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Rebecca Cox Jackson

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Name
  
Rebecca Jackson


Rebecca Cox Jackson www3amhersteduaardocFergusonjpg


Died
  
1871, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Books
  
The Learning Habit: A, Good Night, Good Nights Now, The 1960s, Gifts of power

Rebecca Cox Jackson (1795–1871) was an African-American free woman, best known for her religious activism and for her autobiography.

Biography

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Rebecca Cox was born on February 15, 1795 in Hornstown, Pennsylvania into a free family. She married Samuel S. Jackson and worked as a seamstress until she had a religious awakening during a thunderstorm in 1830. She got divorced after her husband failed to teach her to read and write, and later realised she was able to do both anyway. Whilst travelling from church to church, she came upon and decided to join the Shakers in Watervliet, New York. However she returned to Philadelphia to live with Rebecca Perot for six years, up until she went back to Watervliet, where she ended her life as Eldress of her own family of Shakers in Philadelphia. In 1859 she had founded the first black Shaker community in Philadelphia.

Her autobiography, although written between 1830 and 1864, was only published in 1981.

References

Rebecca Cox Jackson Wikipedia