Bell frequently took part in local meetings to discuss the condition of African Americans. In January, 1876,
Edwin R. Overall,
William R. Gamble, and Rev W. H. Wilson organized a State Convention of Colored men. The convention met to discuss lynching and to select delegates for the national convention to be held in Nashville later that year. Overall, Dr.
W. H. C. Stephenson, Wilson, and Gamble were selected as delegates, with Curry,
John Lewis, Calvin Montgomery, and P. Hampton as alternates. Wilson served as president of the meeting, Curry, Lewis, and J. C. Boone as vice presidents, and Cyrus D. Bell as secretary In September, 1879, Bell organized a meeting with Dr. W. H. C. Stephenson chair and
Emanuel S. Clenlans secretary to express the political views of the Omaha black community. In the early 1890s, local leaders James Alexander,
Matthew Rickets, Richard Gamble, and Bell were outspoken in condemnation of the lynching in Omaha of
George Smith (aka Joe Coe, a convicted rapist) and threatened lynching of Sam Payne (convicted murderer of Maud Rubel). Later, he criticized the
Omaha World-Herald′s coverage of a 1909 lynching in Cairo, Illinois, feeling that the paper condoned the action.
Edwin R. Overall, John Albert Williams, and Cyrus D. Bell worked to bring a convention of the National Colored Personal Liberty League led by
Henry Clay Hawkings to Omaha August 17, 1898 during the
Trans-Mississippi Exposition. On August 22, the
National Colored Press Association met in
Omaha as well. Also that month the Western Negro Press Association met; where John Albert Williams was selected first vice president and Bell was selected treasurer He remained active in politics and civil rights even late in his life. He was an officer of another black political club, the Mutual Interest Club, in 1910. ==Afro-American Sentinel==