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  1. Louisa Matilda Jacobs (October 19, 1833 – April 5, 1917) was an African-American abolitionist and civil rights activist and the daughter of famed escaped slave and author, Harriet Jacobs. Along with her activism, she also worked as a teacher in Freedmen's Schools in the South, and as a matron at Howard University .

  2. In the fall of 1863 her daughter Louisa Matilda who had been trained as a teacher, came to Alexandria in the company of Virginia Lawton, a black friend of the Jacobs family. After some struggle with white missionaries from the North who wanted to take control of the school, the Jacobs School opened in January 1864 under Louisa ...

  3. Las dos mujeres acordaron un período de prueba de una semana, sin sospechar que la relación entre las dos familias duraría 75 años, hasta la muerte de Louisa Matilda Jacobs en la casa de Edith Willis Grinnell, la hija de Nathaniel Willis y su segunda esposa, en 1917.

  4. Louisa Matilda Jacobs (* 1832 oder 1833 in Edenton (North Carolina) [2]; † 5. April 1917 in Brookline (Massachusetts)) war eine afroamerikanische Lehrerin und Bürgerrechtlerin.

  5. Louisa Matilda Jacobs was an African-American abolitionist and civil rights activist and the daughter of famed escaped slave and author, Harriet Jacobs. Along with her activism, she also worked as a teacher in Freedmen's Schools in the South, and as a matron at Howard University.

  6. 24 de ago. de 2015 · Louisa “Lulu” Matilda Jacobs, teacher, equal rights activist, and entrepreneur, was born a slave in Edenton, North Carolina, on October 19, 1833. She was the daughter of congressman and newspaper editor Samuel Tredwell Sawyer and his mixed-race enslaved mistress Harriet Jacobs.

  7. Louisa Matilda Jacobs was born to Harriet Jacobs in Edenton, North Carolina, on October 19, 1833. Because her mother had been willed to the daughter of Dr. James Norcom, and children followed the condition of the mother, Louisa, too, was enslaved.