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What are some facts on:

~Francis Harpor~

~Nat Turner~

~Edmonia Lewis~

~John Brown~

and

~Bill Pickett~




Please help

2007-02-22 10:35:41 · 5 answers · asked by Eggroll 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

Why are they REMEMBERED?

2007-02-22 10:37:33 · update #1

5 answers

Nat, remembered today as Nat Turner, (October 2, 1800 – November 11, 1831) was an American slave whose failed slave rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia, was the most remarkable instance of black resistance to enslavement in the antebellum southern United States. His methodical slaughter of white civilians during the uprising made him a controversial figure, but he is still considered by many to be a heroic figure of black resistance to oppression. Though he became known as "Nat Turner" in the aftermath of the uprising, his actual given name was simply "Nat".

Edmonia Lewis (born July 4, 1845 - died c.1911) was the first professional African-American and Native American sculptor.
A free Black person, Mary Edmonia Lewis was born in Greenbush, New York to a Black father and a Chippewa mother who named her "Wild Fire." Orphaned at the age of nine, she lived with her mother's relatives, but few facts of her early life are known.


John Brown (May 9, 1800 – December 2, 1859) was the first white American abolitionist to advocate and to practice insurrection as a means to the abolition of slavery. He has been called "the most controversial of all nineteenth-century Americans."[1] His attempt to start a liberation movement among enslaved blacks in Virginia in 1859 electrified the nation, even though not a single slave answered his call. He was tried for treason (against the state of Virginia) and hanged, but his behavior at the trial seemed heroic to millions of Americans. Southerners alleged that his rebellion was the tip of an abolitionist iceberg and represented the wishes of the Republican party, but those charges were vehemently denied by the Republicans. Historians agree that the Harper's Ferry raid in 1859 escalated tensions that a year later led to secession and the American Civil War.



Willie M. "Bill" Pickett (December 5, 1871 - April 2, 1932) was a cowboy and rodeo performer.

Pickett was born in the Jenks-Branch community of Travis County, Texas. He was the second of thirteen children born to Thomas Jefferson Pickett, a former slave, and Mary "Janie" Gilbert. The family's ancestry was black, white and Cherokee Native American.

Pickett attended school through the fifth grade, after which he took up ranching work. He invented the technique of bulldogging, the skill of grabbing cattle by the horns and wrestling them to the ground. Pickett's method for bulldogging was biting a cow on the lip and then falling backwards. This method eventually lost popularity as the sport morphed into the steer wrestling that is practiced in rodeos today.

In 1890 Pickett married Maggie Turner, a former slave and daughter to a white southern plantation owner. The couple had nine children. Pickett and his brothers started their own company, the Pickett Brothers Broncho Busters and Rough Riders Association, to offer their services as cowboys. Pickett also made a living demonstrating his bulldogging skills and other stunts at county fairs. In 1905, Pickett joined the 101 Ranch Wild West Show that featured the likes of Buffalo Bill, Will Rogers, Tom Mix and Zach and Lucille Mulhall. Pickett was a popular performer who toured around the world and appeared in early motion pictures. Pickett was shown in a movie created by Richard E. Norman. Pickett's ethnicity resulted in him not being able to appear at many rodeos. He often was forced to claim that he was of Comanche heritage in order to perform.

Pickett continued to work his entire life. He also served as deacon of Taylor Baptist Church. In 1932, he was kicked in the head by a horse while working horses at the 101 Ranch and died of his injuries a few days later, at the age of 62. Will Rogers announced his funeral on the radio. (The birth date, death date, and age at death given in this article are not consistent among themselves.)

Pickett was named to the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1971 and was the first black honoree to that organization. He was enshrined in the ProRodeo Hall of Fame in 1989.

In 1994, the United States Postal Service honored Pickett as one of twenty "Legends of the West" pictured in a series of stamps. Unfortunately, the stamps used a picture which many reference works identified as Bill Pickett but was in fact his brother Ben. The Postal Service recalled the series to correct the error.

Another controversy that still rages is a claim that steer wrestling was independently developed in Canada by the Canadian black cowboy John Ware and possibly predates Pickett. An 1892 Calgary gymkhana lists a demonstration of steer wrestling by John Ware on its program. On the other hand it is claimed that Bill Pickett was steer wrestling as early as 1881.


Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (24 September 1825 - 22 February 1911) born to free parents in Baltimore, Maryland, was an African American abolitionist and poet.

Her mother died three years later and she was looked after by relatives. She was educated at a school run by her uncle which was Waco High , Rev. William Watkins until the age of thirteen when she found work as a seamstress.

Her first volume of verse, Forest Leaves, was published in 1845, the book was extremely popular and over the next few years went through 20 editions. In 1850, she started working in Columbus, Ohio as a schoolteacher. Three years later in 1853, she joined the American Anti-Slavery Society and became a travelling lecturer for the group. She was also a strong supporter of prohibition and woman's suffrage. She often would read her poetry at these public meetings, including the extremely popular Bury Me in a Free Land.

In 1892, she published a novel about a rescued black slave and the Reconstructed South, called Iola Leroy, one of the first books published by an African American. Later, she also wrote Minnie's Sacrifice, Sowing and Reaping and Trial and Triumph.

Harper was a strong supporter of women's suffrage and was a member of the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA).

2007-02-22 10:55:03 · answer #1 · answered by David F 3 · 0 0

Bill Pickett Facts

2016-11-11 04:06:16 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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2016-12-14 03:27:54 · answer #3 · answered by declue 4 · 0 0

nat turner was a rebel slave in the southern united states that went on a killing rampage, killin white folks.
i believe bill pickett was a singer and or songwriter of some note.

2007-02-22 10:45:42 · answer #4 · answered by Jerry_S. 3 · 0 0

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2017-02-15 11:23:37 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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