Maria W. Stewart (1803-1879) was an African American teacher, journalist, abolitionist, and women’s rights activist. Born Maria Miller to free African American parents in Hartford, Connecticut, she was orphaned at the age of three and sent to live with a local minister as an indentured servant. She was educated at Sabbath School and married James W. Stewart, a merchant, in 1826. Following his death in 1829, she was excluded from his will and left to fend for herself. Around this time, she began lecturing to audiences of men and women of all races. She was the first known African American woman to lecture publicly on women’s rights, religion, and abolition, publishing some of her speeches and meditations in pamphlets with the help of William Lloyd Garrison’s The Liberator. After a poorly-received speech at Boston’s African Masonic Lodge, Stewart abandoned lecturing to move to New York City and later Washington, DC, where she found work as a schoolteacher and head matron of Freedmen’s Hospital.
2 Ebooks de Maria W. Stewart
Manning Marable & Leith Mullings: Let Nobody Turn Us Around
This anthology of black writers traces the evolution of African-American perspectives throughout American history, from the early years of slavery to the end of the 20th century. The essays, manifest …
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€75.86
Maria W. Stewart: The Collected Meditations of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart
The Collected Meditations of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart (2021) compiles the speeches and writings of Maria W. Stewart. This groundbreaking collection includes some of the best works from across Stewart’s …
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€6.99