Contents

Biographies

  • Alexander, Kerri Lee. “Sojourner Truth.” Google Arts & Culture, 2019. https://artsandculture.google.com/exhibit/vwIi3HBUyJcCIA
  • The American Parade, Episode Six: “Sojourner,” as broadcast over the CBS Television Network. CBS, 1975.
  • Bernard, Jacqueline. Journey Toward Freedom: The Story of Sojourner, WW Norton & Company, 1967.
  • Berwanger, E. H. ed. As They Saw Slavery, Winston Press, 1967.
  • Claflin, E. Sojourner Truth and the Struggle for Freedom, Barrons Educational Service, 1989.
  • Dunster, M. Sojourner Truth, (A Play) Linden Publishers, 1983.
  • Ed. By Howard Johnson. Black History Monthly February 1979 (Kingston, N.Y.) 1979.
  • Fauset, A. H. Sojourner Truth; God’s Faithful Pilgrim, Russell & Russell, 1971.
  • Ferris, J. Walking the Road to Freedom; A Story About Sojourner Truth, Carolrhoda Books, 1988.
  • Gilbert, O. Narrative of Sojourner Truth. Arno, 1968.
    • —. Narrative of Sojourner Truth…with a History of Her Labors and Correspondence, Drawn from Her “Book of Life”: Also, a Memorial Chapter Giving the Particulars of Her Last Sickness and Death, Battle Creek, Mich.: Review and Herald Office, 1984.
    • —. Narrative of Sojourner Truth: with “Book of Life” and “A Memorial chapter” with an introduction and notes by Imani Perry. Barnes and Nobel Classics, 2005.
  • Grigsby, Darcy Grimaldo. Enduring Truths: Sojourner’s shadows and substance. University of Chicago Press, 2015.
  • Honke, Diedus, et. al. Dutch New York Histories: Connecting African, Native American and Slavery Heritage, LM Publishers, 2017.
  • Jacobs, W. J. Great Lives; Human Rights, Scribner, 1990.
  • Johnson, H. ed, Black History Monthly: February 1979. (Kingston, N.Y.), 1979.
  • Krass, P. Sojourner Truth, Los Angeles: Melrose Square, 1990.
  • Krass, P. and Heather Lehr Wagner. Sojourner Truth : Antislavery Activist. Chelsea House, 2004.
  • Matthews, Mrs Margaret Wright. Matthias. By His Wife. With Notes on the Book of Mr. Stone, on Matthias, New York, 1835.
  • Matthews, R. A Chapter in the History of Robert Matthews Otherwise Known as Matthias the Prophet Together with His Trial for the Murder of Mr. Pierson. Utica, 1835.
    • —. The False Prophet: The Very Interesting and Remarkable Trial of Matthias. Mitchell, 1835.
    • —. Memoirs of Matthias the Prophet with a Full Exposure of His Atrocious Impositions. New York: The Sun, 1835.
  • May, J. Sojourner Truth and the Underground Railway. Creative Educational Society, 1973.
    • —. Sojourner Truth: Freedom-Fighter. Creative Educational Society, 1973.
  • Montgomery, J. W. A Comparative Analysis of the Rhetoric of Two Negro Women Orators: Sojourner Truth and Frances E. Watkins Harper. (Hays, Fort Hays Kansas State College), 1968.
  • Ortiz, V. Sojourner Truth, a Self-Made Woman. J. B. Lippencott, 1974.
  • Painter, Nell Irvin. Sojourner Truth: a life a symbol. W.W. Norton, 1996.
  • Pauli, H. E. Her Name Was Sojourner Truth. Appleton, 1962.
  • Peterson, H. S. Sojourner Truth: Fearless Crusader. Garrard, 1972.
  • Stone W L. Matthias and His Impostures: The Progress of Fanaticism. Harper, 1835.
  • Stetson, Erlene and Linda David. Glorying in Tribulation: The Life Work of Sojourner Truth. Michigan State University Press, 1994.
  • Talyor-Boyd, S. Sojourner Truth: The Courageous Former Slave Whose Eloquence... Gareth Stevens, 1990.
  • Vale, G. Fanaticism: Its Source and Influence. Illustrated by the simple narrative of Isabella… G. Vale, 1835.
  • Washington, Margaret. Sojourner Truth’s America. University of Illinois Press, 2009.
  • “Federal Officeholders in New York State as Slaveholders, 1789–1805.” Journal of Negro History July 1943.

 

Other Related Books

  • American Equal Rights Association Proceedings, 1867. Ames, J. D. Southern Women Look at Lynching. ASWPL, 1937, pp. 4, 6, 8.
  • Anderson, J. Outspoken Women. Kendall/Hurt Publishing Co.
  • Anthony, S. B. “Is It a Crime for a U.S. Citizen to Vote? In an Account of the Proceedings on the Trial of Susan B. Anthony.” Daily Democrat and Chronicle 1974, bookprint: 151–78.
  • Asbury, H. Gangs of New York. Paragon House, 1927.
  • Beardsley, L. Reminiscences of Otsego County, New York. New York, 1852.
  • Bently, G. R. A History of the Freedman’s Bureau. Philadelphia, PA, 1955.
  • Brockett, L. P. Women’s Work in the Civil War, Philadelphia, PA, 1867.
  • “Brooklyn and Long Island.” Scrapbook no. 60 in Collections of Long Island Historical Society.
  • Buckmaster, Henrietta. Let My People Go, Beacon Press, 1941.
  • “Civil War Years.” Harper’s Illustrated Weekly Clearwater, A. T. History of Ulster County, NY.
  • Cromwell, J. W. The Negro in American History, Washington, DC, 1914.
  • Cross, Whitney R. The Burned over District. Cornell University Press, 1950.
  • Davis, A. Women, Race & Class. Random House, 1981.
  • De Crevecoeur, S. J. Sketches of Eighteenth Century America More “Letters from an American farmer.”  Yale University Press 1925.
  • DeWitt, W. C. People’s History of Kingston, Rondout and Vicinity. Kingston, NY: The Author, 1944.
  • Douglass, F. Life & Times Of, Written by Himself, Boston, MA, 1892.
    • —. “What I Found at the Northampton Association.” A History of Florence, MA. By C. A. Sheffield. Florence, MA, 1895.
  • Drake, W. E. The Prophet! A Full and Accurate Report of the Judicial Proceedings. New York, 1834.
  • DuBois, W. E. B. Souls of Black Folk, New York, 1953.
  • Duster, A., ed. Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells, University of Chicago Press, 1970.
  • Ellis, D. M. Landlords and Farmers in the Hudson – Mohawk Region 1790-1850, Cornell, 1946.
    • —. A Short History of New York State. 1957.
  • Ernst, R. Immigrant Life in New York City 1825-1863, 1949.
  • Filler, L. The Crusade Against Slavery, 1960.
  • Fisher, M. M. Negro Slave Songs in the U.S., London, 1953.
  • Fiske, J. The Dutch and Quaker Colonies. 2 vol., Houghton, Mifflin and Co., Boston, 1903.
  • Fitzgerald, T. A. The National Council of Negro Women and the Feminist Movement 1935–1975. The Georgetown Monograph in American Studies. Georgetown University Press, 1985.
  • Flexner. Century of Struggle: The Women’s Rights Movement in the U.S. 1959, 1975.
  • Folksong Society of the Northeast. Bulletin no. 9.
  • Frazier, E. F. The Negro in the U.S. New York, 1957.
  • Freeman, J. “The Building of the Gilded Cage.” Critiques of Contemporary Rhetoric. By K. K. Campbell. Wadworth, pp. 165–166.
  • Giddings, P. When and Where I Enter the Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in America, William Morrow, 1984.
  • Gilbert, O. The Narrative… Reprinted with an introduction by Harriet Beecher Stowe. New York, 1853.
  • Gilbertson, C. Harriet Beecher Stowe, D. Appleton Century Co., 1937.
  • Grant, A. Memoirs of an American Lady, Applewood Books, 2007.
  • Grant, D. The Anti-Lynching Movement: 1883–1932, R and E Assoc., 1975.
  • Grimke, A. Appeal to the Christian Women of the Southern States, New York, 1836.
  • Hall, J. D. Revolt Against Chivalry: Jessie Daniel Ames and the Women’s Campaign Against Lynching, Columbia University Press, 1979.
  • Harper, F. W. “The Colored Women of America.” English Women’s Review, N.s. 15 Jan. 1878, pp. 10–15.
  • Harris, J., ed. “Grady, Henry W. His Life, Writings and Speeches.” Proceedings of the New England Society (Yearbook) 1886. Cassell Co., 1890, pp. 83–93.
  • Haviland, L.  A Woman’s Life Work, Grand Rapids, MI, 1881.
  • Haynes, G. E.  Negro at Work in New York City, 1912.
  • Headley, J. T. The Great Riots of New York, 1712–1873, 1873.
  • History of the State of New York. Ed. A. C. Flick. Vol. 5. New York. 10 vols. 1933-37.
  • Honke, Diedus, et. al. Dutch New York Histories: Connecting African, Native American and Slavery Heritage, LM Publishers, 2017.
  • hooks, b. Ain’t I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism. Boston South End Press, 1981.
  • Humphreys, M. G. Life of Catherine Schuyler. New York, 1897.
  • Images of Women in American Popular Culture. Harcow & Brace Jovanovich, Inc., 1985, pp. 419–421.
  • Indiana: A Guide to the Hoosier State. Federal Writer Project. New York, 1947.
  • Johnson, J. W. Black Manhattan, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1930.
  • Kraditor, A. The Ideas of the Woman Suffrage Movement 1890–1965.
  • Leech, M. Reveille in Washington, New York, 1941.
  • Lefevre, R. History of New Paltz, New York and Its Old Families 1678–1820,
  • Litwack, L. The Negro in the Free States 1790–1860. 1961.
  • Locke, A. L. The Negro and His Music. Washington, DC, 1936.
  • Lutz, A. Crusade for Freedom: Women of the Antislavery Movement, 1960.
  • Majors, M. A. Noted Negro Women, Their Triumphs and Activities, Donohue & Henneberry, 1893.
  • Martin, W., ed. The American Sisterhood: writings of the feminist movement from colonial times to the present. Harper and Row, 1972.
  • Massachusetts Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the Civil War. Adjutant General, 1932.
  • McBee, A. E. From Utopia to Florence, Thesis. Smith College, 1947. Porcupine Press, Inc., 1975.
  • McKay, C. E. Stories of Hospital and Camp, Philadelphia, 1876.
  • Michigan: A Guide to the Wolverine State, New York, 1941.
  • Miller, E. W. The Negro in America: A Bibliography, Harvard University Press, 1966.
  • Millstein, B. & Jeanne Bodin. We the American Women: A Documentary History. SRA: Science Research Associates, 1977,
  • Motley, C. B. “The Legal Status of the Negro in the U.S.” The American Negro Reference Book. Ed. J. Davis. Prentice-Hall International Inc., 1966.
  • Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1966, pp. 484–521.
  • New York: A Guide to the Empire State. Federal Writers Project. New York: Work Projects Admin., 1940.
  • O’Connor, L. Pioneer Women Orators, Columbia University Press, 1954.
  • Olde Ulster, Vol. 1: An Historical and Genealogical Magazine; January – December, 1905 (Reprint) Forgotten Books, 1977.
  • Osborn, G. The Streets of Old New York. New York, 1939.
  • Parker, J. M. Rochester: A Story Historical. Scrantom, Wetmore & Co., 1884.
  • Peck, W. F. History of Rochester and Monroe County. New York, 1908.
  • Powell, A. M. Personal Reminiscences of the Anti-Slavery and Other Reforms and Reformers. Negro Universities Press, 1899.
  • Price, O. J. Early Religious History of Rochester. Vol. 3. Rochester Historical Publications.
  • Robinson, H. J. Massachusetts in the Woman Suffrage Movement. Boston, 1884.
  • Rossi, A. The Feminist Papers. (pp. 416-419).
  • Sandberg, C. Lincoln Collector. Harcourt, Bruce & Co., Inc., 1949.
  • Schneider, D. M. History of Public Welfare in New York State 1609-1866.
  • Scruggs, L. A. Women of Distinction. L. A. Scruggs, 1893.
  • Sheffield, Charles A. A History of Florence, Massachusetts. 1895.
  • Stegmar, H. M. Battle Creek: Its Yesterday. Battle Creek, 1931.
  • Sterling, D. Black Foremothers: Three Lives. The Feminist Press, 1979.
  • Stetson, Erlene and Linda David. Glorying in Tribulation: The Life Work of Sojourner Truth. Michigan State University Press, 1994.
  • Still, B. Mirror for Gotham: New York as seen by contemporaries from Dutch days to the present. Fordham University Press, 1980.
  • Stone, W. L. Matthias and His Impostures. New York, 1835.
  • Swain, Gwenyth. Sojourner Truth. Carolrhoda Books, Inc., 2005.
  • Swallow, S. C. Camp Meetings: Their Origins, History and Utility, New York, 1879.
  • Swisshelm, J. G. Crusader and Feminist: Letters of Jane G. Swisshelm, 1858–1865, Hyperion Press, Inc., 1934.
  • Sylvester, N. B. History of Ulster County, New York. Everts & Peck, 1880.
  • Tanner, L. “The Women Want Their Rights.” Voices from Women’s Liberation, pp. 73.
  • Terrell. A Colored Woman in a White World, Washington, DC, 1940.
  • Terrell, C. “The Justice of Woman Suffrage.” The Crisis 22 (1912) Reprinted in The Crisis 90 (June/July 1985).
    • —. “What It Means to Be Colored in the Capital of the U.S. (1906) ” Outspoken Women: Speeches by American Women Reformers 1635-1935. Dubuque, LA:Kendall/Hurt. Originally publ. in The Independent 24 Jun 1907, pp. 181–186.
  • Truth, Sojourner. “Address to Women Suffrage Convention in New York, 1867.” America Through Women’s Eyes. By M. Beard. (pp.116–120).
  • Vae, G. Fanaticism Its Source and Influence, New York, 1835.
  • Vanderbilt, G. L. The Social History of Flatbush, New York, New York, 1881.
  • Washington, B. T. “Atlanta Exposition Address.” Up from Slavery. New York: Doubleday, 1901. (pp. 217–225).
  • Washington: City and Capital. Washington, DC: Federal Writers Project, 1937.
  • Washington, Margaret. Sojourner Truth’s America. University of Illinois Press, 2009.
  • Weisberger, B. A. They Gathered at the River. 1958.
  • Wells, I. B. “A Red Record.” On Lynchings. 1895.
  • Wells-Burnett, I. B. “Southern Horrors Lynch Law in All Its Phases.” On Lynchings in New Orleans. Southern Horrors, A Red Record, Mob Rule in New Orleans. 1892. (pp.4–19). Reprinted by Arno Press, New York, 1969.
  • Wesley, C. H. Negro Americans in Ohio,
    • —. Negro Labor in the U.S. 1850–1926. New York, 1927.
  • Williams, G. History of the Negro Race from 1880–1919, New York, 1883.
  • Wood, S. The Cries of New York, New York, 1822.
  • Woodson, C. A Century of Negro Migration, Washington, DC, 1918.
  • Work, M. A. A Bibliography of the Negro in Africa and America, Argory-Antiquarian, 1965.
  • Wyman, L. B. C. American Chivalry, Boston: W. B. Clarke, 1913.
  • Zimm, L. H. Southeastern New York. (chapter on Ulster County) vol. 1.

 

Children’s/YA Biographies

  • Adler, David A. A Picture Book of Sojourner Truth, Holiday House, 1994.
  • Basil, Bobby. Texting with Sojourner Truth: A Social Activism Biography Book for Kids (Texting with History, #5). Hazelbazel, 2019.
  • Ferris, Jeri Chase). Walking the Road to Freedom: A Story About Sojourner Truth, Carolrhoda Books, 1988.
  • Harrison, Vashti. Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History. Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2017.
  • McDonough, Yona Z. Who Was Sojourner Truth? Penguin Workshop, 2015.
  • McKissack, Patricia and Fredrick McKissack. Sojourner Truth: A Voice for Freedom, Enslow Publishers, 1992.
  • Pinkney, Andrea Davis and Brian Pinkney. Sojourner Truth’s Step-Stomp Stride, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2009.
  • Rockwell, Anne and R. Gregory Christie. Only Passing Through: The Story of Sojourner Truth, Dragonfly Books, 2002.
  • Swain, Gwenyth. Sojourner Truth. Carolrhoda Books, Inc., 2005.
  • Turner, Anne and James E. Ransome. My Name Is Truth: The Life of Sojourner Truth, HarperCollins, 2015.

 

Periodical Articles

  • Allen-Sommerville, L. “Sojourner Truth: the preacher” Religion and Public Education 14 (1987):396-400.
  • Anthony, S. B. “Is It a Crime for a U.S. Citizen to Vote? In an Account of the Proceedings on the Trial of Susan B. Anthony.” Daily Democrat and Chronicle 1974, bookprint ed.:151-78.
  • Aptheker, B., ed. (1901 Exchange between Jane Adams and Ida B. Wells) Lynching and Rape: An Exchange of Views. New York: New York American Institute for Marxist Studies, 1977.
  • Armstrong, J. W. “Candace Anderson’s Sampler of Michigan Women.” Michigan History 70.2 (1986):16-23.
  • Arnesen, Eric. “Patrick Henry & Sojourner Truth. (Dig’s Choice: Influential Political Orators in US History).” Dig (Peterborough, N.H.), vol. 19, no. 5, Cricket Media, May 2017, p. 8–.
  • Bennett, L. “Sojourner Truth.” Ebony 19 (1964):63-64.
  • Biggers, J. “Sojourner Truth” (mural) Black Collegian 61 (1976):28.
  • Brink, B. M. “Sojourner Truth.” Olde Ulster 10.10 (1914):289-303.
  • Burrow, R. Jr. “Sexism in the Black Community and the Black Church.” Journal of the Interdenominational Theological Center. 13 (1986):317-322.
  • Bush, Elizabeth. “My Name Is Truth: The Life of Sojourner Truth by Ann Turner.” Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, vol. 68, no. 7, 2015, pp. 373–374., doi:10.1353/bcc.2015.0168.
    • —. “So Tall Within: Sojourner Truth’s Long Walk Toward Freedom by Gary D. Schmidt (Review).” Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, vol. 72, no. 2, 2018, pp. 91–91.
  • Campbell, K. K, “Stanton’s the Solitude of Self” a Rationale for Feminism.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 66 (1980), pp. 304–312.
    • —. “Femininity and Feminism to Be Or not to Be a Woman.” Communication Quarterly 31 (1983):105-07.
    • —.  “Style and Content in the Rhetoric of Early Afro-American Feminists.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 72.4 (1986):434-445.
  • Campbell, K. &. K. Janieson. Form and Genre Shaping Rhetorical Action. Falls Church, VA: Speech Communication Association, 1978, pp. 9–11.
  • Carter, H. “Sojourner Truth.” Chautauquan 7:477-480.
  • Chittendon, E. “Glorious Old Mother Sojourner Truth.” Black Collegian 8 (1978):14, 16, 82.
  • Collins K. “Shadow and Substance – Truth, Sojourner.” History of Photography 7.3 (1983):183-205.
  • Collins, P. “Selected Portraits from the Great Beautiful Black Women Collection.” (Portrait) Negro History Bulletin 42 (1979):14.
  • Cordley, R. “Sojourner Truth.” Congregationalist (1880): 65.
  • Derby, M. “Sojourner Truth.” Opportunity 18 (1940):167.
  • “Dr. Edelman Pays Tribute to Her Hero Sojourner Truth.” Jet 70 (1986):24.
  • Fish, B. A. “Sojourner Truth: Michigan’s First Black Feminist.” Michigan Academician 17.1 (1984):31-39.
  • Fleming, J. E. “Slavery, Civil War and Reconstuction: A Study of Black Women in Microcosm.” Negro History Bulletin 38.6 (1975):430-433.
  • Gage, F. D. “Ain’t I a Women.” Excerpt from Women Together. American Heritage 27 1976:32-33.
  • Galvin, C. B. “Sojourner Truth, the Libyan Sibyl.” New York Folklore Quarterly 1950.
  • Ges, Miriam. “Sojourner Truth: Bringing Order Out of Chaos.” The Western Journal of Black Studies, vol. 29, no. 4, Washington State University Press, 2005, pp. 682–86.
  • Gilbert, O. “Like Oil on Agitated Waters (Sojourner Truth, a Camp Meeting Conflict)” Sojourners 15.11 (1986):26-27.
  • Grant, J. “A Refusal to Be Silenced (Reflections on Sojourner Truth.)” Sojourners 15.11 (1986):23-25.
  • Grigsby, Darcy. “Negative-Positive Truths.” Representations (Berkeley, Calif.), vol. 113, no. 1, University of California Press, Feb. 2011, pp. 16–38, doi:10.1525/rep.2011.113.1.16.
  • Greyser, Naomi. “Affective Geographies: Sojourner Truth’s ‘Narrative’, Feminism, and the Ethical Bind of Sentimentalism.” American Literature (Print), 2007(79):2, S. 275-305, 2007.
  • Harlowe, M. “Sojourner Truth, the First Sit-In.” Negro History Bulletin 29 (1966):173-174.
  • Hayes, K. “Sojourner Truth: Theater with a Conscience.” (Photography) Other Side 22.3 (1986):9.
  • Hendricks, H. “Sojourner Truth.” National Magazine (New York)16 (1891):665.
  • Hine, D. C. “An Angle of Vision: Black Women and the United States Constitution, 1787-1987.” Magazine of History 3.1 (1988):7-13.
  • Hirsch, L. H. “New York and the Negro, from 1783–1865.” Journal of Negro History, Oct. 1931.
  • Hollyday J. “Ain’t I a Woman: Sojourner Truth.” Sojourners 15.11 (1986):4, 14-25.
  • Jackson-Opoku, Sandra. “In the Footsteps of Sojourner Truth: [Part 1].” Ms, 2003(13):3, S. 46-51, 2003.
  • Jacobs, W. J. “Mother, Aunt Susan and Me.” Ms 9 (1981): 61-64.
  • Jordan, J. “Sojourner Truth.” (Poem) Black Collegian 9 (1979):92.
  • Kent, R. L. “Isabella: The Story of Sojourner Truth.” Negro Digest 11 (1962):15-24.
  • Krass, Peter. Sojourner Truth. Melrose Square Pub, 1990.
  • Larkins, A. G. “Hero, Place and Value: Using Biography and Story in Elementary Social Studies.” Georgia Social Science Journal 19.1 (1988):6-10.
  • Lebedun, J. “Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Interest in Sojourner Truth, Black Feminist.” American Literature: A Journal of Literary History, Criticism, and BIbliography 46(1974): 359-63.
  • Lindsey, A. G. “Economic Condition of Negroes of New York Prior to 1861.” Journal of Negro History Apr. 1921: pp. 190–99.
  • Black Feminist.” American Literature 46 (1974):359-363.
  • Lowe B. “The Family of Sojourner Truth.” New York Folklore Quarterly 12 (1956):127-135.
  • Lowe, B. “The Family of Sojourner Truth.” Michigan Heritage 3:Summer 1962:181-185.
    • —. “Michigan Days of Sojourner Truth.” New York Folklore Quarterly 12 (1956):127-135.
  • Mabee, C. “Sojourner Truth, Bold Prophet: Why Did She Never Learn to Read?” New York History 69.1 (1988):55-77.
    • —. “Truth, Sojourner and Lincoln.” New England Quarterly – a Historical Review of New England Life and Letters 61.4 (1988):519-529.
  • Mandziuk, Roseann. “‘Grotesque and Ludicrous, but Yet Inspiring’: Depictions of Sojourner Truth and Rhetorics of Domination.” The Quarterly Journal of Speech, vol. 100, no. 4, Routledge, Oct. 2014, pp. 467–87, doi:10.1080/00335630.2014.989896.
  • McDade, T. M. “Matthias, Prophet Without Honor.” New York Historical Society Quarterly 62.4 (1978):311-334.
  • McKissack, Pat, and Fredrick McKissack. Sojourner Truth Ain’t I a Woman? Scholastic, 1992.
  • Meeks, C. “Then I Will Speak Upon the Ashes.” Sojourners Dec. 1986:25-27.
  • Miller, L. M. “Aunt Laura – the Story of Laura Haviland.” Northwest Ohio Quarterly Autumn, 1952.
  • Norment, L. “Ten Most Unforgettable Black Women.” (Photograph) Ebony 45 (1990):104+
  • Northrup, A. J. “Slavery in New York.” State Library Bulletin. History 4. Albany, 1900.
  • Nye, R. B. “Marins Robinson a Forgotten Abolitionist Leader.” Ohio State Archeology and History Quarterly 55 (1946)
  • Olson, E. “Social Aspects of the Slave in New York.” Journal of Negro History Jan. 1941.
  • Painter, N. “Sojourner Truth in Life and Memory: Writing the Biography of an American Exotic.”Gender and History 2.1 (1990):3-16.
  • Painter, Nell I. “Representing Truth: Sojourner Truth’s Knowing and Becoming Known.” The Journal of American History, vol. 81, no. 2, 1994, pp. 461. ProQuest, https://libdatabase.newpaltz.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libdatabase.newpaltz.edu/docview/224915820?accountid=12761.
  • Penn, R. T. “Afro Americans in the Struggle for Woman Suffrage.” Diss. Howard University, 1977.
  • Porter, D. “Anti-Slavery Movement in Northampton.” Negro History Bulletin 24.2 (1960):33-34 &41.
    • —, ed. “Sojourner Truth Calls Upon the President: An 1864 Letter.” Massachusetts Review 13.1/2 (1972):297-299.
  • Ritter, E. J. “Sojourner Truth.” Negro History Bulletin 26 (1963):254.
  • Roy, J. H. “Sojourner Truth for Young People “ Negro History Bulletin 24 (1961):164.
  • Schaehere, M. “Sojourner Truth’s House of Bondage Honors Her Memory.” Ulster, a Regional Magazine (1989):43-49.
  • Schroeder, T. “Mathias the Prophet (1788-1837) a Contribution to the Study of the Erotogenesis of Religion.” Journal of Religious Psychology 6 (1913):59-65.
  • Shafer, E. “Sojourner Truth: A Self-Made Woman.” American History Illustrated 8.9 (1974):34-39.
  • Smiet, K.  “Post/secular Truths: Sojourner Truth and the Intersections of Gender, Race, and Religion.” The European Journal of Women’s Studies, vol. 22, no. 1, SAGE Publications, 2015, pp. 7–21, doi:10.1177/1350506814544914.
  • Smith, G. F. “Sojourner Truth-Listener to the Voice.” Negro History Bulletin 36.3 (1973):63-65.
  • Smucker, D. “To Rock This Nation like a Cradle: Religious Transformations of the Black Woman, Sojourner Truth,” ed. by S. Setta. Women’s Caucus-Religious Studies Newsletter 5 (1978):1, 4-6.
  • “Statue of Sojourner Truth by Oliver LaGrove of Detroit, Michigan.” (Photograph) Negro History Bulletin 30 (1967):14.
  • Stowe, H. B. “Sojourner Truth, the Libyan Sibyl.” Atlantic 11:473.
  • Stanton, E. C. “Speech to the Anniversary of the American Anti-Slavery Society, May 1860.” The Liberator 18 May 1860:78.
  • Terry, E. D. “Sojourner Truth: The Person Behind the Libyan Sibyl.” Massachusetts Review 26.2-3 (1985):425-444.
  • “University of California, San Diego Honors Sojourner Truth.” The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, BruCon Publishing Company, Feb. 2015.
  • Van Dale, R., ed. “Religion, the Republic, and the Commonwealth.” Religion and Public Education 14 (1987):339-408.
  • VanderHaagen, Sara. “Practical Truths: Black Feminist Agency and Public Memory in Biographies for Children.” Women’s Studies in Communication, vol. 35, no. 1, Taylor & Francis Group, Jan. 2012, pp. 18–41, doi:10.1080/07491409.2012.668101.
  • Van De Vere, E. K. “The Heart of the Lake Union.” Lake Union Herald (1976).
  • Van Deusen, J. “The Exodus of 1879.” Journal of Negro History Apr. 1936: pp. 111–129.
  • Wagner, G. A. “Sojourner Truth:God’s Appointed Apostle of Reform.” Southern Speech Journal 28 (1962):123-30.
  • Walker, A. “She Smiles Within My Smile (Inspiration of Sojourner Truth)” Sojourners 15.11 (1986):22.
  • Washington, Margaret. “Going Where They Dare Not Follow: Race, Religion, and Sojourner Truth’s Early Interracial Reform.” The Journal of African American History, vol. 98, no. 1, The Association for the Study of African-American Life and History, Jan. 2013, pp. 48–71, doi:10.5323/jafriamerhist.98.1.0048.
  • White, W. “Sojourner Truth: Friend of Freedom.” New Republic 118 (1948):15-18.
  • Wyman, L. B. C. “Sojourner Truth.” New England Magazine 24 (1901):59-66.
  • Yellin, S. F. “Sojourner Truth.” (poem) Freedomways 2 (1962):186-187.
  • Zackodnik, Teresa. “‘I Don’t Know How You Will Feel When I Get through’: Racial Difference, Women’s Rights, and Sojourner Truth.” Feminist Studies., Feminist Studies, 2004.

 

Modified 2021-04-29