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Sojourner Truth
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Sojourner Truth

1864

Unidentified Artist, Sojourner Truth, c. 1797 - 26 Nov 1883

Born Hurley, New York

Item details

Title:
Sojourner Truth
Creator:
Unidentified Artist, Sojourner Truth, c. 1797 - 26 Nov 1883
Date Created:
1864
Description:

Born Hurley, New York

In 1843, sixteen years after gaining her freedom, Isabella Baumfree changed her name to Sojourner Truth and emerged as one of the nation’s foremost abolitionists. Speaking throughout the country, she supported her antislavery campaign through sales of her book, the Narrative of Sojourner Truth (1850), and by selling copies of her photograph, which carried the caption, “I Sell the Shadow to Support the Substance.”

Truth continued to call for slavery’s abolition during the Civil War and rejoiced when Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation (1863). Eager to assist the many refugees from enslavement who were flocking to Washington, D.C., she traveled there in 1864. Appointed by the National Freedmen’s Relief Association to serve as “counselor to the freed people” at Freedmen’s Village—the camp established by the federal government at Arlington Heights, Virginia—Truth earned praise for her “great service rendered to the Freedmen and their families.”

Nacida en Hurley, Nueva York

En 1843, a los 16 años de haber obtenido su libertad, Isabella Baumfree cambió su nombre a Sojourner Truth y pasó a ser una de las más notables abolicionistas de la nación. Daba charlas a lo largo del país y costeaba su campaña antiesclavista vendiendo su libro Historia de Sojourner Truth (1850) y fotografías suyas con la inscripción “Vendo la sombra para mantener la sustancia”.

Truth siguió abogando por la abolición de la esclavitud durante la Guerra Civil y se regocijó cuando Lincoln emitió la Proclamación de Emancipación (1863). Deseosa de ayudar a los muchos refugiados afroamericanos que venían en masa a Washington D.C., ella también vino en 1864. La Asociación Nacional de Socorro a los Libertos la nombró “consejera de las personas libertas” en Freedmen’s Village, el campamento creado por el gobierno federal en Arlington Heights, Virginia. Allí recibió elogios por el “gran servicio prestado a los libertos y sus familias”.

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Partner:
Smithsonian Institution
Contributing Institution:
National Portrait Gallery
Subjects:
Social Welfare and Reform
Arts and Culture
Dress accessories
Home Furnishings
Carte-de-visite
Eyeglasses
Reformers
Design
Abolitionists
Chairs
Social reformer
Seating
Tables
Enslaved person
Women
Shawl
Interior decoration
Outerwear
Portraits
Lecturer
Educators
Furnishings
Photography
Civil rights activist
Costume
Photographic format
Education and Scholarship
Law and Crime
Truth, Sojourner
Furniture
Chair
Dress Accessory
Table
Interior
Studio
Sojourner Truth
Female
Educator
Reformer
Abolitionist
Portrait
Type:
image
Format:
Albumen silver print
URL:
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/sm4f871361b-4eeb-4322-9b59-ba9405b2b135
Standardized Rights Statement:
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Rights:
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
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