Editorial Archive
Portrait of T. Thomas Fortune

T. Thomas Fortune

1856 — 1928 · Founder of the New York Age; principal Black newspaper editor of the late nineteenth century; founder of the National Afro-American League — predecessor of the NAACP

Timothy Thomas Fortune was born into slavery on the third of October 1856 at Marianna in Jackson County, Florida, the son of Emanuel Fortune — an enslaved cobbler — and Sarah Jane Fortune, an enslaved washerwoman. The family was emancipated in 1865; his father served in the Reconstruction Florida State Legislature from 1868 to 1870 before fleeing political violence to Jacksonville. Fortune attended the public school at Jacksonville from 1869 and apprenticed at fourteen as a typesetter on the Jacksonville Daily Union. He attended Howard University Law School for a single semester in 1876 before financial necessity forced him to leave Washington.

He moved to New York in 1879 and worked as a typesetter on the Sun and the Weekly Witness before founding in 1881 the Black weekly newspaper Globe with George Parker. The Globe was reorganised as the New York Freeman in 1884 and as the New York Age in 1887, under which name it operated for the following four decades as the most influential Black newspaper of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Fortune was its principal editor from 1881 to 1907 and again from 1923 to his death.

He founded in January 1890 at Chicago the National Afro-American League — the first national organisation explicitly devoted to the legal and political defence of African American civil rights. The League's six declared objectives — suppression of mob violence, abolition of penitentiary leasing systems, equal taxation and equal apportionment of school funds, the franchise, equal access to public accommodations, and equal access to the courts — established the agenda that would across the next century pass to the Afro-American Council (1898), to the Niagara Movement (1905), and to the NAACP (1909).

He was the closest journalistic ally of Booker T. Washington (placed in this archive) from 1885 to 1907 — editing the principal Black newspaper that supported Washington's Tuskegee programme and writing many of Washington's published articles — and the principal target of W. E. B. Du Bois's (placed in this archive) criticism of Washington's accommodationism. He suffered a severe mental breakdown in 1907 and lost editorial control of the Age that year. He recovered partially across the 1910s and edited Marcus Garvey's (placed in this archive) Negro World from 1923 to his death.

He died at Philadelphia on the second of June 1928, at seventy-one.

He is honored here as the founder of the National Afro-American League.

Curated with honor.

⚙ Permanence proof

This entry is pinned to the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) by our own node so that a copy survives independent of any single web host. Anyone with the content identifier below can fetch a verifiable snapshot from any public IPFS gateway — now and decades from now.

Entry snapshot CID:
bafkreiakc6d4qz3r64yun4jkakma432k2httpoxjdo66zkqdkozjgcdr6a
Pinned: 2026-05-12
Source: Editorial curation by the Honored Ancestors team

To verify independently, paste the CID into any public IPFS gateway (dweb.link, ipfs.io, cf-ipfs.com) — or run your own IPFS node and request the CID directly.

Placed in the archive by the Honored Ancestors editorial team.