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Participant name: leigh fought

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Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
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FT-270345-20Research Programs: Summer StipendsLeigh Katherine FoughtA Biography of Sally Hemings (1773-1835): Given Her Time7/1/2020 - 5/31/2021$6,000.00LeighKatherineFought   Le Moyne CollegeSyracuseNY13214-1300USA2020U.S. HistorySummer StipendsResearch Programs6000060000

On-site research at Monticello for a short biography of Sally Hemings, one of Thomas Jefferson’s most historically notable slaves.

This biography will tell the life story of Sally Hemings, the Anglo-African woman claimed by Thomas Jefferson as a slave, who was half-sister to his dead wife, mother to his five youngest children, and a member of an extensive kinship network of African Americans centered on his Monticello plantation. As such, the book will also be an introduction to race, gender, slavery, and freedom in the first fifty years of the American republic. The chapters will follow the chronology of Hemings’s life from her birth in 1773 until her death around 1835, with each focusing on a key question that has perplexed historians who have written about her. The final chapter will look at the ways she has been interpreted at the Monticello historical site and in popular culture.

FT-58955-11Research Programs: Summer StipendsLeigh Katherine FoughtFrederick Douglass's Women6/1/2011 - 7/31/2011$6,000.00LeighKatherineFought   Montgomery College Takoma Park CampusTakoma ParkMD20912USA2011U.S. HistorySummer StipendsResearch Programs6000060000

I am requesting funding for research for a portion of a book project, Frederick Douglass’s Women, which is under contract with Oxford University Press for publication in 2013. Frederick Douglass’s Women adopts a new biographical approach to the life of black abolitionist Frederick Douglass by focusing upon his relationships with the women who influenced him over the course of his life. The portion of the book to be covered by this grant will focus upon Douglass's life in Rochester, New York, in an effort to reconstruct the lives of his wife and daughter, their relationship to Rochester's black community, and the intersection of Douglass's activism and private life through his relationships with the female abolitionists and women's rights activists who lived there.