About This Website

[Click on “Sarah Parker Remond: A Daughter of Salem…” or the large panoramic photo above, and scroll to bottom to browse through posts about her life here and abroad]

THIS is a website about an extraordinary woman from an exceptional family. Sarah Parker Remond was born in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1824. She died in Rome, Italy, in December of 1894. The decades between were filled with a life of activism, adventure, and personal achievement.

She was a daughter of Salem’s most prominent African American family of their day. Yet, when Sarah and one of her sisters finished primary school they were refused admission to the Salem secondary school because of their race.

The Family moved to Newport, Rhode Island, where the children attended a private school. John Remond and others initiated law suits to integrate the Salem school. When their case was won the family returned to Salem.

In 1853 Sarah and a party of friends, including the black historian, William C. Nell, purchased tickets by mail to the most popular opera in Boston, Donizetti’s Don Pasquale, performed at the Howard Athenaeum. When Remond refused to be redirected to the segregated section when the theater managers realized the group was black, she was shoved down a flight of stairs and injured. She sued the theater, winning $500 in damages; the theater was ordered by the court to integrate all seating.

Sarah Parker Remond became a speaker for the American Anti-Slavery Society. She agreed to travel to Great Britain on the eve of the Civil War to promote the cause of the Union and to argue against British sympathies for the Confederate South whose cotton supplied the many British mills. She lectured throughout England, Scotland and Ireland.

Determined to further her education, she also attended London’s Bedford College For Women. And after the War she went on to attend medical school at Santa Maria NuovaHospital in Florence, Italy. She lived the remainder of her life in Italy.

Throughout, Remond was an international activist for human rights and women’s suffrage.   

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Sarah Parker Remond is buried in an unmarked grave at the Non-Catholic Cemetery in Rome. A fund has been established to install a plaque there in her honor. Please have a look at our Donations, Please page and join us in establishing a memorial to this internationally significant 19th-century African American woman.

                     ——  Marilyn Richardson and Francis Mayo, for The Remond Plaque Fund

NOTE: Sources are given for much of the historical material and information on this site. A few of the posts represent original research and documentation by Marilyn Richardson and supporters of the Remond Plaque Fund. All rights are reserved where appropriate. Please include source and/or credit when using any of this site’s content. Thank You.

12 thoughts on “About This Website”

  1. nicolaraimes2013 said:

    I am writing a post about Sarah Parker Remond for the Bedford Centre for the History of Women blog. Would it be possible to use the image of the plaque to Remond in Rome in the post? If so, who should be credited? Many thanks. Nicola Raimes.

  2. nicolaraimes2013 said:

    Many thanks, Marilyn. I’ll definitely send you a link to the blog post once it is up. In the meantime you might be interested in a series of podcasts I made about Women and Slavery: part of episode 3, ‘Transatlantic Ties’, is about Sarah Parker Remond.

    https://historicengland.org.uk/research/inclusive-heritage/the-slave-trade-and-abolition/sites-of-memory/

  3. nicolaraimes2013 said:

    Thanks Marilyn. Early stages but of course
    will keep you posted.

  4. Lucy Jordan said:

    Hello, I am writing an article about Sarah Parker Remond for the University of London and was wondering if I could use the image you have of her plaque in Rome? If so, who should be credited for this? Thank you!

  5. Maureen Brady said:

    Hi Marilyn….I would love to connect with you about an idea regarding Sarah Parker Remond. Is there an email address where I can contact you? Thank you, Maureen Brady

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