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- Phillis Wheatley - Wikipedia
In 1838, Boston-based publisher and abolitionist Isaac Knapp published a collection of Wheatley's poetry, along with that of enslaved North Carolina poet George Moses Horton, under the title Memoir and Poems of Phillis Wheatley, A Native African and a Slave
- Phillis Wheatley - National Womens History Museum
Phillis Wheatley Peters is broadly recognized as the first African American woman and only the third American woman to publish a book of poems Her works continue to be studied by historians, and her legacy has inspired generations of writers
- Phillis Wheatley | Biography, Poems, Books, Facts | Britannica
Phillis Wheatley was the first Black woman to become a poet of note in the United States She is best known today for her poem ‘On Being Brought from Africa to America’ (1768)
- Phillis Wheatley | The Poetry Foundation
Although she was an enslaved person, Phillis Wheatley Peters was one of the best-known poets in pre-19th century America
- Phillis Wheatley - U. S. National Park Service
Phillis Wheatley earned acclaim as a Black poet, and historians recognize her as one of the first Black and enslaved persons in the United States to publish a book of poems Born in West Africa, Wheatley became enslaved as a child
- Phillis Wheatley: Her Life, Poetry, and Legacy - National Portrait Gallery
When her book of poetry, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, appeared, she became the first American slave, the first person of African descent, and only the third colonial American woman to have her work published
- Phillis Wheatley - Massachusetts Historical Society
Phillis Wheatley was the author of the first known book of poetry by a Black woman, published in London in 1773 Prior to the book's debut, her first published poem, "On Messrs Hussey and Coffin," appeared in 1767 in the Newport Mercury
- Phillis Wheatley: Poet Laureate of the American Revolution | Gilder . . .
Phillis Wheatley (ca 1753–1784) has appropriately been called “the mother of African American literature,” [1] but with equal justice she can be described as the “poet laureate of the American Revolution ”
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