On December 28, 1875, Sarah Tompkins (appearing in some records as Thompkins) wed noted abolitionist
Henry Highland Garnet, and thereafter was usually identified as Sarah Garnet. Their Brooklyn marriage ceremony was performed by
Amos Noë Freeman, a minister associated with the legendary escape from slavery in 1855 of
Anna Maria Weems on the
Underground Railroad. In 1881 President
James A. Garfield appointed Henry Garnet as ambassador in
Liberia, although Sarah Garnet did not accompany him on the trip. Henry Garnet became ill soon after arriving abroad, and he died on February 13, 1882, in
Monrovia. Sarah Garnet owned a seamstress shop in Brooklyn from 1883 to 1911. In 1911 Garnet traveled with her sister
Susan McKinney Steward to
London, England, for the inaugural
Universal Races Congress, where Steward presented the paper "Colored American Women". The conference was also attended by
W. E. B. Du Bois. Soon after they returned from Europe, Garnet died at home on September 17, 1911. She is buried in
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. ==Legacy==