Sojourner Truth Biography

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Who was she? What did she do? Her name was Sojourner Truth. Abolitionist, feminist, and evangelist. She was as feisty and intrepid as every, every bit of the match of those who tried to prevent her from riding city streetcars.
She was doubly discriminated against in a country founded on the idea independent rights for all people. Sojourners parents were owned by a wealthy landowner in New York. Sojourner was born with the name Isabella, but her family called her Bella. When she was only nine years old, when she was sold from her owner with a flock of sheep for one hundred dollars. She was sold and bought time after time during her time as a slave. She did not have the kindest owners. She was treated and beat badly. When she was twenty years old she was forced to marry another slave named Thomas. They had a religious wedding. They had five children together. In 1827, New York passed a law that would free slaves. Bella’s owner promised her freedom a year …show more content…

In the late 1840’s began speaking out against slavery. She became a popular speaker throughout the North and Midwest. In 1850, she published her life story called,”The Narrative of Sojourner Truth.” She liked to speak about women’s rights. She proposed black women as outcast. (Sojourner Truth.) Her lectures often dealt with her own experiences as a slave. She had her own style that was down-to-earth and seemed to soften the hostile crowds she faced. Sojourner met lots of female abolitionist during her travels. By the mid-1850’s, Truth earned enough money from her book sales of her autobiography to buy land and a house in Battle Creek, Michigan. She still traveled to places like Ohio, Indiana, and Iowa, to continue her lectures. In 1861 after the war ended she visited black troops near Detroit, Michigan, for encouragement. She also met President Abraham Lincoln in October of 1864. (Sojourner

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