Search Results - Jacobs, Harriet Ann, 1813-1897
Harriet Jacobs
![Jacobs's only known formal photograph, 1894<ref>[https://www.journalofthecivilwarera.org/2019/07/harriet-jacobs-working-for-freedpeople-in-civil-war-alexandria/harriet-jacobs-portrait-copy/ Journal of the Civil War Era].</ref>](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d5/Gilbert_Studios_photograph_of_Harriet_Jacobs_%28cropped%29.jpg)
Born into slavery in Edenton, North Carolina, she was sexually harassed by her enslaver. When he threatened to sell her children if she did not submit to his desire, she hid in a tiny crawl space under the roof of her grandmother's house, so low she could not stand up in it. After staying there for seven years, she finally managed to escape to the free North, where she was reunited with her children Joseph and Louisa Matilda and her brother John S. Jacobs. She found work as a nanny and got into contact with abolitionist and feminist reformers. Even in New York City, her freedom was in danger until her employer was able to pay off her legal owner.
During and immediately after the American Civil War, she travelled to Union-occupied parts of the Confederate South together with her daughter, organizing help and founding two schools for fugitive and freed slaves. Provided by Wikipedia