Francis Ellen Watkins Harper, born in Baltimore's poet, novelist, writer and activist, was an African-American child alone with freedom of parents. When Francis died at the age of three, when his mother, aunt and uncle brought up. She attended the school of the Black Youth Academy operated by her uncle until 13 years old, she found a job at the Quaker family house, where she can get a wide variety of literary works. Ohio and Pennsylvania had been teaching for two years, and she began working on the abolition of death sentence circuit. She made slaves the mother of her African-American journalism and often helped escape from the writing of the subway, anti-slave newspaper.
As a prolific writer, Harper publishes many books of poetry, including "Dead Leaves" (also published in "Leaves Forest") (1845). Other poems of the theme (1854), it reprinted 20 times; 1895 (Atlanta offers; poetry (1857); sketch of living south (1872) explained reconstruction Alabama martyrs and other Poetry (1892); sparrow autumn and other poetry (1894)). Harper also announced several novels including Iolaryoi (1892) and a collection of essays. Her short story "Two Offer" is the first African-American short story released. Her poetry is included in the complete poem Francis E. W. Harper (1988, Maryemma Graham edited) and she (1990, ed.Frances Smith Foster) prose A bright coming day.
She married Fenton Harper in 1860. He took his three children, together they had a daughter. When her husband died in 1864, Harper continued to support her family with a speech. During rebuilding, she was proactive in educational opportunities for all, because of citizenship, women's rights. She is responsible for the Philadelphia color and members of the Women's Society of Women's Association of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Department of Women, Co-Founder of the Christianity Abstinence Association and Vice Chairman of the Color Ethnic Institute. Harper, Colored Youth Association and Director of the United States
She was active in African Methodist director's church and monotheism and was buried in the Philadelphia Eden Cemetery to the next daughter Mary
Francis Ellen Watkins Harper, 19th century African-American writer and slave release, was born slave in the state of Maryland state free black family. Francis Watkins Harper is to become a teacher, an anti-slavery activist, a writer, a poet. She is also a defender of women 's rights and a member of the American Women' s Participation Association. Francis Watkins Harper's work often focuses on racial justice, equality and freedom themes. James Fuer Deng Xiaoping's granddaughter Charlotte Fulton was born into a liberal black family. During the Civil War that she became a teacher, former slave professors were released and went to the South Ocean archipelago close to the coast of Carolina State by occupation of the Federal Army. She wrote down the experience. She later got married and FrancisJ.Grimké, his mother was a slave, a slave father Henry Grimke, a white slavery abolitionist and Angelina Grimké brothers Sarah Grimke
Francis Ellen Watkins Harper is a poet, teacher and civil rights activist. She was born in 1825 with the freedom of Baltimore in her life, she made for justice, freedom and work. Harper spent his life using his education to fight for the rights of citizens. She talked in her public speeches to express her passion for the social revolution and she was given a poem. Harper is the core of writing career and social justice for his career. Harper started writing as a child, and it is becoming a future. In the point that she wrote, she wrote for its reputable newspapers and magazines, known as antislavery "mother of African-American news." She also wrote many poems, she The first book was born in 20 years. Harper wrote a novel entitled "Iorari Roy", one of the novels of the first African-American woman known for her 67 years ago at the highest age. Print it. She also wrote the first short story published by an African-American author