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Harriet Tubman Biography

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Harriet Tubman has become the center of a lot of attention recently when it was announced she would be on the new 20 dollar bill. Being on a U.S. currency note is pretty important. One of the reasons she is on the countries most used currency is the fact she is probably “the most famous conductor of the underground railroad.” [Harriet Tubman biography, no author] she also devoted her life for women's rights. Harriet Tubman during the civil was a spy, a cook and a nurse for the union.
Harriet Tubman was born into slavery and had eight siblings. She was a domestic servant but preferred to work out in the fields to escape her overbearing mistresses and the the sexual advances of her masters. but field work did not entirely spare her from pain …show more content…

command of Union Colonel James Montgomery, led 150 black Union soldiers in the Combahee River Raid. Harriet had been working for years to bring slaves from the South to the North through the Underground Railroad, however this was the first time that she was asked to work on a major Union military operation. On the night of June 2nd three federal gunboats set sail from Beaufort, South Carolina up the Combahee River. Tubman had gained vital information about the location of Rebel torpedoes planted along the river from slaves who were willing to trade information for freedom. Because of this information Tubman was able to steer the Union ships away from any danger. She led the ships to specific spots along the shore where fugitive slaves were hiding and waiting to be rescued. At first many of the slaves were frightened by the Union soldiers’ presence, but Tubman was able to talk with them and convince them to come aboard. They carried Union troops who came on shore and succeeded in destroying several influential South Carolina estates owned by leading secessionists, including the plantations of the Heywards, the Middletons, and the Lowndes families. Many of the Union soldiers who took part in the raid were former slaves who saw the burning and pillaging of these estates as an opportunity to enact revenge on the master …show more content…

Many of the Union soldiers who took part in the raid were former slaves who saw the burning and pillaging of these estates as an opportunity to enact revenge their previous owners.
Harriet tubman was the only woman known to have led a military operation during the American Civil War. Thanks in great part to the intelligence she provided, the Union boats escaped unharmed, and the raid was a major military and psychological blow to the Confederate

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