In 1844, Missouri belle Julia Dent met dazzling horseman Lieutenant Ulysses S Grant. Four years passed before their parents permitted them to wed, and the groom's abolitionist family refused to attend the ceremony. Since childhood, Julia owned as a slave another Julia, known as Jule. Jule guarded her mistress's closely held twin secrets: She had perilously poor vision but was gifted with prophetic sight. So it was that Jule became Julia's eyes to the world. And what a world it was, marked by gathering clouds of war. The Grants vowed never to be separated, but as Ulysses rose through the ranks -- becoming general in chief of the Union Army -- so did the stakes of their pact. During the war, Julia would travel, often in the company of Jule and the four Grant children, facing unreliable transportation and certain danger to be at her husband's side. Yet Julia and Jule saw two different wars. While Julia spoke out for women -- Union and Confederate -- she continued to hold Jule as a slave behind Union lines. Upon the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, Jule claimed her freedom and rose to prominence as a businesswoman in her own right, taking the honorary title Madame. The two women's paths continued to cross throughout the Grants' White House years in Washington, DC, and later in New York City, the site of Grant's Tomb.
This is a collection of stories. In Karen White Owens's Baby Its Cold Outside, Resa Warren reluctantly accepts a job and moves to cold Michigan. When she meets handsome skier Clay Shire, he lights a fire in her heart.
One Minute a Free Woman: Elizabeth Freeman and the Struggle for Freedom
In the present chapter, I shall focus on Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye. Morrison's narrative stands as her initial attempt at generic denigration, as her first effort to create what she has elsewhere called "A genuine Black . . . Book.
This book has been written to tell the story of the Sojourner Truth Statue Committee for the commemoration of the Tenth Anniversary of the Sojourner Truth Statue completed and dedicated in Northampton on October 6, 2002.
This book, out of print for many decades but again available, tells the personal side of living and working in Washington, but also the struggles of a black woman, both as slave and as free woman, in the turbulent times of the Civil War
Behind the Scenes, Or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in The Whitehouse
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
Hill Testifies against Clarence Thomas In August 1991 an aide to Ohio Democrat Senator Howard Metzenbaum , a member of the Judiciary Committee , received a tip that Clarence Thomas sexually harassed Anita Hill during her employment with ...
The phone rang and rang at the Griffin residence. And the paper lay still un- transmitted in the fax machine. Nervous, I pulled a piece of Bazooka bubble gum out of my pocket and popped it into my mouth. It was a habit I had picked up ...