Lydia Marie Child Lydia Marie Child was born on February 11, 1802 and died on October 20, 1880. Through her life, she wrote in various shapes and topics, but Lydia is more than a mere writer. She writes short stories, biographies, science fiction novels, continuous novels, children's literature, historical novels, and anti-slavery literature (Kecher 6). She is a journalist and a feminist and I write articles about American Revolutionary War and Native American. She helped Harriot Jacobson escape slavery, encourage reform and become a retirementist.
Since then, before the work of Jean Fagan Yellin in the 1970s and 1980s, the accepted academic opinion advocated by historians such as John Blassingame is that the "event of a slave girl's life" is Lydia Marie Child It was done by. I wrote a fictitious novel. When rereading the event in the 1970s as part of an educational project using gender as an analysis category, Yellin began to be interested in the true author of the text. In six years of effort, Yellin discovered and used various historical documents, including the Amy Post paper of the University of Rochester, the State and Regional History Society, Horniblow and the Norcum paper of the North Carolina Archive. Please confirm that Harriet Jacobs is the true author of the story, the story is not her imaginary work but her autobiography.
• Susan B. Anthony • John Humphrey Noise • Adin Ballo • Robert Owen • Lyman Beecher • Lydia Marie Child • Wendell Phillips • Dorothea Dix • Joanne George Wrap • Ralph Waldo Emerson • Joseph Smith • Charles Grandisons Finney • Elizabeth Keydi Stanton Margaret Fuller • Arthur Tappan • William Lloyd Garrison • Sylvester Graham • Sojourner Truth • Angelina / Sarah Grimke • David Walker • Mother Ann Lee • Thodod Dwight Weld • John Greenleaf Whittier
Lucretia Mott, Sarah Grimke, and Angelina Grimke. Lydia Maria Child, Mary Livermore, Elizabeth Cadistan and others are active in abolition movement. Because their experience was ranked second and sometimes limited to the right to speak publicly and to talk to women, some of these women later became a woman in an "independent field" of ideological role became. Liberation and work As the legend calls her, Betsy Ross may not be the first flag of the United States, but she was a professional standard player at the end of the eighteenth century. As a tailor or female businessman, she kept working through several marriages. Many other women are doing various work. Sometimes I work with my husband and father. Especially, especially in the case of a widow, I am doing my own work.