Ann Eliza Hammond
Appearance
Ann Eliza Hammond (born c. 1816) was an African American student from Providence, Rhode Island.[1] She attended Prudence Crandall's Canterbury Female Boarding School and was subpoenaed[2] and arrested in 1833 for vagrancy as a result of Connecticut opposition to the school's attempt at desegregation. Her father, Thomas Hammond, had died in 1826.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "A Canterbury Tale: A Document Package for Connecticut's Prudence Crandall Affair". September 1833. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
- ^ "Who Are Now the Savages?". The Liberator. newspapers.com. 18 May 1833. p. 2. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
Further reading
[edit]- McBurney, Christian (2020). "Prudence Crandall, Sarah Harris Fayerweather and Ann Hammond: Their Pre-Civil War Struggle for Equality for Black People". Small State, Big History. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
- Williams, Donald E. Jr. (2016). Prudence Crandall's legacy: the fight for equality in the 1830s, Dred Scott, and Brown v. Board of Education (First paperback ed.). Middletown, Connecticut. ISBN 9780819576460.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Baumgartner, Kabria (1 January 2019). "Love and Justice: African American Women, Education, and Protest in Antebellum New England". Journal of Social History. 52 (3): 652–676. doi:10.1093/jsh/shy019.