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  1. Jan 11, 2014 · Public domain image. Harriet Robinson Scott was an enslaved person who is best remembered for being the second wife of Dred Scott. Harriet was born a slave on a Virginia plantation around 1820. From a young age she was a servant to Lawrence Taliaferro, a US Indian Agent.

  2. Died: June 17, 1876 (age 61?) Missouri Hometown: St. Louis. Region of Missouri: St. Louis. Categories: African Americans, Leaders and Activists, Women. Introduction. Harriet Robinson Scott was an enslaved woman who tried for more than a decade to gain her freedom through the court system.

  3. Feb 25, 2019 · Local 506270702. Harriet Scott played her own pivotal role in landmark 1857 Supreme Court case. The ruling, denying rights to free and enslaved black people, is widely considered among the...

  4. Learn more about Harriet Robinson Scott, a woman who challenged slavery in the highest court in the United States. This video is adapted from a resource in the New-York Historical Society’s Women & the American Story curriculum.

  5. Born into slavery, Harriet Robinson was brought from Pennsylvania to the Northwest Territory by Indian agent and slaveholder Lawrence Taliaferro in 1835. Around 1836, she married Dred Scott, an enslaved man sold to military surgeon Dr. John Emerson.

  6. Harriet Robinson Scott (c. 1820 – June 17, 1876) was an African American woman who fought for her freedom alongside her husband, Dred Scott, for eleven years. Their legal battle culminated in the infamous United States Supreme Court decision Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1857.

  7. Sep 15, 2022 · September 15, 2022 1:31 PM. Listen Dred Scott's time at Fort Snelling. Dred Scott and Harriet Robinson Scott in an illustration from the Library of Congress. Library of Congress. Share....

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