Civil
“The Niagara Movement” Documentary On The Founding Of NAACP Is Now Streaming
“The Niagara Movement: The Early Battle for Civil Rights,” a compelling documentary by WNED PBS, is now streaming in the U.S. and Canada. The film explores the founding of the Niagara Movement and the early civil rights landscape, focusing on the debates between prominent Black leaders W.E.B Du Bois, William Monroe Trotter, and Booker T. Washington. It delves into the Movement’s demand for full civil rights and its profound impact on shaping the modern American civil rights movement, leading to the formation of the NAACP.
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Buffalo, NY
The Niagara Movement: The Early Battle for Civil Rights, a powerful hour-long documentary by WNED PBS, is now available for viewers in the U.S. and Canada to stream. The film delves deep into a national crusade that forged the civil rights landscape for the 20th century and beyond. The Niagara Movement also explores the Black elite and intellectual society at the turn of the 20th century and examines the heated national debate and conflict three Black leaders – sociologist W.E.B Du Bois, publisher William Monroe Trotter and educator and orator Booker T. Washington – had about how best to foster equality and opportunity for Black Americans. The film can be streamed on Buffalo Toronto Public Media’s YouTube Channel, the PBS app and theniagaramovement.org.
Produced and directed by Emmy Award-winning and two-time Oscar-nominated filmmaker Lawrence R. Hott, The Niagara Movement spotlights the early battle behind the civil rights movement that sprang forth as a repudiation of the methods of Booker T. Washington, then the most prominent Black leader in America. The end of Reconstruction brought about oppressive Jim Crow laws and widespread lynching. Washington pandered to white society with his conciliatory philosophy of racial segregation and industrial training for Blacks instead of other advances.
Washington’s position was roundly criticized by Du Bois and by Trotter, a prominent Boston newspaper publisher, and soon a new civil rights organization emerged: the Niagara Movement. The group was formed when Du Bois and Trotter helped summon Black intellectuals, clergy, writers, newspapermen and activists from across the country to Buffalo, New York; the 29 men ultimately met across the Niagara River in Fort Erie, Canada, to evade disruption by Washington’s supporters. The organization’s key demand: full civil rights for Black Americans.
Its Declaration of Principles, a sharp rebuke to Washington, stated, in part: “We refuse to allow the impression to remain that the Negro-American assents to inferiority, is submissive under oppression, and apologetic before insults.”
The film captures the far-reaching impact of the short-lived Movement – disbanded only four years after its inception – which laid the cornerstone of the modern American civil rights movement, eventually morphing into the NAACP.
“The influence of the Niagara Movement is evident in the protests and court challenges of the American civil rights movement as well as past and current activism,” said Tom Calderone, President & CEO of Buffalo Toronto Public Media. “We are pleased to present this important film about such a prevailing influence on our society.”
The Niagara Movement will be distributed by American Public Television in February 2024 to public television stations across the country (check local listings).
Audiences can find more information, educational resources and bonus materials by visiting www.theniagaramovement.org.

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