Additionally, for African American leaders, the World's Fair seemed like the perfect opportunity to exhibit the contributions, achievements, and racial progress of African Americans in the nearly 30 years since the end of slavery.
However, while fair organizers planned attractions that would dazzle fairgoers with American accomplishments, they refused to give African Americans a voice in the fair.
Black Americans were allowed to participate as low-level workers and paying guests, but white organizers kept them from any meaningful positions of influence or authority.
Social reformers Ida B. Wells, and Frederick Douglass wrote a protest pamphlet titled "The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in the World's Columbian Exposition." The pamphlet was written to make international visitors aware of both the achievements of Black Americans since emancipation and the difficult and dangerous conditions they continued to face after slavery.