Charlotte Forten Grimke on Books

Charlotte Forten Grimke

 Charlotte Forten Grimke was born in 1838 to a wealthy black family in Philadelphia. All her life she was a lover of books and a vociferous opponent of prejudice based on skin color. When she was twenty-two she became ill and had to give up her job as a teacher in Salem, Massachusetts. Unable to be active, she read voraciously, often a book a day, recording her thoughts in her journal.

“…how blessed it is to know that all the wealth of the ages can be ours, if we choose to grasp it! That we can live, not in this century, this corner of the world, alone, but in every century, every age, and every clime! That we can listen to the words of orators, poets, and sages; that we can enter into every conflict, share every joy, thrill with every noble deed, known since the world began. And hence are books to us a treasure and a blessing unspeakable. And they are doubly so when one is shut out from society as I am, and has not the opportunities to study those living, breathing, human books, which are, I doubt not, after all, the most profoundly interesting and useful study.”   Charlotte L. Forten,  January 1, 1860 [From The Journal of Charlotte L. Forten: A Young Black Woman’s Reactions to the White World of the Civil War Era Dryden Press 1953]

Charlotte Forten Grimke with Book

 

Read more of her writings: The Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimke

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5 Comments

  1. Fascinating post. Thank you for making known women most of us would never otherwise have heard of.

    1. Author

      Thank you, Kathleen. There are so many incredible women who have been neglected for all too long.

      1. There are, indeed. In school (all right, dinosaurs still walked the earth, but even so…) we usually learned only about the women who did womanly things or charitable work. Dorothea Dix, Clara Barton, Pocahontas, Betsy Ross. Maybe Florence Nightingale and Amelia Earhardt (probably because she vanished). Molly Pitcher, the 1,100 WASPs who ferried military planes, and my own favorite, Sybil Ludington, whose ride was longer and harder than Paul Revere’s..

        1. Author

          The thing is, even those women who we were taught about in school had sides to them that were never mentioned. Clara Barton plays an important role in my next novel, but not in the way you think, as does Susan B. Anthony. Cool fact: Anthony hated the B to be used in her name.

          1. That is a cool fact, indeed.

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