Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs, is a biography on Harriet Jacobs life, she is telling her story as a slave and the events that occurred in her life. I choose this book because I’ve always been interested in the topic of slaves and how their lives were. Being a female myself, I was curious about the life of a slave girl. I wanted to know and understand the life of Harriet Jacobs. Harriet Jacobs was born into slavery to Elijah and Delilah Jacobs in 1813. Grow up in Edenton, N.C. Both her parents were slaves with different families. She had a brother named John. At an early year her parents died, she was raised by her grandmother Molly Horniblow. Harriet had two children Louisa Matilda Jacobs and Joseph Jacobs who’s names…
Lucretia Mott was born on January 3, 1793 in Nantucket, Massachusetts. She was born to Ana Folger and Thomas Coffin. Her parents had eight children. When Mott was thirteen she was sent to a Quaker Boarding school in Dutchess County, NY. After she graduated she became a teacher there. Once Mott discovered that males were paid three times more than females she became very interested in woman’s rights. Mott was antislavery, and because she believed that she refused to use any slavery produced products. (Wikipedia, 2013)…
Sarah Lane, one of the best female spies, was born February 11, 1838 in Greene County, Tennessee. In 1854, Sarah married Sylvanius H.Thompson and they had two children. Sylvanius later became a private in the 1st Tennessee Calvary U.S.A., where he served primarily as a recruiter for the Union Army. Sarah worked alongside her husband assembling and organizing Union sympathizers in a predominately rebel area around Greeneville, Tennessee. In early 1864, Sylvanius Thompson was ambushed and killed by a Confederate soldier. Spurred by her husband 's death, Sarah Thompson continued her work for the Union, delivering dispatches and recruiting information to Union officers. When CSA General John Hunt Morgan and his men spent the night in Greeneville, Sarah managed to slip away and alert Union forces to his whereabouts. Union troops invaded the area and by her accounts, she personally pointed out Morgan hiding behind a garden fence to a Union soldier who proceeded to kill Morgan.…
She was born in 1823. She and her family were free, but they didn’t have the rights and freedoms of a white American. When Mary Ann was little her father ran a show-making business. They helped slaves traveling through the underground railroads. They gave slaves food and shoes that came from the company. Her early life wasn’t very good, because she always saw runaway slaves and wondered if they would be captured and beat to death.…
school for training African-American hairstylists and agents…” (32). The Walker company created the hot comb, which became the foundation of the Black beautician industry for more controllable hair. Although these women made great contributions to better the lives of their community, it is important to note that they did not attempt to challenge the prevalent idea of beauty at the time. Some critics even blamed Walker for expanding the notion that black women needed to straighten their hair (35-36). However, it should be understood that black women—especially darker-skinned women—were experiencing difficulties finding a job or a husband. So companies like The Walker were providing ways to possibly change that kind of life for them. She wanted to make them feel good about themselves, and if that was to straighten their hair, then she will be satisfied (36). Black men, on the other hand, in an attempt to save money, took to making their own conks instead of purchasing ones on the…
Sarah Boone was born on June 18, 1770, in Chalfont, New Britain. She was raised in Barks County, Pennsylvania. As a child, she received little education, but that didn’t stop her from succeeding in anything. Although she didn’t receive college education, she still helped make a world of a difference. On her trip to success, she met and later married a young man by the name of John Wilcoxin, also known as Wilcox, in 1742 in Lancaster, California. They were married for full sixty years until Mr. Wilcox’s death in 1802.…
Lyda Newman’s life is not very well known, but a census record shows that she was born in around the year of 1885 in Ohio of the United States of America. In later years it is proven that she was a New York resident and patented a more durable hairbrush in 1898. In her 30’s she was living in an apartment in West Side Manhattan, New York.…
She was the granddaughter of slaves. Her father was a Pullman Porter who moved to Chicago from Memphis, Tennessee, as a part of a great black migration.…
It all started with a birth of a child in 1840, she was the daughter of Leonard Pardee and Sarah Burns, a carriage manufacturer in New Haven, Connecticut, (Sarah Winchester, 2011) known as the “Belle of New Haven.” That little girl name is Sarah Lockwood Pardee, in life she enjoyed all the advantages of cultured upbringing, including an…
Cited: Harris, Sharon M. Dr. Mary Walker: An American Radical, 1832-1919. New Brunswick, New Jersey, and London: Rutgers University Press, 2009. 1 March 2013.…
Mary Boykin Chesnut was born on her grandparents' estate at Mount Pleasant, South Carolina on March 31, 1823. She learned early about the workings of a plantation by observing her grandmother. Her grandmother worked with the servants and sewing crew so easily and effectively that Mary was nearly nine years old before she became aware that her grandmother's coworkers were slaves. Having learned to respect these workers, she thought of them as near equals.…
Ms. Mary Walker was born on September 25, 1934 in Savannah, Georgia to Joseph and Emma Lou Simmons. She is the youngest and only girl of four children. Shortly…
Sarah Grimke was among many others who fought for the African Americans freedom in the United States. Sarah along with her sister Angelina both grew up in a home where their father owned slaves. Sarah was born on November 26, 1792 in Charleston, South Carolina. The sisters built an early dislike of slavery. In 1819 the sisters moved to Philadelphia where they joined the society of friends once known as the Friends of truth.…
Sarah Moore Grimke was born in Charleston, South Carolina on November 26, 1792 and Angelina Emily Grimke was born on February 20, 1805 in Charleston, South Carolina. Their father was a wealthy plantation owner that owned many slaves; their father was also a politician and lawyer that served as the chief judge of South Carolina. Both girls were educated privately at home in the appropriate manner for young ladies of their social level. Sarah and Angelina grew frustrated with the education they were provided with and the expectations of the role they were supposed to play in the Charleston society. Both girls spoke out against the ill-treatment of slaves that they saw firsthand.…
Walker’s life story begins in Eatonton, Georgia, where she was born on February 9, 1944. She was born to her parents Minnie and Willie Walker who were sharecroppers. Alice was the last of eight children born into the family. As a child, she was accidentally blinded with a BB gun while playing with her brother. Instead of being responsible for normal work and chores, her mother allowed her to…