The Tale of Mary Ann Shadd Cary

It’s a Pick-A-Book Giveaway.

This month enter to win any book from the catalog of books I’ve pinned.

Winners will be announced April 30.

 

 

When times are tough, sometimes we need an encouraging voice

or uplifting story to help get us through. 

 

Mary Ann Shadd Cary was an educator and abolitionist.  She was the first black woman to graduate from Howard University Law School and the first black woman to vote in a federal election.  She helped President Lincoln enlist black men to fight in the Union and her house was frequently a safe haven in the Underground Railroad for slaves fleeing the South.  After the war she became a school principal, and then a lawyer in Washington, D. C., at the age of sixty.  She died in 1893 at age seventy from heart failure, with an estimated value at $150.

 

 

For more stories of encouragement from women in history read

Tales Behind the Tombstones.  

Available everywhere books are sold.