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SMIT001. Rhoda Strong Lowry, 1849-1909. In: North Carolina women: making history. By Margaret Supplee Smith and Emily Herring Wilson. Chapel Hill; London: North Carolina UP, 1999. Pages 154-157; notes on pages 327-328. 1 drawing, 11 notes Publication type: Book chapter or section This biographical sketch of the wife of Henry Berry Lowry is brief but detailed and well-documented. The authors note that Rhoda had been married for only six years when her husband died or disappeared in 1872. She protected her husband in his path of violence as a way she could redress the wrongs committed by Whites against people of color; thus she, also, has come to be seen as a symbol of struggle against oppression. Rhoda had three children to raise when Henry Berry disappeared. Henry Berry was her cousin. She was sixteen and he was twenty when they married. It is believed that her father was a White man named John Gorman who later changed his name to Strong, and that her mother was an Indian woman named Lowry who died young.Additional Subjects: Rhoda Strong Lowry This annotation was edited on: June 24, 2002 Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |
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