Joseph Blackburn Bass (1863-1934)

January 21, 2007 
/ Contributed By: William Lang

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Joseph Blackburn Bass

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Born in Jefferson City, Missouri, in 1863, Joseph Blackburn Bass made his mark in the newspaper business in Kansas, Montana, and California. After teaching school during the 1890s, Bass took over ownership of the Topeka Call in 1896, where he had worked for two years as a reporter for owner William Pope. Bass had to sell the newspaper in 1898, which became the Topeka Plaindealer, although he remained on the staff until 1905, when he moved to Helena, Montana, and established his own paper, The Montana Plaindealer.

Bass wrote, edited, and published the Plaindealer at 17 South Main Street in Helena, aided by an assistant, Joseph Tucker, from March 1906 to September 1911. An activist and promoter of civic organizations, Bass embraced progressive political goals and urged Helena’s sizable African American population—more than 450 in 1910—to be entrepreneurial and engage in cultural uplift.

In 1906, Bass helped organize the St. James Literary Society, based in the St. James AME Zion Church. Three years later, Bass spearheaded the Afro-American Protective League, an ambitious statewide organization that meant to defend African Americans in Montana from racism. The group lasted only a few months, but Bass had established himself as a community leader. Two years earlier, in 1907, he helped organize a Helena chapter of  Booker T. Washington’s National Negro Business League, which included more than a dozen businesses in town, and in 1908 Bass created the Afro-American Building Association, a self-help group of African American real estate owners in Helena.

After financial difficulties forced Bass to close the Plaindealer in 1911, he headed first to San Francisco and by 1912 to Los Angeles, where Carlotta Spear hired him as a writer for her fledgling California Eagle. Bass became editor of the Eagle in 1913, married Spear in 1914, shared his wife’s activist political interests, and edited the paper until his death in 1934.

Author Profile

William L. Lang, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus of History at Portland State University, where he taught Environmental, Public, and Pacific Northwest History. His research into African American history in Montana came as a result of his dissertation at University of Delaware—“Black Bootstraps: Abolitionist Educators’ Ideology and the Education of the Northern Free Negro, 1828-1860,” at Carroll College in Helena (1971-1978) and as editors of Montana, The Magazine of Western History (1978-1989) at the Montana Historical Society. Lang wrote “The Nearly Forgotten Blacks on Last Chance Gulch, 1900-1912,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly 70 (April 1979): 50-57 and “Tempest on Clore Street: Race and Politics in Helena, Montana, 1906,” Scratchgravel Hills 3 (1981). He is also author of Confederacy of Ambition: William Winlock Miller and the Making of Washington Territory (1996), Two Centuries of Lewis and Clark (2004), Two Centuries of Lewis & Clark: Reflections on the Voyage of Discovery (2004), Explorers of the Maritime Pacific Northwest (2016), and editor of Centennial West (1991), Stories From an Open Country (1995), and Great River of the West (1999).

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Lang, W. (2007, January 21). Joseph Blackburn Bass (1863-1934). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/bass-joseph-blackburn-1863-1934/

Source of the Author's Information:

William L. Lang, “The Nearly Forgotten Blacks on Last Chance Gulch, 1900-1912,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly 70 (April 1979): 50-57; www.socallib.org/bass/research/photos/jbbass.html

Further Reading