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It’s Women’s History Month, a celebration dedicated to learning about and sharing women’s many — and often untold — contributions to society. We honor women who have played, and are playing, an important role in leading, healing, teaching, advocating, and blazing trails to make our world better. Women like Susie King Taylor.
Born into slavery in Georgia, she learned how to read and write in secret as a child. At the age of 14, she founded a school for Black children. She soon expanded her talents to nursing, caring for Black troops during the Civil War and teaching many of them how to read and write. Years later she wrote her own story — the only firsthand account of the lives and experiences of Black Civil War soldiers written by a Black woman. This amazing leader’s story is told for young readers in Susie King Taylor: Destined to Be Free, and it’s just one. There are so many more women whose stories deserve to be told, not only this month, but all year long.
Whose stories are you sharing?
Recommended reading:
Brave. Black. First. 50+ African American Women Who Changed the World
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