Harriet Tubman was an African American abolitionist who led hundreds of enslaved blacks to freedom
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Harriet Tubman was an African American abolitionist who led hundreds of enslaved blacks to freedom
Harriet Tubman born at
She married John Tubman, a free black in 1844. However, he did not support her dream of escaping to Philadelphia. Therefore, she had to leave him behind and escape. When she returned to take her husband with her, she discovered that he had remarried.
She married a Civil War veteran named Nelson Davis in 1869 and together they adopted a baby girl.
A deeply religious lady, she was involved with The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. She donated a piece of land to the church for building an old age home for destitute coloured people.
She was born to slave parents Harriet Green and Ben Ross in Maryland. Her mother was a cook owned by Mary Brodess while her father, a skilled woodsman was held by Anthony Thompson. Records suggest that her parents had a total of nine children.
Many of her siblings were sold off by her parents’ owners to other slave owners. Her mother resisted and tried her best to stop the owners from selling her children. Her mother’s courage deeply influenced Harriet’s beliefs.
At the age of six she was considered old enough to work and was hired out as a nursemaid; her duties consisted of taking care of a baby. Her owners beat her frequently.
She was sent to work at a plantation after she attained the age of 11. With age she grew bigger and stronger and was assigned more arduous work like driving oxen, forest work, hauling logs and plowing.
She worked at a dry-goods store as an adolescent where she was hit on the head with a heavy weight by a white overseer. This resulted in a severe head injury and she suffered from seizures and headaches throughout her life.
She became ill in 1849 because of which her value as a slave diminished. Her owner Edward Brodess was trying to sell her but could not find a buyer. Her owner died the same year and her risk of being sold increased.
She along with two of her brothers escaped in 1849. But, within weeks of their escape, her brothers decided to return and she was forced to return with them.
She soon escaped alone making use of a network known as the Underground Railroad that comprised free and enslaved blacks and white abolitionists and activists. She covered a journey of nearly 90 miles by foot to finally reach Philadelphia, her destination.
Even though she was free now, she often thought of her family and others in Maryland who were still enslaved. Around this time the U.S. Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 which made it illegal for any citizen to help slaves in escaping.
She made several trips back to Maryland and helped rescue several of her relatives whom she safely brought back to Philadelphia. She became acquainted with the abolitionist Thomas Garrett and is believed to have worked with him.
She was a highly respected abolitionist who had helped guide hundreds of slaves to their freedom. She played a very important role in the civil war caring for sick people and in directing the Combahee River Raid. She is regarded as one of the most important civilians in the history of America before the Civil War.