Sarah Hopkins Bradford was an American writer and historian, best known today for her two pioneering biographical books on Harriet Tubman. Most of her work consists of children's literature.
Bradford wrote her first published work, Amy, the Glass-Blower's Daughter: A True Narrative in 1847. She then wrote the six-volume Silver Lake Series, published from 1852 to 1854. Rather than a formal series involving connected characters, these six books are each collections of poetry and prose, including many short stories. Bradford wrote these books under the pen name 'Cousin Cicely'. Most of her early writing, up until the late 1860s, targeted the children's market, and she published at least seven further children's books, including both fiction and history. She also wrote articles published in magazines. Following her husband's death in 1860, she opened a seminary for girls and young women in Geneva, New York. She moved to Europe for eight years, where she educated her daughters.
Harriet Tubman works
In 1869, four years after the end of the Civil War, Bradford wrote her first of two groundbreaking books, Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman. Tubman was an escaped slave who had helped many escaped slaves travel to the northern United States and Canada before the Civil War, using the Underground Railroad. Bradford wrote the book, using extensive interviews with Tubman, to raise funds for Tubman's support. The two became friends. It was the first Tubman biography of any depth. Bradford was one of the first Caucasian writers to deal with African-American topics, and her work attracted worldwide fame, selling very well. In 1886, she followed up with Harriet Tubman, Moses of Her People, again to assist in supporting Tubman. Both works have been published in many editions, and still sell well in the early 21st century.
Bradford lived in Geneva, New York, and late in her life settled in Rochester, New York. She died there June 25, 1912.
Legacy
Bradford was one of the first American women writers to specialize in children's literature, predating better-known writers such as Louisa May Alcott. She was a contemporary of Harriet Beecher Stowe, whose breakthrough novel Uncle Tom's Cabin also featured African-American themes, but appeared some 20 years before Bradford's first Tubman biography. Much of Bradford's children's literature is still available in modern times, either online, or in through photographed copies of original volumes, reissued by modern publishers. Her Tubman books, which received some criticism based on lack of thoroughness in historical methods, remain popular, and have been issued in some twenty editions, as of 2012.
Major works
Children's literature
Amy, the Glass-Blower's Daughter: A True Narrative, 1847, published by American Sunday-School Union, Philadelphia
Silver Lake Series, from 1852–1854, published by Alden, Beardsley & Co., Auburn, New York, and some also published by Wanzer, Beardsley, Rochester, New York
* The Budget: A Collection of Pieces in Prose and Rhyme
* The Jumble: A Collection of Pieces in Prose and Rhyme
* The Old Portfolio: A Collection of Pieces in Prose and Rhyme
* Green Satchel: A Collection of Pieces in Prose and Rhyme
* Ups and Downs: Or, Silver Lake Sketches
* Aunt Patty's Mirror: A Collection of Pieces in Prose and Rhyme
Lewie; Or, The Bended Twig, 1854, published by J.C. Derby
The Linton Family, Or, The Fashion of this World, 1860
Getting Well: Tales for Little Convalescents, 1866
Grandmamma's Search, 1870, published by New Editions, London