William Mobile Ashby was born in 1889 in Carters’ Grove, Virginia. His family, which had been free landowners for at least four generations, faced violence and discrimination, and his grandfather was murdered by a group of white men who were envious of his wealth. The family moved to Newport News, Virginia in the 1890s, and Ashby left Virginia after graduating high school. He went to New Jersey, where he received tutoring from Lincoln University alumnus John Locklear. He then went to Lincoln himself, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1911.
While working as a waiter in Newark, New Jersey, Ashby heard socialist activist, labor leader, and presidential candidate Eugene Debs speak at the Labor Lyceum and was inspired to dedicate his life to serving and advocating for the oppressed. He entered Yale Divinity School, graduating in 1916. At Yale, he joined Zeta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. In 1915, while a student at Yale, Ashby invited Booker T. Washington to the New Haven meeting that would turn out to be Washington’s final public appearance. Ashby, who was also a playwright and novelist, later wrote a play about Washington.
After graduation, he returned to New Jersey and began a career in social work. He has been recognized as New Jersey’s first Black social worker. He founded the Newark Welfare Foundation and Community Chest, a forerunner to the United Way. He also founded the Fuld Neighborhood House in Newark. He founded and directed the first Urban League offices in New Jersey and served as director of Urban League offices there and in Springfield, IL from 1917 to 1953. He served on New Jersey’s Advisory Committee to the US Civil Rights Commission from 1960-1961, and was a cofounder of the Newark Preservation and Landmarks Committee. He was also a member of the Newark Human Rights Commission.
Ashby was married to Mary A. Arnold, and had one daughter, Catherine Ashby. William Ashby died in 1991 at the age of 101.
Image citation: Yale Divinity School class composite photographs, Yale Divinity School