According to the Dred Scott Heritage Foundation and the Missouri Historical Society, Dred Scott and his wife Harriet, who were married c. 1836, had four children: two sons who died in infancy (names and dates unknown) and two daughters, Eliza (b. 1838) and Lizzie (c. 1845). Eliza died of an unspecified cause at age 25, sometime around 1863. Lizzie grew up, married and had two sons, only one of whom lived to adulthood.
what the freak
By:Tralisea A. Fuller
No freakin' where!
Dred Scott lived in missouri
According to Chief Justice Roger Taney's ruling on the Dred Scott case. Nothing is the answer. Dred Scott is just as much property as a mule.
Dred Scott is famous for the start of the civil war between the union army of the north and the south.
The Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sanford did not decide if Dred Scott was a slave or not, but that slaves (and their descendants) could not be counted as US citizens and had no right to sue in court.
Dred Scott was fighting for the freedom of himself, his wife Harriet, and his two daughters, Eliza and Lizzie.
No freakin' where!
Harriet Robinson
Harriet Robinson
i dont know. you tell me.
Dred Scott (1795 - September 17, 1858), was an African-American slave in the United States who unsuccessfully sued for his freedom and that of his wife and their two daughters in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case of 1857, popularly known as "the Dred Scott Decision
When Scott's master died and left him as property in his will to his wife's family.
The name of the slave that sued for his freedom in the Dred Scott vs Sandford case, was Dred Scott. He tried unsuccessfully to sue for the freedom of himself, his wife and their two daughters.
No, Dred Scott is not single.
Dred Scott`s fll name was Dred Scott v. sandford
Dred Scott`s fll name was Dred Scott v. sandford
Dred Scott lived in missouri