They Call Her Moses
Brave. Selfless. Kind. Who do you think of when you hear these three words? Do you know who led over 300 African American slaves to freedom in the 1850's? This person also worked for the Union Army during the Civil War and earned the nickname Moses from John Brown. This heroic person's birth name is Arminta Ross, but you may know her as Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman was a courageous historical figure that has inspired people all around the world.
Around 1820, Arminta Minty Ross was born into a slave family and was one of 8 children. When she was around five or six, she was put to work as a house servant. As she grew to be 12-13, she started working in the field with everyone else. At this point, she had become very independent. She would suffer the rest of her life due to an event that happened soon after she started working in the fields. A slave owner was very angry at a slave and was going to hurt him. Instead of being a bystander, Arminta (Harriet) blocked the doorway to protect her fellow field worker. This caused the overseer to be even more furious. The overseer then threw a two-pound weight, and it ended up hitting Arminta in the head. She never recovered from
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After having a hard childhood being enslaved, she eventually escaped in 1849. This is when she changed her name to Harriet Tubman (Harriet Tubman Historical Society). When Harriet escaped, she went to Pennsylvania, then soon after she went to Philadelphia to start her new life and start working and saving to make a living. One year after she came to Philadelphia, she returned to Maryland and led her sister and her children to freedom. She returned again but this time to free her brother and two other enslaved men. Feeling almost complete, she returned once more for her husband. When she returned for her husband, she found that he had remarried. Not wanting to waste a trip, she found several other slaves to take back with
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 really named Araminta Ross, but she later adopted her mother’s first name. She was one of eleven children of Harriet Greene and Benjamin Ross. She was five when she worked on a plantation in Dorchester County, Maryland. She was first a maid, and a children’s nurse before she started working as a field hand when she was twelve. While she was thirteen, her master hit her head with a heavy weight. The hit put permanent
A reward of $300 was posted for both Harriet and her two brothers by the Cambridge Democrat (Biography.com). Not only that happened, but also in 1850, the Fugitive Slave Law was passed. The law was that if you were an escaped slave and was caught, you would get sent back to slavery (Math.buffalo.edu). Not to mention that before she accomplished all the things she did, she had a severe injury that affected her whole life. In her early years she was hit by a 2-pound weight, which caused her to have severe headaches and narcolepsy (nwhm.org). Even though all these things happened, mostly everything she did lead to success.
Harriet Tubman was born in the year of 1820 into a family of 8 children and two parents of who were all slaves. Harriet’s real name was Araminta Harriet Ross yet she later changed her name to Harriet around the time she was married to John Tubman. Harriet’s life as a slave was hard like many other slaves lives during that time. When Harriet Tubman was around 12 years old she was hit in the head by a two pound weight when she refused to hold down a runaway slave, because of this she suffered through sleeping spells and sever headaches throughout her life, this was called Narcolepsy. Harriet was married in 1844 to a free black man named John Tubman. She ran away in 1951 using the underground railroad. Once she was freed
The early 1850’s, Harriet started to help the enslaved escape and lead them to freedom. Harriet started out by rescuing family members, which she knew the location of. She also went back to her get her husband, only to find out that he was remarried and did not want to see her. Even though her husband was free she still felt the need to save him from the south. From that point on she vowed not to waste another trip, and rescue other enslaved people. She helped reunite families and loved ones despite her disappointment with her own husband. Harriet rescued the enslaved during the winter, when nights were longer and people were less likely to be outside. Often runaway slaves felt they could no longer make the journey and wanted to return, for that reason Harriet carried a pistol. She threatened those to continue the journey, because if they were caught they; there was a possibility they could expose what they saw on the trip. Once on a journey Harriet developed an infection in her mouth, and was able to take her pistol and knocked out the tooth that was infected taking others teeth. She was strong enough to deal with the pain and continue on her journey. For some time Harriet lived in Canada since she was at in risk in America, but she come back to bring her parents to Canada even though they were living free.
Harriet Tubman was like a conductor on a train. Running the underground railroad to free innocent slaves from certain neglect. What do people think when they hear the name Harriet Tubman. some might think of her as a dirty black others might call her a hero, or moses. Harriet Tubman was a very brave, and courageous woman. In this paper we will explore the childhood, life of slavery, and how she came to be known as the women called moses.
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 Tubman was a second generation slave born in the 1820s in Dorchester County, Maryland. She was born a slave. Her birth name was Aramita Ross, her nicknames were Minty, Moses, and Moses Of Her People. She was one of eleven children in her family. Her parents were Harriet Green, nicknamed “Old Rit” and Benjamin Ross. They were believed to be full blooded African Americans, Ashanti West African war people. Harriet’s owner, Edward Brodas, was a plantation owner and often rented Harriet out to neighboring families. At age 7 she was sent to take care of a baby, she tried to eat a sugar cube, but got caught, she ran and hid. After a few days hunger got the best of
Harriet Tubman was born into slavery in Dorchester County Maryland in 1820. She was called Araminta Harriet Ross she was one of the 11 children of Benjamin and Harriet Green Ross. At the age of twelve Harriet Tubman was instructed to tie up a fellow slave for a whipping. Harriet Tubman refused to tie up the slave and in Harriet’s masters rage he threw a two pound weight at Harriet’s head. Harriet Tubman was in a coma for weeks and there was a dent in her forehead for the rest of her life. This resulted in headaches and episodes of narcolepsy all throughout her life. Harriet Tubman’s mother was freed from slavery by a previous owner which in result also made Harriet free. Harriet Tubman was advised not to go to court because of how long ago the freeing of her mother was. Harriet Tubman married John Tubman a free black man who lived near the Brodas Planation on which Harriet lived in 1844. Even though she was married to a free man she still was a slave
Harriet Tubman is a woman of faith and dignity who saved many African American men and women through courage and love for God. One would ponder what would drive someone to bring upon pain and suffering to one’s self just to help others. Harriet Tubman was an African American women that took upon many roles during her time just as abolitionist, humanitarian, and a Union Spy during the American civil war. Her deeds not only saved lives during these terrible time’s but also gave other African Americans the courage to stand up for what they believe in and achieve equal rights for men in women in the world no
Harriet Tubman was an American bondwoman who escaped from slavery in the south to become a leading abolitionist before the American civil war. She was born in maryland in 1820, and successfully escaped in 1849. Yet she returned many times to rescue both her family members and non-relatives from the plantation system.
At the age of 13, Harriet became more rebellious; she disobeyed her masters as people watched. One day, another male slave was getting beat; the overseer wanted to punish him and he wanted Harriet to help but she refused to. Harriet was hit with a weight, which put a hole in her skull and pushed her skull against her brain. She described it as it “broke my skull and cut a piece of that shawl clean off and drove it into my head”. After the accident she didn’t get medical treatment and soon had to return to the fields. The experience of going back to the field was noted as “with blood and
(Harriet Tubman was originally born Araminta Ross and then later changed her first name to Harriet, after her mother.) In 1849, Tubman ran away in fear that she, along with many other slaves on the plantation were going to be sold off. Harriet Tubman left on foot. Luckily, Tubman was given some assistance from a white woman, and was able to set off on her journey to freedom. Tubman used the North Star in order to find her direction during the night, slowly inching her way to Pennsylvania. Once Tubman had reached Pennsylvania, she found a job and began to save her money. The following year after arriving to Philadelphia, Tubman returned to Maryland and to lead her family to freedom. Among the people she took was her sister and her sister’s two children. Tubman was able to make the same dangerous trips months later back to the South to rescue her brother and two other men that her brother knew. On Tubman’s third return to the South to rescue her husband, she found that he had found another wife. Undeterred by her husband’s actions, she rescued other slaves wanting freedom and lead them Northward.
She was also known as the underground railroad conductor. Harriet Tubman set up a network of stations. The moment that she decided to go back she changed the world of slavery. Slaves started to disappear everywhere only to turn up in a free state. Harriet Tubman was in a safe house for slaves in Pennsylvania when she decided to go back to the other slaves and her family. What caused this is that Harriet thought that more slaves should know about the railroad but had no way to get the word out without the masters finding out. She then decided that she would be the one to pull them out of the slave ways and bring them to a place where they were safe. Many of her escape plans take days or even weeks to get the people to the free. Even when they arrive they are stilled owned by their slave