Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) refuses to give up her seat in the white section of a Philadelphia horse-drawn street car, almost a century before Rosa Parks. Her action is a small incident in the busy life of an abolitionist, suffragist, poet, temperance activist, teacher, public speaker and writer.
Born free in Baltimore and raised by an aunt, Henrietta, and an active abolitionist, Rev. William J. Watkins, Sr., Frances is well-educated and publishes a book of poems at 20, beginning a popular and pioneering writing career. In 1859 she publishes the first short story by a Black woman, “The Two Authors.” In 1892, at 67, she is one of the first to put a novel, titled “Iola Leroy”, on the market.
Frances Watkins is an articulate and acclaimed supporter of abolition, prohibition and women’s rights throughout her long career. As the only African American speaker at an 1866 suffragist meeting, she says, “You white women speak of rights. I speak of wrongs.” She dies at 85, only nine years before the passage of the 19th Amendment, giving women the vote.

First use of genetic genealogy at Catoctin Furnace
The first use of DNA links 27 Black workers buried in the local cemetery of the Catoctin Furnace (c1800) and reveals links to nearly 42,000 living relatives, and traces the enslaved back to their African origins.