Carole Boston Weatherford Born:
February  13 Baltimore, Maryland,
United States Of America

Current Home:
High Point, North Carolina,
United States Of America

Carole Boston Weatherford

Biography

The daughter of educators, award-winning poet Carole Boston Weatherford began writing in first grade.  Today she is the author of numerous books, including the Carter G. Woodson award winning title, The Sound That Jazz Makes and most recently, Dear Mr. Rosenwald.   Her writing covers such topics as jazz and  photography, as well as the slavery, reconstruction and Jim Crow eras. When she's not traveling or visiting museums, Carole is mining the past for family stories, fading traditions, and forgotten struggles. Coming from a family of educators, she has a passion for rescuing events and figures from obscurity by documenting American history.

When commenting on writing Dear Mr. Rosenwald, Carole remarks, "I wrote Dear Mr. Rosenwald to document the African-American community's investment and involvement in education during the Jim Crow era. Much has been written about Booker T. Washington, but few know of his educational initiatives beyond Tuskegee Institute. A proponent of literacy, Washington urged philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, the president of Sears, Roebuck and a member of Tuskegee's board, to provide matching funds to build schools in rural communities in the South. More than 5,000 such schools were erected — 2,500-plus in North Carolina alone. Local communities not only raised funds for the school buildings but also provided sweat equity. The schools are a testament to the value that African-Americans placed on education. With limited resources, Rosenwald schools provided educational opportunities for generations of African Americans."

She is currently an Associate Professor of English at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina.  For more information, you may also visit Carole Boston Weatherford's website

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    Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freed

    Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freed

    by Carole Boston Weatherford

    We know Harriet Tubman as the Moses of her people. The quintessential American hero, Tubman guided enslaved Africans along the Underground Railroad - a loose network of racially diverse helpers and top secret hideouts - from bondage of the South to freedom in North.

    Yet little is known about Harriet's first trip. Born into slavery, how did she become free? What was her first trip North like? And what inspired her to make nineteen more trips escorting hundreds of slaves, including her own parents, to freedom? Never once getting caught. Never once losing a passenger.

    In this elegy to Tubman, award-winning author Carole Boston Weatherford and star illustrator Kadir Nelson imagine all of this and more.

    $12.79 You save: 20%
    books;hardcover books;picture books | Ages 5-8
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    Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freed
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    I, Matthew Henson

    I, Matthew Henson

    by Carole Boston Weatherford and Eric Velasquez

    The true story of explorer Matthew Henson, who travelled to five continents and made seven Arctic voyages when African-America seamen were nearly unheard of. "An excellent choice." - SLJ

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    Paperback Book | Grades 3-5
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    I, Matthew Henson
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