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  1. Harriet Robinson Scott (c. 1820 – June 17, 1876) was an African American woman who fought for her freedom alongside her husband, Dred Scott, for eleven years. Their legal battle culminated in the infamous United States Supreme Court decision Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1857.

  2. Harriet Robinson Scott was an enslaved woman whose determination to free herself and her family made history. She and her husband, Dred Scott, spent years living in free territory in what is now Minnesota. In the 1840s, the Scotts sued for their freedom in Missouri.

  3. Life Story: Harriet Robinson Scott (ca. 1815-1876) A Personal Fight for Emancipation with National Ramifications. The story of the enslaved woman who challenged slavery in the highest court in the United States. Print Page. “Eliza and Lizzie, children of Dred Scott, Dred Scott, and his wife Harriet”

  4. 11 de ene. de 2014 · Harriet Robinson Scott was an enslaved person who is best remembered for being the second wife of Dred Scott. Harriet was born a slave on a Virginia plantation around 1820. From a young age she was a servant to Lawrence Taliaferro, a US Indian Agent.

  5. Harriet Robinson Scott was an enslaved woman who tried for more than a decade to gain her freedom through the court system. In separate cases that were later combined, Harriet Scott and her husband, Dred, sued for their freedom before several courts in Missouri.

  6. Harriet Scott. Harriet Robinson Scott was born around 1820 in Virginia, or perhaps Pennsylvania, it is unclear as yet. As a young girl, she was taught by her mother, who worked at an inn owned by the Dillon family, to do laundry.

  7. Harriet Robinson Scott. *The birth of Harriet Robinson Scott is celebrated on this date in c. 1820. She was a Black domestic who fought for her freedom alongside her husband, Dred Scott. Born into slavery, Harriet Robinson was brought from Pennsylvania to the Northwest Territory by Indian agent and slaveholder Lawrence Taliaferro in 1835.