The woman we know as Sojourner Truth was born into slavery
in New York as Isabella Baumfree (after her father's owner, Baumfree). She was
sold several times, and while owned by the John Dumont family in Ulster County,
married Thomas, another of Dumont's slaves. She had five children with Thomas.
In 1827, New York law emancipated all slaves, but Isabella had already left her
husband and run away with her youngest child. She went to work for the family
of Isaac Van Wagenen.
While working for the Van Wagenen's -- whose name she used
briefly -- she discovered that a member of the Dumont family had sold one of
her children to slavery in Alabama. Since this son had been emancipated under
New York Law, Isabella sued in court and won his return.
Isabella experienced a religious conversion, moved to New
York City and to a Methodist perfectionist commune, and there came under the
influence of a religious prophet named Mathias. The commune fell apart a few
years later, with allegations of sexual improprieties and even murder. Isabella
herself was accused of poisoning, and sued successfully for libel. She
continued as well during that time to work as a household servant.
In 1843, she took the name Sojourner Truth, believing this
to be on the instructions of the Holy Spirit and became a traveling preacher
(the meaning of her new name). In the late 1840s she connected with the
abolitionist movement, becoming a popular speaker. In 1850, she also began
speaking on woman suffrage. Her most famous speech, Ain't I a Woman?, was given
in 1851 at a women's rights convention in Ohio.
Sojourner Truth met Harriet Beecher Stowe, who wrote about
her for the Atlantic Monthly and wrote a new introduction to Truth's
autobiography, The Narrative of Sojourner Truth.
Sojourner Truth moved to Michigan and joined yet another
religious commune, this one associated with the Friends. She was at one point
friendly with Millerites, a religious movement that grew out of Methodism and
later became the Seventh Day Adventists.
During the Civil War Sojourner Truth raised food and
clothing contributions for black regiments, and met Abraham Lincoln at the
White House in 1864. While there, she tried to challenge the discrimination
that segregated street cars by race.
After the War ended, Sojourner Truth again spoke widely,
advocating for some time a "Negro State" in the west. She spoke
mainly to white audiences, and mostly on religion, "Negro" and
women's rights, and on temperance, though immediately after the Civil War she
tried to organize efforts to provide jobs for black refugees from the war.
Active until 1875, when her grandson and companion fell ill
and died, Sojourner Truth returned to Michigan where her health deteriorated
and she died in 1883 in a Battle Creek sanitorium of infected ulcers on her
legs. She was buried in Battle Creek, Michigan, after a very well-attended
funeral.
No comments:
Post a Comment