The Libertarian Pioneer Who Wrote for America's Biggest Black Newspaper
To Rose Wilder Lane, African Americans' achievements were all the more amazing given their disadvantaged starting point.

Rose Wilder Lane—novelist, journalist, founding mother of the modern libertarian movement, and very likely uncredited co-author of her mother Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House on the Prairie books—was also, less famously, a columnist in the early 1940s for the largest black newspaper in the United States.
Lane first learned about The Pittsburgh Courier in spring 1941 from a black woman who worked for her. After taking out a subscription, she sent a fan letter and an article submission to Joel A. Rogers, one of the paper's columnists. Rogers, a self-taught popularizer of black history, was instrumental in getting her hired as a regular contributor. She wrote for the paper from 1942 to 1945, and the authors of this article have compiled most of her Courier columns in a forthcoming book, titled Rose Lane Says.
Lane's fascination with the Courier was not surprising. She was bound to appreciate the cosmopolitan and welcoming atmosphere, as well as the ethnic and ideological diversity of the columnists and the lively dialogue between them. The regular contributors included a white drama critic, Ted Le Berthon; an Indian expatriate, journalist, and independence activist, Kumar Goshal; and a Japanese-American semanticist, S.I. Hayakawa, who later became a U.S. senator from California.
The most accomplished person on the paper's staff may have been the lead editorial writer, George S. Schuyler. Dubbed "the black H.L. Mencken" for his scathing prose, he was in the process of a gradual transition from independent socialist to libertarian-leaning conservative. Schuyler, like Lane, was an unrelenting anti-Communist, always ready to denounce the party's infiltration and attempted manipulation of black organizations and causes. He fought many Roosevelt- and Truman-era policies, including the New Deal's intersections with Jim Crow and the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan. Lane had known Schuyler in the 1930s when, according to her, he was still an "ardent" New Dealer. Even then she admired his consistent, "almost singlehanded" fight against "communists and racists white or black."
Lane's columns appeared weekly from October 31, 1942, to September 8, 1945. Rather than hiding or trimming her laissez faire views, she promoted them to this new audience by addressing topics of direct concern to Courier readers. Her maiden column glowingly characterized the "Double V Campaign" (victory over fascism abroad and Jim Crow at home) as part of the more general struggle for individual liberty throughout U.S. history. The Courier "is a place where I belong," she wrote. "Here are Americans who know the meaning of equality and freedom." But she also showed awareness that she was an outsider with something to learn. "For the first time in my long life as a writer," she confessed, "I suffer from stage-fright. How does a recruit speak, indeed how does she dare to speak, in the presence of veterans of a movement that she should have joined long ago?"
Lane regularly weaved her laissez faire and anti-racist ideas together. Her columns promoted the individual over artificial collective constructs such as race and class. Instead of indulging in the "ridiculous, idiotic and tragic fallacy of 'race,' [by] which a minority of the earth's population has deluded itself during the past century," she wrote, Americans both black and white should "renounce their race." She compared people who judged others by their skin color to communists, who assigned guilt or virtue on the basis of class. In her view, the "delusions" of race and class hearkened to the "old English-feudal 'class' distinction." The collectivists, including the New Dealers, filled "young minds with fantasies of 'races' and 'classes' and 'the masses,' all controlled by pagan gods, named Economic Determinism or Society or Government."
To Lane, African Americans' achievements were all the more amazing given their unusually disadvantaged starting point. Under slavery, they had toiled under conditions "more destitute than the starving hordes in Europe now." They "had been born and had lived in concentration camps, under guard; they had been worked hard, meagerly fed, denied schooling, churches, privacy or decency; forbidden to marry, to own property, to read and write, without permission."
With emancipation, they were "homeless, penniless, ragged, illiterate, lost among strangers, they had freedom." But, Lane asked provocatively, "'Freedom—for what? Freedom to starve?' Yes, precisely." In the years since slavery, she asked, "How did they survive at all? God knows. And I wish some of their brilliant writers would tell us, in great works of fiction. For they not only survived; they prospered. They became great writers, scientists, educators, musicians and doctors, lawyers, capitalists. Behind the wall of prejudice that kept them unknown to other Americans, they built up a culture, a society, churches, colleges, business enterprises. They own today property worth tens of billions of dollars. They did this, in eighty years. Starting from nothing at all. Nothing but freedom."
While the Courier was an exhilarating opportunity for Lane to bring the message of individualism and free enterprise to a new audience, it also prompted some painful self-reflection. She had wrongly "accepted the myth of 'the Negro race.' Dark-skinned persons served me, and I was kind and courteous to them, with the damnable kindness and courtesy for which there is no forgiveness." She had heard about lynchings and other racial injustice but had assumed that these were isolated incidents. Reading the Courier had shown her that she had been an "utter fool" and "a traitor to my country's cause, the cause of human rights."
In some ways, Lane anticipated what later came to be known as "whiteness studies," although she gave it an individualist twist. She asked her black readers to appreciate how hard it was for whites to overcome these old patterns of bigotry.
From infancy, Lane explained, the schools had taught whites the collectivist delusion "that whiteness is the ineradicable mark of superior race." Half in jest, she said that "the progress of my people is slow….The American White is generally a friendly fellow, good-hearted, generous, and meaning no harm to anyone. His errors, even his cruelties, come from the false beliefs instilled in him by his environment and training. He needs help to overcome them." One way for African Americans to "solve the White problem" was to mail copies of the Courier to "more ignorant whites."
Lane's libertarian approach toward race led her to reinterpret familiar tropes for her readers, such as her interpretation of the familiar phrase, "white friends of the Negro." The modern liberal claim to be friends to an entire race was just as implausible to her as the claims of the leftist who pronounced himself a friend of humanity. Friendship, she argued, was individual, not collective or impersonal. It was "an emotion felt by one person for another person; it is as unique and exclusive as love. Nobody can be a friend to anyone whom he never saw, nor whose very name he doesn't know….Try being a friend to musicians. It can't be done."
So when Schuyler called for abolition of the term Negro, she heartily approved—but also conceded that it was not her place to decide. To millions, the word Negro represented "pride in achievement and the fellowship in the struggle for human rights."
Lane even anticipated in a small way the strategy of the lunch counter sit-ins of the 1960s. She suggested emulation of the crusade of "shy, sensitive, Victorian" women like her, who had once asserted their right to smoke in restaurants: "We never questioned that individuals are responsible for any injustice that they submit to. So we did not submit. We smoked in public places….A waiter rushed to your table and contemptuously told you to leave….You put out the cigarette and doggedly choked down some food from your plate. The next time you ate, you did it again." Through this method, these women had worn down prejudice bit by bit.
When promoting her vision of a free society, Lane emphasized black success stories to illustrate broader themes of the value of entrepreneurship, freedom, and creativity. One column compared the accomplishments of Courier publisher Robert L. Vann and Henry Ford. Vann's rags-to-riches story illustrated the benefits of a "capitalist society in which a penniless orphan, one of a despised minority, can create The Pittsburgh Courier and publicly, vigorously, safely, attack a majority opinion." Ford showed how a poor mechanic can create "hundreds of thousands of jobs…putting even beggars into cars."
But Lane's primary goal in her columns was not merely to glorify the individual entrepreneur. It was to illustrate the benefits of "uncontrolled" free markets for ordinary people. Proponents of central state direction, she argued, did not realize the ability of decentralized markets to bring order out of chaos. A free economy was "NOT planned by a few persons and NOT enforced by the police"; it was "planned by all the individuals and controlled by the free choices of all the individuals working, selling, buying and consuming material things."
Although Lane wanted this planning accomplished through "liberty and individual initiative," she feared that most Americans had passed the point of no return. The habit of seeking security in the New Deal and wartime bureaucracy was becoming harder to break: "It's human to want to be safe and freedom isn't safety; freedom demands self-reliance and courage." In proclaiming the "four freedoms" (freedom of speech and expression, freedom of religion, freedom from want, and freedom from fear), President Franklin Roosevelt had misunderstood the fundamental meaning of the term. Freedom was not a "freedom to" or a "freedom from" anything. For Lane, "Freedom is self-control; no more, no less."
Lane ultimately left the Courier because of internal politics. The Courier's executive editor, P.L. Prattis—who Lane had personally liked—abruptly and without explanation terminated her services. She suspected that Prattis had acted for political reasons, with Lane landing in the middle of growing ideological tensions between Schuyler, who was increasingly hostile to the Roosevelt administration, and the rest of the staff: "Two of us were too much to be endured in that nest of leftists, George [Schuyler] says, since they could not get him, they got me." On at least one count, Lane was correct. Prattis had closely aligned himself with the leftist faction in the Roosevelt administration, led by Vice President Henry Wallace, and was contemptuous of the "rugged individualism" of Republican "reactionaries."

Lane certainly gave no hint of trimming her sails. Her final column (which ended with the unfulfilled promise "Continued Next Week") used events in Danbury, Connecticut, as an illustration to attack zoning. Under zoning, "nobody in the town of Danbury could build or alter his house without permission." The town imposed regulations to lower density, such as minimum lot size requirements, and other rules that would raise building costs. To put a human face on the regulations' impact, she quoted a local Italian immigrant: "Do I come to America to be a free man, that now in America I must ask permission to live? I must ask and pay, or I cannot improve my own house with my own money and my own hands? And officials come into my house to see that I obey? How can this be, in the United States of America?…This like Italy. Those born at the top can stay at the top. Born at the bottom, the poor must stay at the bottom."
The loss of her Courier column was personally upsetting but was no great financial blow. For the first time, the sales of the Little House on the Prairie books were beginning to provide her a comfortable steady income. But Lane was not completely through with the Courier.
In 1948, she wrote a letter to the editor that praised some previous letters which called for no longer using the word Negro and other racial references. For Lane, such a campaign was necessary because judging people "by their 'races' which do not exist" conflicted with the "revolutionary American principle of individualism" as embodied in the Declaration of Independence. The United States had no hope of achieving its stated ideals, she stressed, unless "each of us destroys segregation in his own mind."
Lane devoted most of the last two decades of her life—she died in 1968—to hands-on mentoring roles in launching the "libertarian movement," a term she may have coined. She wrote book reviews for the National Economic Council and then for the Volker Fund, an organization from which the Institute for Humane Studies later emerged. She kept her distance from William F. Buckley and his new magazine, National Review: His version of conservatism struck her as an aristocratic and "reactionary" holdover of the philosophy "that a commonwealth is a mystic Being, that Governments are ordained by God."
Much more to her liking was the libertarian Freedom School, launched in 1956 and headed by Robert LeFevre, a charismatic radio commentator and businessman. At one point, Lane almost emptied her modest banking account to keep the struggling Freedom School, later known as Rampart College, afloat. One of her admirers was the economist Hans Sennholz, who was later the president of the Foundation for Economic Education, a libertarian educational organization.
With her combined appeals to markets, individualism, and anti-racism, Lane joined a long line of classical liberals who were critically important to abolitionism and the later civil rights movement. When asked what should be done with emancipated slaves, Frederick Douglass had replied: "Do nothing with them; mind your business and let them mind theirs. Your doing with them is their greatest misfortune." Later, Booker T. Washington touted thrift, investment, and the work ethic; even Washington's great rival, the socialist W.E.B. Du Bois, had championed free markets as a "black Mugwump" in the 1890s. Moorfield Storey, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's founding president, was a champion of the gold standard, free trade, and minimal regulation. Oswald Garrison Villard, the organization's first treasurer, had similar views.
Lane's columns for the Courier represented the most ambitious effort during this period to promote laissez faire ideas to a black audience. The last two decades have brought a new appreciation of Lane as a political activist and as a collaborator in the Little House books. It is time for her writings on civil rights to receive their due as well.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Rose Wilder Lane, Anti-Racist."
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Another diversity hire.
Wow reason is all in on identity politics now.
Good news reason now the schools tell children that being white makes you automatically evil
It is interesting how much these two play that up, especially with her wanting to end racism, which is entirely different from the modern lefty anti-racism. I don't think I'll be buying their book; it will have that smell all over it.
Skin color is the most important thing.
And homosexual orientation! For example, I’m informed by the JeffSarc that Chase Oliver is gay. Chase Oliver also manages to mention that every time he speaks.
But only Jeff tells us that Oliver is a "fag".
Yeah, Jeffy is likely a huge pervert. That would explain his pedophilia and child mutilation advocacy
Skin color is the only important thing.
FTFY.
You must have at least a Masters in grievance studies.
Have I told you lately that gay people will literally die unless you trans your kids and give them unfettered access to pornography RIGHT THIS MINUTE?
Gay people need sexualized children like they need oxygen. If you aren’t teaching your 5yr old (or, really, anyone else’s) how to jack off, YOU’RE PERSONALLY KILLING THE RAINBOW PEOPLE.
And if you won't teach them - then I guess State public schools (it takes a village!) will have to step in and do your parenting for you!
Two of us were too much to be endured in that nest of leftists, George [Schuyler] says, since they could not get him, they got me.
Raise your hand if you were surprised that an organization not explicitly right wing ended up being left.
Pluggo’s Democratic Party ancestors in dog dick Georgia had these people picking cheesy poofs in the fields until the ACW 1.0, where after they controlled them in a cheesy poof sharecropping scheme.
Pluggo’s democrat ancestors were also ‘borrowing’ their children for……. ‘recreational purposes’.
"Bring me the cute little pickaninnies!"
>To Rose Wilder Lane, African Americans' achievements were all the more amazing given their disadvantaged starting point.
The racism of low expectations.
Keep in mind that Lane was born after the Civil War, started writing around 1900, so its not like she was observing slaves fresh off the plantation making their own lives. And that's ignoring the generations of 'freedmen' blacks living in the North already.
" which a minority of the earth's population has deluded itself during the past century,"
Ah, another person who believes in 'American exceptionalism' when it comes to how 'exceptionally evil' America is?
Note in the same paragraph the authors call her "Anti-racist" though seem to be ignoring the modern definition of that term. The concept not seeing race is literally the opposite.
I think there's a lot to be read into the article's interpretation of her views. I don't think it's as anti American as you do, though.
But she did work for a big black newspaper.
The racism of low expectations.
That said, would anyone be surprised if she stepped out of a time machine in the modern day and expressed her disappointment, one way or the other, at the subsequent hundred years of "progress".
I'm not sure Rose Wilder Lane would be okay with a Libertarian political magazine calling a particular skin-color the disadvantaged color.
Course Reason hasn't been Libertarian since Trump was elected. I guess their new "Journalism Grants" required a [Na]tional So[zi]alist DNC commitment to the "disadvantaged color" who get special Federal Agencies shoveling taxpayer $ to them because of their skin-color specifically.
And anyone has to wonder why there is so much division in the nation. Plotting people against each other by their skin-color, their sex, their religion, their wealth and promising THEFT of those 'icky' people for their 'Disadvantaged Identity'. Oh those 'poor' Nazi's; just HAD to TAKE from those 'icky' people.
The Newspeak unword is an imported Portuguese word meaning black. The Portuguese original is now tarbrushed but the translation proudly owned by political collectivists and moviemakers of African descent. Rose is the mystical conservatives' poster child alternative to Ayn Rand, who defended the rights of all individuals to freedom from coercion AND rejected Ronald Reagan's messianic efforts to bring back federal Comstockist enslavement of females. The LP platforming of her ideas derailed mystical efforts to reverse the 13th Amendment and again urge States to ban or allow enslavement of a select category of persons--this time women--as conscripts in TR's War on Race Suicide. I am eager to fade bets superstitious effrontery will prevail over the Nineteenth Amendment as cunningly as it circumvented the Ninth and Fifteenth come November.
Just stopped by to note that in todays world, this woman would be guilty of a host of racial thought crimes for her work and so too would a number of other authors at this historical paper simply because of the color of their skin.
It's one of the great ironies of our time that racism is celebrated and considered good-think by the very people who are calling everyone else racist.
Progressives are the same as they've ever been, but somehow people keep expecting them to not be racial essentialists. They believe in the superiority of whites over any racial minority in the United States, and clearly label themselves as white saviors to those oppressed people who simply can't know better.
They may couch this as kindness to those poor oppressed savages, but it's always implicit that minorities are indeed savages without autotomy. The best you can possibly get them to admit to is that they may have agency, but it's entirely subject to the agency of progressive whites.
At least they also consider poor white people to be savages as well. They blame that one on essentially poor genetic stock which is ironic to me as the aristocracy is more inbred than the population at large.
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be "cured" against one's will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals.”
C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock: Essays on Theology
When Christian National Socialists made beer 'n such a felony, immune cops instantly replaced liquor dealers AND enjoyed a 400% markup. Roy Olmstead was so good at this the feds had to tap his phone to coerce him. Mystical jurists declared these wiretaps good, Christian and ethically right. One Associate Justice, the honest man in a Solomon Asch Experiment, replied: Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficial. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greater dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding. Justice Louis Brandeis, Olmstead v. US, 277 US 479 (1928)
A favorite quote, and one which I find cause to whip out in these comments with some frequency.
and anti-racist ideas
Anyone who uses the term “anti-racist” is telegraphing that they are an actual racist.
It’s an adjective that serves no purpose but to try and virtue signal righteousness while actually advocating for bigotry and hatred against what they consider an “acceptable” demographic for such things.
Racist ideas are a terrible thing. But that doesn’t make anti-racist ideas their opposite. Replace “racist” with “poison.” It’s the same problem. Why not just advocate normal not-racist ideas for a change?
Answer: because victimization is political currency. Now replace “racist” with “oppressor.” And people who only see things through an oppressed/oppressor lens – aka Marxists – HAVE to invoke this dynamic in order for their insane views to hold any traction. Because otherwise it slips and slides like the ideological feces that it is.
Half in jest, she said that “the progress of my people is slow…
Self-loathing Karen wants to speak to the manager about that.
His errors, even his cruelties, come from the false beliefs instilled in him by his environment and training. He needs help to overcome them.
Which is just projection. Racism of Lowered Expectations. “Poor dumb nigger doesn’t know any better, can’t do it on his own, and needs our oh-so-noble and benevolent help. (For which we’ll expect loyalty and obedience in return.)”
Just reworked to be racist against whites.
In some ways, Lane anticipated what later came to be known as “whiteness studies,” although she gave it an individualist twist.
No, she didn’t. There’s nothing “individualist” about any of this. It’s just naked Marxism you’re trying to pretend has merit, probably because you’re also a pair of self-loathing Karens.
A free economy was “NOT planned by a few persons and NOT enforced by the police”; it was “planned by all the individuals and controlled by the free choices of all the individuals working, selling, buying and consuming material things.”
Meaning no laws, no justice system, no restitution for wrongs committed by wrongdoers but for that which you can retake by your own hands (or that of a mob).
I don’t know why Losertarians struggle with this so much. They talk about “free markets” – but what they actually articulate is total anarchy.
It is time for her writings on civil rights to receive their due as well.
Nah. Chuck that garbage in the 5 for $1 bin next to Kendi and the recently extremely humiliated DiAngelo.
My test: swap all references of "Black" and "White" in some progressive's diatribe, and throw it back at them. If they get apoplectic, then you know they are full of shit.
Note to foreign readers: MAGA racial collectivists accidentally empowered by LP spoiler votes in 2016 are the same racial collectivist ideology that hung the "A Black America Will Lose Its Greatness" on the U. of Mississippi dormitory 30SEP1962. Journalist Paul Guihard was murdered for reporting the facts. Ignorant bigots seek to reenslave women freed by the Libertarian Supreme Court decision of 1973. Their GOP declares trade and production are crimes. The reaction to the 2008 Bush Crash was President Obama. To this day they imagine Black Marxists the way Hitler imagined Jewish Marxists and cannot understand they lost the election.
Hear that Libertarians? Abandon your principles, kick Chase Oliver to the curb, and jump on the sinking blue ship and start paddling furiously! It's your libertarian duty! Your lives to the cause! Only Kamala's venn diagrams can save democracy!
If you want to stop racial collectivism, you need to go ALL IN on racial collectivism!
D E R P
Hey Hank, foreign readers will have an even harder time translating your arcane gibbering than the American readers.
Thirty-five years before Rose was born, Voice of the Fugitive was a Canadian newspaper and hotbed of Liberty Party activism critical of Article 4; Section 2; Clause 3 as the stain on the U.S. Constitution viewable in Google News archives. More pungently telling than all the legalese is the following warning to Republicans eager to again use treasonous jurists to reinstate female enslavement under color of Federalism: "MURDER OF A MASTER BY A SLAVE: Mr William Smith of Johnson County, N.C. who is described as a man of miserly habits, recently took a runaway negro girl belonging to him from Wilmington Gaol. He carried her home, and as soon as he released her, she seized an ax, struck him on the head and killed him." When similar votes are counted next January, grapeshot will be the appropriate response to butthurt lewser MAGAt treason and vandalism.
'Lane's fascination with the Courier was not surprising. She was bound to appreciate the cosmopolitan and welcoming atmosphere, as well as the ethnic and ideological diversity of the columnists and the lively dialogue between them. The regular contributors included a white drama critic, Ted Le Berthon; an Indian expatriate, journalist, and independence activist, Kumar Goshal; and a Japanese-American semanticist, S.I. Hayakawa, who later became a U.S. senator from California.'
These days the Courier would be excoriated and probably fire-bombed for not being Authentically Black.
You have to show you're not a racist by affirming that Black people are helpless and stupid.
And then she grew up to play Firecracker in "The Boys".
https://superstarsbio.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/7-121.jpg
(I think in the photo she looks like actress Valerie Curry [see the linked pic] did when she was younger).
I actually made it to the end of the comments, which is always a task. Hard to believe how awful and inane and childish they were. Too bad. The article is an excellent snapshot of a period in journalism when white papers wrote for white people and black papers wrote for black people. In short, white papers in the North ignored 10 percent of the population and had no idea how awful life was like for 10 million blacks who lived in the Jim Crow South — aka, the Cradle of Apartheid. The Courier, a weekly, was a great paper and the largest black paper in the USA. It was a conservative paper in many ways. It pushed self-reliance and self-help, publicized lynchings in great detail and heralded court victories that eroded legal and de facto segregation in the South and North. It did what the biggest, most important white papers in the North never did until the mid-1950s — it shone a powerful light of tabloid-like journalism on the day-to-day oppression of blacks by the South’s cruel system of legal discrimination while praising the legal, social and athletic accomplishments of blacks. If anyone actually wants to read about the cultural and political power of the Courier and the greatness of its iconoclastic libertarian editor/columnist George Schuyler, aka the Black Mencken, they can read my history book ’30 Days a Black Man.’ It’s set in 1948 and features an undercover mission into the Jim Crow South by a famous white reporter from Pittsburgh who passed himself off as a black man so he could see for himself how horrible life under Jim Crow was for blacks. I guarantee, the commenters above me have no idea how awful it was -- or why the conservative Republican reporter Ray Sprigle wrote in his 21-part nationally syndicated series that he was ashamed to be a white man. https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1493026186/reasonmagazinea-20/