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What Role Did Harriet Tubman Play In The Abolition Movement

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Underground Railroad, Violence, and Political and its effects on Abolition The Abolition Movement was a movement against slavery to abolish it and free all the slaves. The Abolitionists used multiple tactics to aid in the ending of slavery like the Underground Railroad, violence and uprising, and the multiple Acts passed by Congress. The Underground Railroad gave runaway slaves a sense of hope because it sheltered them and helped free slaves so they could start a new life. The Underground Railroad was a network of secret tunnels used to house runaway slaves as they tried to escape slavery and make it to the Northern States. The network of tunnels extended through 14 Northern States and Canada until fugitive slave hunters could not get them. …show more content…

Probably the most famous conductor was Harriet Tubman who was a runaway slave. She made 19 trips back to the South to assist about 300 slaves. She left behind her family to escape for what she believed in because she said “Mah people mus’ go free” (Harriet Tubman 1). This motivated her as she never had a slave be turned back. During the Civil War she acted as a nurse and spy. Harriet Tubman’s resistance against slavery was very strong because not only did she manage to escape from the horror itself, but she assisted many others as they wanted the future that she had. She fought against slavery because she believed no one should have to go through the pain and suffering as many slaves had to and she had a bounty of forty thousand dollars and was never caught. When the slaves would escape and make

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