In 1826, a mother discovered her 5-year-old son had been sold illegally and taken hundreds of miles away. She had no money, no power, no rights. But she had something stronger: a fire that refused to die. Her name was Sojourner Truth, and she was about to do the impossible. She would become the first black woman in American history to sue a white man in court—and win.

In the spring of 1828, in a small courthouse in Kingston, New York, something happened that had never happened before in the history of the United States. A black woman born into slavery stood before a white judge and demanded the return of her child. She had no money. She could not read or write. She had never been inside a courtroom in her life. And she was about to do the impossible. She was about to win.

Her name was Isabella. The world would later know her as Sojourner Truth. But on that day in March 1828, she was simply a mother fighting for her son. A mother who refused to accept that her child had been stolen from her and sold into the Deep South. A mother who walked into a system designed to crush people like her and, somehow, against all odds, walked out victorious.

This is her story. The story of the first black woman in American history to sue a white man and win.

The Hudson Valley of New York in the late 1700s was a land of contradictions. Rolling hills and fertile farmland stretched along the great river. Dutch and English settlers had built prosperous farms and estates. Churches stood at the center of small villages. And on those farms, in those houses, beside those churches, slavery existed. Not the massive plantation slavery of the South, but slavery nonetheless. Families owned other families. Human beings bought and sold other human beings. Children were separated from their mothers and sold like livestock.

It was into this world that Isabella was born, sometime around 1797. The exact date is unknown because no one bothered to record the births of enslaved children with precision. She was born on the estate of Colonel Johannes Hardenbergh, a wealthy Dutch landowner in Ulster County, in a hilly area the Dutch called Swartekill, about 95 miles north of New York City. Her parents were James and Elizabeth Baumfree. The name Baumfree was Dutch, meaning “tree.” Her father had been given this name because of his tall stature. James and Elizabeth had been captured in Africa and brought to this strange land against their will. They had perhaps ten or twelve children over the years, though Isabella never knew the exact number. Many of her siblings were sold away before she was old enough to remember them.

In the cellar of the Hardenbergh estate, in a cold, damp space beneath the main house, James and Elizabeth raised their youngest daughter. There was no bed. There were no windows. The floor was dirt. The walls were stone. Water seeped in when it rained. The only light came from a small opening that led to the outside. This was home for the first years of Isabella’s life.

She grew up speaking Dutch. It was the only language her parents knew. It was the only language spoken on the Hardenbergh estate. Later, this would cause her tremendous suffering when she was sold to English-speaking owners who could not understand her and who beat her for not understanding them.

In 1806, when Isabella was about nine years old, Colonel Hardenbergh died. His estate was divided among his heirs, and the enslaved people he owned were sold at auction. Isabella watched as her family was torn apart. She stood on the auction block with a flock of sheep and was sold together with the animals for $100. $100 for a child. $100 for a human life.

Her new owner was John Neely of Kingston, New York. Neely spoke only English. Isabella spoke only Dutch. When she could not understand his commands, he beat her. When she responded in the only language she knew, he beat her again. Years later, she would describe the scars that covered her back from those beatings. She never forgot the pain. She never forgot the helplessness of being a child, alone, unable to communicate, unable to escape the violence that rained down upon her.

After about two years of this torment, she was sold again. Martinus Schryver, a tavern keeper in Kingston, paid $105 for her. The atmosphere in his tavern was crude and morally questionable, but it was safer than the Neely farm. Isabella began to learn English during her time there, picking up words and phrases from the customers who came and went. But in 1810, she was sold once more. John Dumont of New Paltz, New York, paid $175 for the thirteen-year-old girl. She would remain with the Dumont family for the next sixteen years. These years would shape everything that came after.

John Dumont was not the worst owner Isabella had known. Compared to John Neely, he seemed almost kind. He recognized her intelligence and her capacity for hard work. He sometimes praised her abilities. But his wife, Sally Dumont, was a different matter entirely. Mrs. Dumont seemed to take pleasure in making Isabella’s life miserable. She criticized everything Isabella did. She accused her of laziness and incompetence. She made it clear that she considered the enslaved woman beneath contempt.

The details of what Isabella suffered at the hands of Mrs. Dumont remain largely hidden. In her later autobiography—dictated to a friend because she never learned to read or write—Isabella spoke only vaguely of the cruelties she endured. Historians have speculated about what she left unsaid. Sexual abuse was common for enslaved women. The constant threat of violence hung over every interaction. Whatever specific torments Isabella experienced, they left deep scars on her soul.

Despite the hardships, Isabella found ways to survive. She found comfort in religion, developing a deep and personal relationship with God. She learned to pray, speaking aloud to the divine when she was scared or hurt. This faith would sustain her through everything that was to come. It would give her the courage to do things that seemed impossible. It would convince her that she was not alone, even when everyone and everything seemed to be against her.

Around 1815, when Isabella was about eighteen years old, she was married to an enslaved man named Thomas. The marriage was arranged by John Dumont, as was common practice. Thomas was older than Isabella and enslaved on the same property. Together they had five children over the next decade: Diana, born around 1815; Peter, born around 1821 or 1822; Elizabeth, born around 1823; Sophia, born around 1824; and another child who died in infancy.

Isabella loved her children with fierce devotion, but she lived in constant fear. She knew that at any moment, any one of them could be sold away from her. She had watched her own siblings disappear. She had heard the stories of mothers who never saw their children again. This fear was the constant companion of every enslaved parent. It was a fear that never went away.

Meanwhile, the laws of New York were slowly changing. In 1799, the state had passed a law for the gradual abolition of slavery. Under this law, children born to enslaved mothers after July 4, 1799, would eventually become free. Boys would be freed at age twenty-eight. Girls would be freed at age twenty-five. It was a slow process designed to protect the property rights of slaveholders while gradually ending the institution. But for people like Isabella, who had been born before the law was passed, it offered no immediate hope.

Then in 1817, a new law was passed. This law set July 4, 1827, as the date when all remaining slaves in New York would be emancipated. For the first time, Isabella could see an end to her bondage. In ten years, she would be free. Her children, born after 1799, would also eventually gain their freedom, though they would have to wait until they reached the specified ages.

But John Dumont made Isabella a promise that changed everything. He told her that if she worked faithfully and well, he would release her one year early—on July 4, 1826. He would give her a cabin and a small plot of land where she could live with her husband, Thomas. After all her years of loyal service, she would finally have something of her own.

Isabella worked harder than ever. She spun wool. She cooked. She cleaned. She labored in the fields. She did everything Dumont asked and more. She believed his promise. She trusted that he would keep his word.

But in the winter of 1825, Isabella suffered a serious injury. She hurt her hand badly, and for weeks she could not work as effectively as before. When July 4, 1826, arrived and Isabella approached Dumont about his promise, he refused to honor it. He claimed that because of her injured hand, she had not given him the full amount of work she owed. He would not free her until the following year, as the law required.

Isabella was devastated. She had believed him. She had trusted him. And he had broken his word.

Something inside her shifted that day. Something hardened. She had spent her entire life obeying the rules that white people set for her. She had done everything right. And still she had been betrayed.

She made a decision. She would not wait another year. She would take her freedom for herself.

In the late autumn of 1826, Isabella made her move. She did not run away in the night like a fugitive. She did not sneak off in fear. Instead, she waited until she had spun one hundred pounds of wool, completing the work she felt she owed Dumont. Then one morning at dawn, she picked up her infant daughter, Sophia, and walked away.

Years later, she would describe this moment with simple dignity. “I did not run away,” she said. “I walked away by daylight.”

She did not walk far. She had nowhere to go. She had no money, no friends, no resources. But she knew of a family that might help her. Isaac and Maria Van Wagenen were known abolitionists who lived nearby. They did not believe in slavery. Isabella walked to their door and asked for help.

The Van Wagenens took her in. When John Dumont came looking for his property, Isaac Van Wagenen made him an offer. He would pay Dumont $20 for Isabella’s services until July 4, 1827, when the Emancipation Law would set her free. Dumont agreed. Isabella was not technically free, but she was safe. She was out of Dumont’s house. She was away from his wife’s cruelty. And she was only months away from legal freedom.

But Isabella had not been able to bring all her children with her. Her older children were bound by their own terms of service to Dumont and other families. And her young son, Peter, about five years old, remained behind. This separation tormented her. Every day she thought of him. Every night she prayed for his safety.

Then, in the autumn of 1826, she learned something that shattered her world.

John Dumont had sold Peter.

The circumstances of the sale were complicated and horrifying. Dumont had transferred Peter to Dr. Elisa Gedney of Newburgh, New York, for $20. Gedney had planned to take the boy to New York City, possibly with the intention of traveling to England. But when those plans fell through, Gedney decided the boy was too young and too much trouble. So he sold Peter to his brother, Solomon Gedney. Solomon Gedney did not want Peter either. So he sold the child again, this time to his brother-in-law, a wealthy plantation owner from Alabama named Fowler.

Peter was gone. Sold to the Deep South. Sold to a cotton plantation a thousand miles away. Sold into a form of slavery that made the Hudson Valley version seem almost gentle by comparison.

When Isabella learned what had happened, something inside her broke, and something else caught fire. She knew exactly what this meant. Alabama was not New York. There was no gradual emancipation law in Alabama. There was no July 4, 1827, waiting for Peter. If her son remained in Alabama, he would be enslaved for the rest of his life. He would work in the cotton fields until he died. He would never see his mother again. He would never know freedom.

Isabella’s grief was overwhelming. She screamed. She cried. She felt the weight of absolute helplessness crushing her. What could she do? She was one woman. She had no money. She had no power. She could not read or write. How could she possibly fight against wealthy white men who had sold her child like a piece of property?

She went to the Dumonts to confront them. She demanded they return her son. They laughed at her. Mrs. Dumont, the woman who had tormented Isabella for years, was particularly cruel. “A fine fuss to make about a little n—–,” she reportedly said. “Making such a fuss about a little n—–. Why, you have as many of them left as you can take care of.”

But Isabella was not deterred. She went to the Gedneys. She pleaded with them to help her get Peter back. They refused. Solomon Gedney claimed he had done nothing wrong. He said the sale was perfectly legal. He told Isabella to stop making trouble and go away.

Isabella should have given up. Everything in her world told her that she had no chance. Black people could not sue white people. Enslaved women could not challenge the property rights of wealthy men. The legal system was not designed for people like her. It was designed to keep people like her in their place.

But Isabella had something that her oppressors did not understand. She had faith. Not just faith in God, but faith in herself. Faith that what had been done was wrong. Faith that there must be some way to make it right.

She sought help from the Quakers. The Religious Society of Friends, as they were formally known, had long opposed slavery. Many Quakers actively worked to help enslaved people gain their freedom. Isabella found a group of Quaker abolitionists who listened to her story and were moved by her determination. They told her something extraordinary.

They told her that what the Gedneys had done was actually illegal.

New York law prohibited the sale of enslaved people out of state for the purpose of keeping them in bondage. Peter had been protected by this law. His sale to Alabama was a crime. And that meant Isabella had grounds to sue.

But how does an illiterate, penniless black woman sue a wealthy white family in 1827? How does she navigate a legal system that has never been designed to serve her? How does she find lawyers who will take her case? How does she pay for their services?

The Quakers helped her. They pooled their resources. They found lawyers willing to represent her. They explained to Isabella what she needed to do. And they told her to go to the courthouse in Kingston and present her case to the grand jury.

Isabella had never been inside a courthouse. She did not know what a grand jury was. She had no formal education, no experience with legal proceedings, no understanding of the complex rules and procedures that governed the courts. But she had her story. She had the truth. And she had her unshakable conviction that her son had been stolen from her.

She walked to Kingston. It was the same town where she had been sold as a child with a flock of sheep. It was the same town where she had been beaten for not understanding English. Now she returned as a woman on a mission—not as property, but as a plaintiff.

At the courthouse, she asked for the grand jury. Someone directed her to the correct room. She walked in and faced a group of white men who had probably never seen a black woman demand anything from them.

And she began to speak.

Isabella’s voice was powerful. It carried across the room. It demanded attention. In later years, when she became famous as Sojourner Truth, people would describe her voice as deep, guttural, powerful. They would say that when she spoke, everyone listened. Whether speaking to a handful of jurors or a crowd of thousands, she had a presence that commanded respect.

She told them what had happened. She told them about Peter. She told them about the illegal sale. She told them that her son had been taken from her and sent to Alabama. She told them that she wanted him back.

One of the jurors was moved by her testimony. He asked her to step into a private room and tell her story again. There, she was asked to swear an oath that Peter was indeed her child. She swore. She was then asked to provide more details about the sale, about the Gedneys, about where Peter had been taken. The wheels of justice began to turn.

But they turned slowly.

On March 1, 1828, Isabella’s lawyers filed a formal legal action. The document was called a writ of habeas corpus. The Latin phrase means “you have the body.” It is one of the oldest and most fundamental legal protections in the English legal system. It requires anyone holding a person in custody to bring that person before a judge and justify the detention. If no lawful reason can be given, the person must be released.

Isabella’s lawyers argued that Peter was being held unlawfully. They argued that the sale to Alabama violated New York law. They demanded that Solomon Gedney, who had arranged the sale, produce the child before the court.

The lawyers who represented Isabella were named Herman M. Romeyn and John Van Buren. The case was heard by Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck, a commissioner of the New York Supreme Court. These names may not be famous today, but they should be remembered. They were white men who chose to help a black woman fight for her rights at a time when such help was rare and dangerous.

Solomon Gedney received the legal summons and realized he was in serious trouble. The charge was essentially kidnapping. If convicted, he could face criminal penalties. He had not anticipated this outcome. He had assumed that the sale of a black child would go unnoticed and unchallenged. He had assumed that no one would care. He was wrong.

Gedney quickly contacted his brother-in-law Fowler in Alabama. He arranged to have Peter sent back to New York. The boy would be produced before the court, and Gedney would claim that nothing illegal had happened. He would deny everything and hope for the best.

Peter arrived back in New York sometime in March 1828. He had been in Alabama for nearly a year and a half. He was about seven years old. And he was not the same child who had been taken from his mother.

A hearing was scheduled for March 14, 1828, before Commissioner Hasbrouck. Isabella would finally see her son. But what she saw broke her heart.

She arrived at the courthouse and waited. The lawyers presented their arguments. Solomon Gedney denied that he had done anything wrong. He claimed that the sale was legitimate, that no laws had been broken, that the whole affair was a misunderstanding. And then they brought Peter in.

Isabella looked at her son. She expected him to run to her. She expected him to cry out with joy at seeing his mother. She expected the reunion she had dreamed about for eighteen long months.

Instead, Peter screamed. He grabbed Solomon Gedney’s leg and clung to it. He shouted that Gedney was his master. He said he did not know this woman. He said he had no mother here. He did not want to go with her.

Isabella was stunned. What had they done to her child? What had happened in Alabama that made him deny his own mother?

The judge noticed something else. Peter had scars. There was a large scar on his forehead. There was another scar on his cheek. The judge asked Peter how he had gotten these wounds. Peter said a horse had kicked him on the forehead. He said he had gotten the scar on his cheek by running into a carriage. The judge was not convinced. He ordered Peter to look at him directly when answering questions, not at Solomon Gedney. He pressed the boy for more details.

Slowly, the truth began to emerge. Peter had been brutally abused in Alabama. He had been beaten repeatedly. The scars on his face were not from accidents. They were from violence. And the boy had been so traumatized, so terrified, that he had learned to deny his own family and cling to his abusers. It was a survival mechanism. It was the desperate adaptation of a child who had learned that defiance brought pain and submission brought survival.

Isabella understood. She did not blame Peter. She saw the fear in his eyes. She saw the way he flinched at sudden movements. She saw what Alabama had done to her son.

The judge saw it, too. Commissioner Hasbrouck listened to all the testimony. He considered the evidence. He looked at the scarred child who had been illegally sold into slavery and brutally abused. And he made his ruling.

The words he spoke that day would echo through history.

“The boy is to be delivered into the hands of his mother,” the judge declared. “He shall have no other master, no other controller, no other conductor, but his mother.”

Isabella had won.

She was the first black woman in American history to sue a white man for the return of a family member—and win. She had done what everyone told her was impossible. She had challenged the system. She had demanded justice. And she had received it.

The court documents from this case were lost for nearly 200 years. Historians knew the case existed because Isabella later described it in her autobiography. But the actual legal papers disappeared into the archives and were forgotten. It was not until 2022 that archivists at the New York State Archives rediscovered the original documents, including Isabella’s own affidavit and the judge’s order releasing Peter.

The discovery was remarkable. Here was physical evidence of a moment when an enslaved woman used the legal system to fight back against her oppressors. Here was proof that even in the darkest periods of American history, there were people who demanded justice—and sometimes received it.

Isabella took Peter home with her. The reunion she had dreamed of was nothing like what she had imagined. Her son was traumatized. He was terrified. He had been conditioned to fear and distrust. It would take time to undo the damage that had been done. But he was alive. He was free. He was with his mother.

In the weeks and months that followed, Peter slowly began to heal. The terror in his eyes faded. He stopped flinching at every sudden movement. He began to remember who he was and where he had come from. He began to trust his mother again.

And Isabella began to tell her story. She began to speak about what had happened to her. She began to testify about the cruelties of slavery, about the illegal sale of her son, about her fight to get him back. She discovered that she had a powerful voice. She discovered that when she spoke, people listened.

She was not yet Sojourner Truth. That transformation would come later. But the foundation had been laid. The woman who would become one of the most famous abolitionists and women’s rights advocates in American history had discovered her power. She had walked into a courtroom with nothing but her faith and her determination. She had faced wealthy white men who held all the power. She had demanded justice. And she had won.

The story of Isabella’s court case is remarkable enough on its own. But it was only the beginning. Her life would take her far from the Hudson Valley, far from the farms and courthouses of New York. She would travel across America, speaking to crowds of thousands, challenging injustice wherever she found it. She would meet presidents. She would inspire generations. She would become a symbol of resistance and hope.

But that is the story of part two. For now, let us pause and consider what Isabella accomplished in 1828.

She was about thirty years old. She was illiterate. She was a single mother with multiple children. She had spent her entire life as property, subject to the whims of others, with no legal rights and no recognized humanity. And yet, when her son was stolen, she did not accept it. She did not surrender to the hopelessness that should have overwhelmed her. She found allies. She learned about the law. She navigated a legal system that was never meant to serve her.

And she won.

The same woman who had been sold for $100 with a flock of sheep had used the legal system to defeat some of the most powerful men in her community. The same woman who had been beaten for not understanding English had spoken in court and convinced a judge to rule in her favor. The same woman who had been told that black people had “no rights which the white man was bound to respect” had proven that she had rights, and those rights would be respected.

It was a victory that should have been impossible. It was a victory that pointed toward a different future. It was a victory that demonstrated, even in the darkest times, the power of one person who refuses to give up.

Peter’s scars would fade, but they would never completely disappear. The physical marks of his abuse gradually healed, but the emotional wounds went deeper. In the years that followed, Peter struggled. He got into trouble. He had difficulty adjusting to life as a free person. The trauma of his childhood followed him like a shadow.

In 1839, when Peter was about eighteen years old, he made a decision that would haunt his mother for the rest of her life. He enlisted to work on a whaling ship. He told Isabella that he needed to get away, to find himself, to escape the past. She let him go, though it tore her apart.

Over the next three years, Isabella received three letters from Peter. He was somewhere in the vast Pacific Ocean, hunting whales, living a life she could barely imagine. The letters were brief and sporadic, but they were evidence that he was alive, that he was surviving, that he had not forgotten her.

Then the letters stopped.

In 1842, Peter’s ship returned to port without him. He was not aboard. No one could explain what had happened. Had he died at sea? Had he deserted? Had he been killed? Isabella never found out. She never saw her son again. She never learned what happened to the child she had fought so hard to save.

This tragedy shaped everything that came after. The boy she had rescued from Alabama, the boy she had fought for in court, the boy she had dreamed about during those endless months of separation simply vanished. He became one more loss in a life filled with losses. He became one more wound that never fully healed.

But Isabella did not let grief destroy her. She channeled her pain into purpose. She took the strength she had discovered in that Kingston courtroom and used it to fight for others. She became a voice for the voiceless. She became a champion for the oppressed.

She became Sojourner Truth.

The transformation began in 1843. Isabella was living in New York City, working as a domestic servant, still processing the losses she had endured. Peter was gone. Her other children were scattered. The life she had imagined for herself had not materialized. She was free, but freedom had brought its own burdens.

On June 1, 1843—Pentecost Sunday—Isabella woke up with a sense of divine calling. She felt that God was speaking to her, telling her to leave the city and travel through the countryside, preaching and bearing witness to the truth. She felt called to a higher purpose. She gathered a few possessions into a pillowcase. She said goodbye to the people she knew. And she walked out of New York City, heading north and east into an uncertain future.

She also gave herself a new name. She would no longer be Isabella Baumfree, the name she had used in bondage. She would no longer be Isabella Van Wagenen, the name she had taken from the family that had sheltered her. She would be Sojourner Truth. A sojourner is a traveler, someone who does not stay in one place. And truth was what she intended to speak.

“The Spirit calls me,” she told her friends, “and I must go.”

Sojourner Truth walked out of New York City in the summer of 1843 with nothing but a pillowcase filled with her few possessions. She was about forty-six years old. She had no money. She had no plan. She had no idea where she was going or what she would do when she got there. All she had was a calling—a voice inside her that said she must travel and speak the truth about what she had seen and what she had survived.

She headed north, following the roads along the Connecticut River Valley into Massachusetts. She stopped at farmhouses and asked for food. She stopped at churches and asked to speak. She stopped at camp meetings—those great outdoor religious gatherings that were sweeping through America in the 1840s—and she raised her voice among the crowds.

People noticed her immediately. She was nearly six feet tall, towering over most women and many men of her era. Her voice was deep and powerful, capable of reaching across large crowds without any amplification. She spoke with a Dutch accent that she never lost—the legacy of her childhood among Dutch-speaking slaveholders. And she spoke with an authority that could not be denied.

At these camp meetings, she began to develop her skills as a public speaker. She learned how to hold an audience’s attention. She learned how to use silence as effectively as words. She learned how to tell stories that moved people to tears and to action. She discovered that she had a gift.

One story that became famous occurred at a camp meeting in Northampton, Massachusetts. A group of rowdy young men had gathered to disrupt the proceedings. They were drinking and shouting and threatening violence. The other speakers were terrified. Some wanted to call the police. Others wanted to flee.

Sojourner Truth stood up and began to sing. Her voice cut through the chaos. It was a hymn—a simple song of faith and redemption. The young men stopped their shouting. They turned to look at this tall black woman who seemed utterly unafraid of them. And they listened.

When she finished singing, she began to speak. She asked them why they had come. She asked them what they were afraid of. She spoke to them not with anger or condemnation, but with a kind of fierce compassion that disarmed their hostility. By the end of the evening, the young men who had come to cause trouble were sitting quietly, listening to the preachers they had planned to attack.

This was Sojourner Truth’s power. She could walk into hostile situations and transform them. She could face down violence with moral courage. She could speak hard truths in ways that people could hear. It was a power she would use again and again in the years to come.

In the autumn of 1843, Sojourner Truth arrived at the Northampton Association of Education and Industry, a utopian community in Florence, Massachusetts. The community was founded on principles of equality and cooperation. Members lived and worked together, sharing resources and rejecting the social hierarchies that dominated American society. Most importantly for Sojourner, the community was integrated. Black and white members lived side by side as equals.

At Northampton, Sojourner Truth met some of the leading abolitionists of the era. Frederick Douglass, the famous escaped slave who had become a powerful orator and writer, was a frequent visitor. William Lloyd Garrison, the white abolitionist who published the influential newspaper The Liberator, was connected to the community. David Ruggles, the black abolitionist who had helped Douglass escape from slavery, was a member. Olive Gilbert, who would later help Sojourner Truth write her autobiography, was also there.

These connections changed Sojourner Truth’s life. She had been speaking at camp meetings about religious faith and personal salvation. Now she began to speak about the abolition of slavery and the rights of women. She joined the great reform movements that were reshaping American society in the 1840s. She found her cause.

Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth made an interesting contrast. Douglass was educated, articulate, and wrote with elegant precision. He had taught himself to read and write despite being enslaved, and his mastery of language was a powerful weapon against those who claimed black people were intellectually inferior. Sojourner Truth could not read or write at all. She spoke in plain, simple language, with a Dutch accent and grammatical patterns that reflected her upbringing among Dutch speakers.

But her inability to read did not mean she was unintelligent. Far from it. She had a mind like a steel trap, remembering everything she heard, processing arguments with devastating logic, and cutting through pretense with simple but profound observations.

The two great abolitionists respected each other, but they were not always allies. Douglass tended to work within the system, seeking to change laws and policies through political action. Sojourner Truth was more radical, more willing to challenge not just slavery, but the entire structure of American society. They disagreed about strategy and tactics. They disagreed about the role of violence in the struggle for freedom. But they shared a fundamental commitment to human dignity that transcended their differences.

In 1850, Sojourner Truth took a major step toward securing her place in history. She dictated her life story to her friend Olive Gilbert, who wrote it down and helped prepare it for publication. The book was called The Narrative of Sojourner Truth, a Northern Slave. William Lloyd Garrison published it privately that same year.

The narrative told the story of Isabella’s life: her birth into slavery, her brutal treatment by various owners, her escape to freedom, her court case to rescue Peter, and her transformation into Sojourner Truth. It was honest about the horrors she had endured. It did not spare the reader from the violence and degradation of slavery. And it established Sojourner Truth as a powerful voice in the abolitionist movement.

The book also provided her with income. Sojourner Truth sold copies of the narrative at her speaking engagements. She also began selling photographs of herself—small cards called cartes de visite that were popular at the time. She captioned these photographs with a clever phrase: “I sell the shadow to support the substance.” The shadow was her image. The substance was her life and her work.

With the proceeds from her book and photographs, Sojourner Truth was able to buy a small house in Florence, Massachusetts, in 1850. She paid $300 for it. For the first time in her life, at about fifty-three years old, she owned property. The woman who had been sold for $100 with a flock of sheep now owned a home of her own.

But 1850 was also a dark year for the cause of freedom. That September, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act as part of the Compromise of 1850. This law required citizens of free states to assist in the capture of escaped slaves. It denied accused fugitives the right to a jury trial. It imposed heavy penalties on anyone who helped enslaved people escape. And it emboldened slave catchers to venture into the North, hunting down men and women who had lived in freedom for years.

The Fugitive Slave Act was a devastating blow to the abolitionist movement. It made the free states complicit in slavery. It put every black person in the North at risk, whether they had escaped from slavery or had been born free. And it demonstrated that the slaveholding South had enormous power over the federal government.

Sojourner Truth was outraged. She redoubled her efforts, speaking against the law and against the entire institution of slavery. She traveled throughout New England and New York, addressing audiences large and small. She challenged people to resist the unjust law, to refuse cooperation with slave catchers, to stand up for human dignity.

In May 1851, Sojourner Truth attended the Ohio Women’s Rights Convention in Akron. This gathering of reformers and activists was focused on the rights of women, but it was also connected to the broader struggle against slavery. Many of the same people who fought for abolition also fought for women’s suffrage. They saw these causes as linked—as part of a larger movement toward human equality.

The convention had been going on for two days when Sojourner Truth asked to speak. She was probably the only black person in the room. She was certainly the only former slave. Some of the white women in attendance were uncomfortable with her presence. They worried that associating their cause with a black woman would hurt their movement. They worried about how she would be received.

But the president of the convention, Frances Gage, allowed her to speak. And what Sojourner Truth said that day would become one of the most famous speeches in American history.

She walked to the front of the church where the convention was being held. She was tall and dignified, wearing a simple gray dress and a white turban. She stood before the audience and began to speak in her deep, powerful voice.

No complete transcript of her speech exists. Different people who were there remembered it differently. Frances Gage published an account of the speech twelve years later, in 1863, that included the famous refrain, “Ain’t I a woman?” But historians have debated whether Sojourner Truth actually used those exact words, or whether Gage embellished the speech in her recollection.

What we know is that Sojourner Truth spoke about the contradictions between how women were supposedly treated and how she had been treated. She spoke about the hard labor she had performed as an enslaved woman. She spoke about the children she had borne and lost. She challenged the idea that women were weak and needed to be protected by men.

“I have plowed and planted and gathered into barns,” she reportedly said, “and no man could head me. And ain’t I a woman?”

She spoke about bearing thirteen children and watching most of them sold into slavery. She spoke about the grief of a mother who loses her children. And she asked again, “And ain’t I a woman?”

She spoke about Jesus Christ, noting that he came from God and a woman. “Man had nothing to do with it.” She challenged the religious arguments that were used to justify the subordination of women.

And she spoke about strength. “If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world upside down all alone,” she said, referring to Eve, “these women together ought to be able to turn it back and get it right side up again.”

The speech electrified the audience. Women who had been skeptical of this tall black stranger found themselves cheering. Women who had worried about association with a former slave found themselves inspired. Sojourner Truth had taken the arguments against women’s rights and demolished them with simple logic and personal testimony.

The speech became known as **”Ain’t I