Saturday, July 13, 2013
Dr. Ira James Kohath Wells
Ira James Kohath Wells, educator, editor and
political organizer (also known as I.J.K. Wells)
was born in Tamo, Arkansas, July 1, 1898 to
William James Wells and Emma Brown Wells
He attended elementary school under the esteemed
Professor Samuel Vaster at Tamo and finished high
school at Branch Normal College in Pine Bluff (now
the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff). He received
a B. A. degree in Business from Lincoln University
(Pennsylvania) in 1923. He was a contemporary
classmate of the distinguished educator and scholar,
Dr. Horace Mann Bond and eminent poet and educator,
Melvin Tolson.
While at Lincoln University, Wells was a leader and
organizer. The 1923 Lincoln Yearbook, The PAW,
described him as a member of the Student Anti-
Lynching delegation before President Warren Harding,
and founder and student organizer of the "Colored
Student Movement."
Dr. Wells received an honorary Doctor of Pedagogy
degree from Lincoln University in 1941, an honorary
Doctor of Laws degree from Allen University, and a
Master of Arts degree from the University of Pittsburgh
in 1944. The citation given by Lincoln University's
Dean, George Johnson, on conferring the Honorary
Doctor of Pedagogy read- Ira James Kohath Wells
"a man of versatile interests; with
knowledge of human nature, endowed with
great sympathy for all sorts and conditions
of men; an able exponent of interracial
understanding; a cooperative worker in
every field of social uplift; a most loyal
alumnus who Lincoln University delights
to honor."
As an educator, Dr. Wells was the State Supervisor
of Negro Education in West Virginia from 1933 to
1952. This position, the first of its kind in the country
which he helped to create, enabled African-Americans
to have a greater voice in the administration and
supervision of their schools. As a major key officer in
West Virginia education, he is credited with helping
build the " Best integrated state school system in America."
He was a teacher at Stratton High School, Beckley,
West Virginia. In later years (1971), he initiated the
Black Studies program at Cheyney State College, PA.
He was the organizer and chairman of the Negro Democratic
Committee of West Virginia. In the 1932 presidential election,
he was one of the country's leaders who helped change
the majority of African-Americans' allegiances since the
Civil War from the Republican Party to the Democrat Party.
His first job after college was with the Pittsburgh Courier
which he considered one of the most beneficial of his life
which established his interest in journalism. He founded
and published Color Magazine, the first African-American
pictorial magazine, in 1944. It was patterned after Life Magazine,
and reached a circulation over a hundred thousand before its
demise fourteen years later. He sold stock in Color Inc. to finance
the magazine.
Dr. Wells had two brothers, Lewis and C.L Wells, three sisters,
Evelyn Wells, Emma Wells Dawson, and Genoa Wells Keith.
He was married to Edna Virginia Clowden (1934) of Anawalt,
West Virginia, a school teacher. He was the father of two
children, Ira James Kohath Wells, Jr., and Edna Anita V.
He died of a stroke on December 26, 1997 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
My mother, Mary Bluford Turner, knew the Wells family.
She was a dear friend of Genoa Wells Keith. in 1994, Solomon L.
Keith, (Genoa's son) sent my mother a copy of a picture of
the 1935 Wells Family Reunion in Tamo, Arkansas. My father's
step brother, Cap Shelton, was in the picture.
My recollections are of Genoa Wells Keith pressing and curling
my hair as a child in 1946 in St. Louis, Missouri, subsequent
visitations to her home, and contacts with her son. Emma Wells
Dawson's husband owned a Variety Store in Pine Bluff, near
4th and State Streets where I worked briefly as a teenager.
During Dr. Wells long career he championed the rights of workers
and the rights of African-Americans. He used African Art, Culture
and History to enhance the self-image of African- Americans.
He left an enduring legacy of achievement and service, and in
1985 was honored as a recipient of the Distinguished West
Virginia Award during the West Virginia Black Cultural Festival.
Sources: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Newspaper, Obituary, Sunday,
January 25, 1998.
A Short Sketch About I.J.K. Wells, Sr., A Resident of Philadelphia.
Lincoln University Library Special Collections, The PAW." 1923
Lincoln University Yearbook.
University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Museum and Cultural Center.
"Recollections of Gladys Turner Finney."
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I would love to correspond with you more on the topic of this great legend. I have several other questions and my mother and I just completed a book on African Americans of Pine Bluff and Jefferson County. We just recently found out about him and would like to include more information about him in a second edition of this book. My email address is jmmyjam@mac.com.
ReplyDeleteGlad to find this article, Solomon L. Keith is my grandfather.
DeleteWould be a nice addition to have the Covers of the Color Magazines" that Mr. Wells founded in 1944. These periodicals Chronicle the history of the Negro with Narrative and Photography.
ReplyDelete