Black Folk, Then and Now (1939) is an elaboration
of the history of black people in Africa
and the New World. Color and Democracy: Colonies
and Peace (1945) is a brief call for the
granting of independence to Africans, and
The World and Africa: An Inquiry into the
Part Which Africa Has Played in World History
(1947; enlarged ed. 1965) is a major work
anticipating many later scholarly conclusions
regarding the significance and complexity
of African history and culture. A trilogy
of novels, collectively entitled The Black
Flame (1957, 1959, 1961), and a selection
of his writings, An ABC of Color (1963),
are also worthy.
Du Bois received many honorary degrees, was
a fellow and life member of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science,
and a member of the National Institute of
Arts and Letters. He was the outstanding
African American intellectual of his period
in America.
Du Bois died in Ghana on Aug. 27, 1963, on
the eve of the civil rights march in Washington,
D.C. He was given a state funeral, at which
Kwame Nkrumah remarked that he was "a
phenomenon."