Abolitionist Mary Virginia Wood Forten (1815-1840), the mother of Charlotte Forten Grimké (1837-1914), created one of the five extant antebellum African American friendship albums. Born enslaved in North Carolina and emancipated at 17 by her wealthy planter father, she, her mother, and her three siblings relocated to Philadelphia in 1833. There, she became a charter member of the interracial Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society and the Female Vigilance Association. She married Robert B. Forten, son of antislavery activist James Forten, in 1836, and their daughter Charlotte Louise Forten was born the following year. She died of consumption in 1840 at the age of 25. (See Mary Maillard, https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/pe...
Redefining Opportunity: Charity Folk’s Life in Slavery and Freedom The life of a woman named Charity...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
The intellectual influence given to Phillis Wheatley by her white owners allowed for the young slave...
Abolitionist Mary Virginia Wood Forten (1815-1840), the mother of Charlotte Forten Grimké (1837-1914...
In 1854, Charlotte Forten, a free teenager of color from Philadelphia, was sent by her family to Sal...
Slavery in America began when Africans were brought in as slaves to the North American Colony of Jam...
In 1846, Cecelia, a 15-year-old slave girl traveled to Niagara Falls with her young Louisville mistr...
M.J. MorganLorraine Reimers examines the life of Ethel Morgan, an African American quilter and oral ...
Abstract: The collection contains many of the works, both published and unpublished, many in the dia...
Eighteenth and nineteenth-century Black Christian women in the United States contributed socially, p...
Decree to auction Negro woman and three children, in Petersburg, Virginia, by James Boyd and Martha ...
Abstract: Papers of a freeborn African American family who lived in Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alab...
Order for the inventory and appraisement of the estate of Rebecca Franklin, deceased, including fiv...
My work contributes to current scholarship on African colonization by providing a specific case stud...
African American quilting exhibits a long and rich history in antebellum and post– bellum America. A...
Redefining Opportunity: Charity Folk’s Life in Slavery and Freedom The life of a woman named Charity...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
The intellectual influence given to Phillis Wheatley by her white owners allowed for the young slave...
Abolitionist Mary Virginia Wood Forten (1815-1840), the mother of Charlotte Forten Grimké (1837-1914...
In 1854, Charlotte Forten, a free teenager of color from Philadelphia, was sent by her family to Sal...
Slavery in America began when Africans were brought in as slaves to the North American Colony of Jam...
In 1846, Cecelia, a 15-year-old slave girl traveled to Niagara Falls with her young Louisville mistr...
M.J. MorganLorraine Reimers examines the life of Ethel Morgan, an African American quilter and oral ...
Abstract: The collection contains many of the works, both published and unpublished, many in the dia...
Eighteenth and nineteenth-century Black Christian women in the United States contributed socially, p...
Decree to auction Negro woman and three children, in Petersburg, Virginia, by James Boyd and Martha ...
Abstract: Papers of a freeborn African American family who lived in Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alab...
Order for the inventory and appraisement of the estate of Rebecca Franklin, deceased, including fiv...
My work contributes to current scholarship on African colonization by providing a specific case stud...
African American quilting exhibits a long and rich history in antebellum and post– bellum America. A...
Redefining Opportunity: Charity Folk’s Life in Slavery and Freedom The life of a woman named Charity...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
The intellectual influence given to Phillis Wheatley by her white owners allowed for the young slave...