Search Results: Returned 3 Results, Displaying Titles 1 - 3
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2014., Fact Finders Thumbnail cover image Summary Note: As a free African American living in the North in the 1800s, Charlotte Forten was luckier than most African Americans of her time. But she still faced segregation, limited opportunities, and the sharp barbs of racism. Through it all, Charlotte wrote down her experiences in a diary. Read her story, and learn about the pre-Civil War days from someone who lived it.
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By Tackach, James Equiano, Olaudah. Condemnation of the international slave trade Walker, David. Slavery violates the will of God Turner, Nat. Slave rebellion Douglass, Frederick. Becoming an abolitionist leader Truth, Sojourner. Woman abolitionist speaks out Jacobs, Harriet. Assistance for the newly freed slaves Grimke, Charlotte Forten. Day of celebration for abolitionists Douglass2003., Greenhaven Press Call No: 323.092 TAC Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Series Title: History firsthandSummary Note: Presenting history through eye-witness African-American writings, this book discusses the nineteenth-century abolitionist crusade, the Reconstruction-era civil rights movement, and the twentieth-century civil rights movement.
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2000., Juvenile, Blue Earth Books Call No: Biography FORTEN Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Series Title: Diaries, letters, and memoirsSummary Note: A sixteen-year-old free African American who lived in Massachusetts in 1854 tells of her schooling and participation in the anti-slavery movement.