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  1. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper The narratives and labors of eminent colored men such as Banneker, Douglass, Brown, Garnet, and others, have been written and sketched very fully for the public, and doubtless with advantage to the cause of freedom. But there is not to be found in any written work portraying the Anti-Slavery struggle, (except in the ...

  2. Children. Mary Frances Harper (1862–1908) Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (September 24, 1825 – February 22, 1911) was an American abolitionist, suffragist, poet, temperance activist, teacher, public speaker, and writer. Beginning in 1845, she was one of the first African American women to be published in the United States.

  3. Frances Ellen Work (October 27, 1857 - January 26, 1947) was an American heiress. Born in New York City , she was a daughter of Franklin H. Work , a well-known stockbroker and protégé of Cornelius Vanderbilt (the Commodore Vanderbilt), and his wife, Ellen Wood.

  4. Life and work. She was born on 10 April 1884 in London to James Roche, 3rd Baron Fermoy (1852–1920), an Irish peer who was a Member of Parliament in the House of Commons, and Frances Ellen Work (1857–1947), an American heiress and socialite. Her brothers were Maurice Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy, the maternal grandfather of Diana, Princess of ...

  5. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper. Frances Ellen Watkins (Harper) was an abolitionist and poet born free in 1825 in Baltimore, Maryland. Harper's mother died before she was three years old, leaving her an orphan. Harper was raised by her uncle, William Watkins, a teacher at the Academy for Negro Youth and a radical political figure in civil rights.

  6. 22. Feb. 2024 · Frances Ellen Watkins Harper — considered the mother of African American journalism — died on this date 113 years ago at the age of 85. Harper’s legacy lives on through the writing she left behind and her inspiring lifelong pursuit of civil rights, justice and freedom for all. The 19th’s HBCU fellowship program is named in her honor.

  7. Melba Boyd’s Discarded Legacy: Politics and Poetics in the Life of Frances E.W. Harper 1825-1911 (Detroit, 1994), Frances Smith Foster’s A Brighter Coming Day: A Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Reader (New York, 1990), and Maryemma Graham’s Complete Poems of Frances E.W. Harper (New York, 1988) are essential to learning more about Harper’s life and literary works.