preview

Harriet Tubman Dreamed of Freedom

Good Essays

Freedom is something we all take for granted now days, where as in the 1820 it was a prized state of living for African American slaves. Some only dreamt of this, while others, such as Harriet Tubman, made this dream a reality. When it was easier to walk away and save herself, Harriet Tubman came back and put everything on the line to make the dream of freedom alive for others. Harriet was born into slavery around 1820 in Dorchester, Maryland to Benjamin Ross and Harriet Green. Her master, Edwards Brodas, gave her the name Araminta but she eventually took on her mother’s name. At the age of five when most children would be starting off into school, Harriet began working as a house maid. Many times she would be “rented” out to different plantation homes for several months at a time. During this time she received multiple routine beatings, whippings, and verbal assaults. But these times of house work wouldn’t last long. As she began to grow older and stronger she was moved from house work to the fields. She often displeased her Master with her work, landing her in trouble constantly. But the opportunity to work in the fields worked to her advantage. She had the chance to meet free black people who were hired to work alongside the slaves, who told her of slaves who escaped to the north and how they did it. This was the beginning of the lust for freedom. Still working in the fields, Tubman received a injury that would scar her for the rest of her life. When another slave

Get Access