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Sojourner Truth was born a slave named Isabella about 1797 in
Ulster County, New York. Before the age of thirty, she had served
three masters, married, and had five children. In 1827, she escaped
from her abusive master. The following year, she became free under
the New York Anti-Slavery Act.
In 1843, she experienced a call from God to preach. Beacause
she did not want to carry anything from her life of slavery into
her life as a free woman, she changed her name to Sojourner Truth
- Sojourner because she was going to travel throughout the country,
and Truth because she was going to declare truth to the people.
Working in the abolitionist and women's rights movements, her
imposing stature, commanding personality, and captivating speaking
style made her a popular speaker and one of the best known women
of her time. Her address at the Akron, Ohio, Women's Rights Convention
in 1851, in the version known as "Ain't I a Woman",
is one of her most influential speeches. She supported herself
by publishing her autobiography, The Narrative Sojourner Truth,
which she dictated to her friend, Olive Gilbert.
After the Civil War, Sojourner Truth traveled to Washington,
D.C., where she worked to improve living conditions for African
Americans, and to integrate the city's streetcars. She also attempted
to persuade the government to set aside land in Kansas and Missouri
for freedmen.
In 1875, she retired to her home in Battle Creek, Michigan,
where she died on November 26, 1883.
One of the most important women of the nineteenth century, Sojourner
Truth remains a powerful symbol of the struggle for the rights
of African Americans and women. In 1981, she was inducted in to
the National Women's Hall of Fame. http://www.greatwomen.org
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