Harriet Tubman was seen as a hero to the African American, she was often called “General Tubman,” because of her bravery and leadership.(Vox,”A Biography of Harriet Tubman”) Harriet was a conductor of the Underground Railroad and a spy during the Civil War.During her lifetime, Harriet Tubman did many great things, but her greatest achievement was helping slaves escape to the North. Harriet decided to escape from slavery with the help of abolitionists in Philadelphia, after she escaped, she helped her sister and her children escape from slavery.(Vox, "How did Harriet Tubman find the courage to lead the Underground Railroad?")Harriet was inducted to the Underground Railroad afterwards, the Philadelphians abolitionists gave Harriet details about the routes they use and swearing her to secrecy.(Vox, "How did Harriet Tubman find the courage to lead the Underground Railroad?")Soon after she began to conduct on the Underground Railroad helping slaves escape from slavery and become free. Between 1851 and 1860 Harriet made about 19 trips as a conductor for the Underground …show more content…
Harriet Tubman was often called the “Moses” and “General Tubman” by her peers because she was considered brave and a leader.Harriet suffered from uncontrollable sleeping spells but she didn’t let it stop her from helping slaves escape.Harriet kept all her operations a secret and all the details of her trips still remain unknown..(Vox, "How did Harriet Tubman find the courage to lead the Underground Railroad?") Harriet did everything she could do to make trips successful for example,during one of her trips she would give the babies a harmless drug to keep them quiet during the journey.(Vox, "How did Harriet Tubman find the courage to lead the Underground Railroad?") Another example of her bravery and leadership is when she was aware that they were being followed she would go further south to lose the trail.(Vox, "How did Harriet Tubman find the courage to lead the Underground
Harriet Tubman was a woman who escaped from slavery in the south. She was born into slavery in Maryland in 1820. She risked her life to save her family and other slave. Harriet led hundreds to safety. “The underground railroad was the way that the slaves escaped. It was a secret network of safe houses organized for that purpose.
Harriet Tubman was a poor slave girl who ran away from her plantation at the age of 28. Throughout the course of her life many people and many things challenged her. Each situation she was faced with tested either her mental or physical strength, usually both. She persevered through all of her trials stronger and wiser, and was willing to always help others through their own. Not one to instigate unless extremely necessary, Harriet was known for her quick thinking and her reactions to each ordeal she was faced with. She responded to them with a sharp mind, and strong faith in deliverance through the Lord.
Harriet Tubman was among the greatest fighters for justice in her time and was an inspiration to others to fight for what they believe in, but she along with many others who fight experienced it themselves. When she was younger, “She knew that her brothers and sisters, her father and mother, and all the other people who lived in the quarter, men, women and children, were slaves. At the same time, someone had taught her where to look for the North Star, the star that stayed constant, not rising in the east and setting in the west as the other stars appeared to do; and told her that anyone walking toward the North could use that star as a guide. She knew about fear, too. Sometimes at night, or during the day, she heard the furious galloping of horses, not just one horse, several horses, thud of the hoofbeats along the road, jingle of harness. She saw the grown folks freeze into stillness, not moving, scarcely breathing, while they listened. She could not remember who first told her that those furious hoofbeats meant the patrollers were going past, in pursuit of a runaway. Only the slaves said patterollers, whispering the word” (Petry). Living with her family as a slave, she learned all the things she needed to know to do her job in the future as the conductor of the Underground Railroad, she learned about the North star, and she learned about how you should not get caught by the patrollers. Perturbed by the thought of the fate of her family and her future, she escaped to Philadelphia but “Rather than remaining in the safety of the North, Tubman made it her mission to rescue her family and others living in slavery via the Underground Railroad” (Biography.com editors). She made it her mission to save others and take
She helped millions of people get their freedom. She is best known as a hero of the Underground Railroad. She is Harriet Tubman. The Underground Railroad is also known to be a network of safe houses that allow for slaves to escape. "Tubman was a "conductor" on that railroad the leader who led slaves to freedom"(The Fugitive). What Harriet was doing was extremely dangerous and demanded strength and endurance, from the body and mind. Tubman was about five feet tall and slightly build. She showed leadership qualities that were right away recognized by the people she escorted to freedom. Slave owners regarded her as a troublemaker. Harriet Tubman was brave, she wanted a change
<br>Harriet Tubman never lost any of her control and had a weird ability to find food and shelter during these hard missions. Among other African Americans she came to be known as Moses (Biblical hero who led the Hebrews out of enslavement in Egypt.)
In 1849, Tubman set her mind of escaping to the north. On September 17, 1849, Tubman with her two brothers, Ben and Harry, left Maryland. After seeing runaway notice offering $300, Ben and Harry had reconsiderations and returned to the plantation. Tubman, with her strong will, continued to escape nearly 90 miles to Philadelphia for her freedom using the secret network known as the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad was neither a rail road nor underground. The routes taken at night to were called “lines” and at places they stopped to rest were called “stationed”. “Conductors” such as Harriet Tubman and Quaker Thomas used their knowledge and luck to securely free slaves from slave states to the Free states. (Biography, 2017) As she cross the state line into Pennsylvania she recalled “When I found I had crossed that line, I looked at my hands to see if I was the same person. There was such a glory over everything; the sun came like gold through the trees, and over the fields, and I felt like I was in Heaven”
For about ten years, she made an estimated 19 trips into the slave states and helped about 300 slaves to the north. Tubman was in great danged while she was a conductor of the railroad, because southerners offered a huge reward for her capture. Tubman used great disguises, posing as old men and old women, to avoid suspicion when traveling in slave states. She carried sleeping powder to stop babies from crying and always had a gun just for protection.
Harriet Tubman is considered a hero when she helped free slaves. She led them through the Underground Railroad since she knew the all the routes well. The Underground Railroad was a transport that would help slaves escape to freedom and it was certainly secretive. Each stop would go to a safe-house (Math.buffalo.edu). Harriet Tubman
From childhood she was destined to help people, even though she never experienced freedom there was a hunger to be free. She was able to escape and lead others to freedom without any education. Her selfless acts will be forever remembered in history as depicted in the book Harriet Tubman: the road to freedom. Harriet Tubman was a revolutionary that challenge the slave society. This book provides a lot of details about the successful of the Underground Railroad, and people and cities that fought for blacks
Harriet Tubman, a runaway slave, helped so many blacks escape to freedom that she became the ‘‘Moses’’ of her people. She was born in 1820 in Bucktown, Maryland and died in 1913 in Auburn, New York. During the civil war, she served the union army as a nurse, cook scout, and spy for four years. In 1844, Harriet married a free black man, John Tubman. She left him in 1849. She married Nelson Davis in 1870 and stayed with him.She traveled at night and day guided by the underground railroad a secret network of secret routes and safe house’s. She built the Tubman Home in 1870. She receives honor from queen Victoria for bravery (1893) Harriet Tubman is a hero because of her Determination, Sacrifice and Loyalty. Here’s why,
Harriet was a slave at first, but she changed her life around. She escaped to be an abolitionist in 1849. She had been treated very badly and that is the reason why Harriet had wanted to leave so badly. She became a conductor. She had memorized the routes so in case there was something wrong, she would know a different way to save the people. She had always gone out of her way to save people. Whenever she had saved people she would sometimes
Harriet Tubman is probably the most famous “conductor” of all the Underground Railroads. Throughout a 10-year span, Tubman made more than 20 trips down to the South and lead over 300 slaves from bondage to freedom. Perhaps the most shocking fact about Tubman’s journeys back and forth from the South was that she “never lost a single passenger.”
The second contribution of Harriet Tubman is that she was a conductor in the Underground Railroad, a network of antislavery activists who helped slaves escape from the south. On her first trip in 1850, Tubman bought her sister and her sister’s two children out of slavery in Maryland. In 1851, she helped her brother out of slavery, and in 1857 she returned to Maryland to guide her old parents back to freedom. Overall Tubman made about nineteen trips to the south and guided about three hundred slaves to freedom. But during those travels Tubman faced great danger in order not to get caught she would use disguises and carries a sleeping powder to stop babies from crying and also always carried a pistol in case one of the people back out once the journey has begun( Strawberry 1).
One year after the marriage Brodess plans to sell Harriet but he dies leaving his wife Eliza Brodess in debt. So to pay off the debt Eliza to plans to sale Harriet But this time Harriet thought she 'll take matters in her own hands On September 17, 1849 Harriet and her two brothers Ben and Henry Escaped from slavery. But the family constantly argue over directions due to the lack of knowledge of directions the brothers decided to return to the plantation which also forced Harriet to go with them. Finally ran off on her on realizing that it would be too dangerous to reveal her plans her family. She traveled at night and hid during the day. She would get food from free dock workers the willingly provided her food and shelter and guided her through hidden tunnels and pathways. She was also helped by Hannah Leverton which whose was a white women . Leverton drove Harriet to Delaware border and gave her a piece of paper with the information of Thomas Garrett, a Quaker Abolitionist whose Underground railroad station was the last stop in Delaware before the Pennsylvania boundary dividing the free and slave states. Which leads to Harriet crossing the Mason-Dixon Line finally giving her freedom.
Slavery has always been an anomaly, although abolitionists such as Harriet Tubman did much to ameliorate, and later, abolish slavery. Harriet was a strong and courageous woman and a well-known conductor of the Underground Railroads, around the 1850s. Harriet Tubman personal experiences throughout her life have shaped her to become the stout-hearted woman who helped many slaves escape to freedom, by using the Underground Railroad—a network of secret routes.