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1992 Myers Center Outstanding Book on Human Rights Historians have produced scores of studies on white men, extraordinary white women, and even the often anonymous mass of enslaved Black people in the United States. But in this innovative work, Adele Logan Alexander chronicles there heretofore undocumented dilemmas of one of nineteenth-century America’s most marginalized groups—free women of color in the rural South. Ambiguous Lives focuses on the women of Alexander’s own family as representative of this subcaste of the African-American community. Their forbears, in fact, included Africans, Native Americans, and whites. Neither black nor white, affluent nor impoverished, enslaved nor t...
Reprint of the original, first published in 1877.
Seven Sisters is a work of historical fiction about seven single young women who were part of a group of 800 Mormons who left England on a forty-four day voyage to the United States with the goal of settling in Utah. This is based on true events that were recorded in the emigrants' journals and diaries.