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Compare And Contrast Sojourner Truth And Harriet Tubman

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Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, two African American women who made major impacts on the American Society back in the nineteenth century. To this day, they are remembered for their efforts. Some may be unaware of what they both were best known for and what separates them from one another. Both of these women are significant figures to the history of America. Today, the similarities and differences of Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman will be discussed along with their impact on American Society. Truth and Tubman both were similar in several ways that will make many people think they were related. Both were African American woman who were born into slavery. Also, they both were abolitionists, which are people who fought against slavery. …show more content…

So Truth escaped Dumont’s farm along with her infant daughter Sophia and left her husband Tom and some of her other children behind. In result, Dumont’s anger and frustration caused him to illegally sell her son Peter. Later, she was helped and guided by her “Quaker” friends and they sent her to live with Isaac and Maria Van Wagener. Throughout this time Truth entered a plea before the Grand Jury of Kingston in order to sue for the recovery of her son Peter. She was successful and won. She was able to reunite with Peter after her Quaker friends managed to help her raise money in order to retrieve him. To continue, Tubman was completely the opposite as a slave. She was more of a disobedient slave who fought back from the whippings of her slave owners. One day, an overseer asked Tubman to help him whip another slave. She refused to help him, and decided it was rather best to help the slave escape. Unfortunately, “the overseer picked up a two-pound weight and threw it at the fleeing slave. His …show more content…

Sojourner Truth made an impact to the American society like stated before, by working with acumen to claim and gain rights for all human beings. Mostly for the people who were unemployed, poor, and enslaved. Also, “Truth believed that all people could be enlightened about their actions and choose to behave better if they were educated by others, and persistently acted upon these beliefs.” She also gave out multiple speeches that were against slavery, which were very eye popping too many. Truth was also a women’s rights activist that attended Woman’s Rights Conventions. Most importantly, she gave out a speech called “Ain’t I a Woman?” in 1851 in Ohio at the Akron Woman’s Rights Convention. In this speech, “Truth addressed the white women present who wanted rights for women, but at the same time believed African American women to be inferior because of their race. Truth also related her own lifelong history of backbreaking labor, refuting the conventional ideal of women as being unaccustomed to labor or confrontation.” In 1850, Truth’s very first narrative was written down by a man named Olive Gilbert. This primary source shows the title page saying “Narrative of Sojourner Truth” following the words “Northern Slave” and more text along with a picture of herself on the left. To continue, this narrative includes stories of Truth’s early life and her change into a revivalist

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