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Activist · Educator · Journalist

Timeline in Salem, Massachusetts 1833 – 1862 (discontinuous) [1]
 


November 1853

  • Moves to Salem from Pennsylvania (Age 16)

  • Enrolls in Higginson Grammar School

March 1855

  • Graduated Higginson Grammar School

  • Read her poem “A Parting Hymn” at graduation (Selected best poem in class)

  • Enrolled in Salem Normal School

  • Her poem “To W.L.G. on reading his “Chosen Queen”       published in Liberator magazine

September 1855

June 18, 1856

  • Accepts teaching position at Epes Grammar School

July 22, 1856

  • Graduates Salem Normal School

  • Reads “Poem for Normal School Graduation” at ceremony

August 24, 1856

  • “Poem for Normal School Graduation” published in Liberator

June 12, 1857

  • Returns to Philadelphia to recover from respiratory tract illness

July 28, 1857

  • Returns to Salem to continue teaching

December 16, 1857

  • “The Lost Bride” rejected by Ladies Home Journal

March 3, 1858

  • Resigned from Epes Grammar School and returned to Pennsylvania, due to poor health.

April 30, 1859

  •  Accepts fall teaching position at Higginson Grammar School

September 1859

  •  Returns to Salem to teach at Higginson Grammar School

January 14, 1860

  • “The Slave Girl’s Prayer” published in National Anti-Slavery Standard

Spring 1860

  • Resigned Higginson Grammar School due to poor health

September 1860

  • Resumed teaching in Salem

October 1860

  • Resigned due to poor health, returned to Philadelphia

Summer 1862

  • Returned to Salem to teach summer courses at Higginson Grammar School

September 14, 1862


[1] Forten, Charlotte L., and Brenda E. Stevenson. The Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimké. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. Xxxiii

 

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