Henry H. Garnet: Minister, Orator, Abolitionist Born a slave in Kent County Maryland; to Henrietta and George Trusty, on December 23, 1815. He had a large family, 11 members. While attending a funeral, his family escaped in a covered wagon. They landed in Wilmington Delaware, eventually moving to New York. He received his education at from the African Free School and the Phoenix High School for Colored Youth. He had a passion for Science and English. He continued his education throughout the 1830 and completed school in the 1840’s at the Oneida Institute in Whitesboro New York. While Henry was off working on ships his family was hunted by slave catchers. His parents escaped, but his sister was caught. He searched for the slave
He was born in Baltimore in 1748, but his story begins long before his birth. It started when his father’s family immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1680’s. His father just so happened to move to Maryland, where he met his wife, married her, and settled in Baltimore where William was to be born. William had many hard times and little schooling until he was ten, when his family moved to North Carolina.
basic; elementary school, then trained in the classics by his father. His father, John Henry
As Washington stated in his book, Up From Slavery, "I am not quite sure of the exact place or exact date of my birth, but at any rate I suspect I must have been born somewhere and at sometime" (29). But, in reality, Booker Taliaferro Washington was born on a slave plantation in Franklin County, Virginia on April 5, 1856, where his mother worked as a cook. Washington's father, who he knew little of, was suspected to be a white man who worked on a near-by plantation. Growing up on the slave plantation, Washington lived in the most destitute surroundings. His "home" was a fourteen by sixteen square foot log cabin that he shared with his mother, brother, and sister. He spent most of his time on the plantation doing odd work, such as cleaning and working at the mill, since he was too small to do much more.
Born May 29, 1736, at studley in the family farm, in Hanover country, Virginia. Patrick henry is considered one of the great American authors, he wrote in the rationalist period. As a kid henry attended local schools for a couple of years, and after this his father decided to teach him himself. In 1754 henry decided to marry Sarah Shelton, they lived together in a 300 acre pine slash farm near Mechanicsville gifted to them by Sarah’s parents as a wedding gift with a couple of slaves, with his marriage henry became a landowner and also a slave owner Patrick henry then decided to start a career
Booker T Washington was born into slavery on a plantation in Franklin County Virginia. Like many slaves at that time, historians are not sure of the exact place or date of his birth (Washington, Up From Slavery 7). Washington had absolutely no schooling while he was a slave; he received all his education after he was set free. The fact that he had no education through slavery, made it that much more important to him when he did get his education, and that is one of the reasons he so highly stressed education. Growing up, he did not even know what education was, he first heard about it through the miners he worked with while he was a slave....
When he was fifteen years old, his mother died from appendicitis. From fifteen years of age to his college years, he lived in an all-white neighborhood. From 1914-1917, he shifted from many colleges and academic courses of study as well as he changed his cultural identity growing up. He studied physical education, agriculture, and literature at a total of six colleges and universities from Wisconsin to New York. Although he never completed a degree, his educational pursuits laid the foundation for his writing career.
He was taught how to read and write by his master son. Later on, he got married to a slave named Cherry. They had two children together. The last was born in 1822. He went by the name Samuel Turner.
No black school was available locally so he was forced to move. He said "Good-bye" to his adopted parents, Susan and Moses, and headed to Newton County in southwest Missouri. Here is where the path of his education began. He studied in a one-room schoolhouse and worked on a farm to pay for it. He ended up, shortly after, moving with another family to Fort Scott in Kansas. In Kansas, he worked as a baker in a kitchen while he attended the High School. He paid for his schooling with the money he earned from winning bake-off contests. From there he moved all over bouncing from school to school. "College entrance was a struggle again because of racial barriers."2 At the age of thirty he gained acceptance to Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa.
To begin, Harrison’s early life took place on his wealthy father’s plantation in Virginia, then going to college in order to study history at Hampden-Sydney College, and later medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. After some time, Harrison dropped out in order to join the army in 1791. He fought against the Native American Confederation in the Northwest Territory, where he participated in many battles with Native Tribes, including the Battle of Fallen Timbers in August of 1794.
First of all, the early life of Frederick Douglass was horrible and very difficult. He was born on February 1818 in Tuckahoe, Maryland. 7 His parents were from two different races. His father was white while his mother was a African American. At that time period slave auctions were held to sell black slaves to white land owners. It was at a slave auction that as a child Frederick Douglass was separated from his Negro mother. His mother was sold and Douglass never saw an inch of her again in his entire life.
Booker Taliaferro Washington was born a slave on April 5, 1856, in Franklin County, Va. His mother, Jane Burroughs, was a plantation cook. His father was an unknown white man. As a child, Booker swept yards and brought water to slaves working in the fields. Freed after the American Civil War, he went with his mother to Malden, W. Va., to join Washington Ferguson, whom she had married during the war.
Harriet Tubman was born between 1820 and 1825 in Dorchester County, Maryland. She was born with the name Araminta Harriet Ross. She was of the nine children to be born to “Rit” Green and Ben Ross. As a child Harriet went through a lot of tough times, three of her brothers were sold off to distant plantations, but also at the age of five or six, she began to work as a house servant. In her later life she recounted the time where she had received five lashes before breakfast. Approximately seven years later she was sent to work in the fields.
A freedom fighter or a terrorist? A question that seemed so difficult to answer but I believe was not at all.
Born on July 30th, 1863, Henry was the first of six children raised on a farm by his parents, William and Mary. At age 16, Henry left home for nearby Detroit for a job as a mechanic. When Henry went back to his birthplace of Dearborn, he helped his dad on the farm and repaired steam engines.
and Martha L Gant, he was born in Knoxville Georgia, on July 8th 1831, he attended school in