As Harriet Tubman once said, “I was the conductor of the Underground Railroad for eight years, and I can say what most conductors can 't say; I never ran my train off the track and I never lost a passenger.” In this quote Harriet Tubman tells us how she was the only conductor capable of keeping every one of her passengers safe on their trip to the South. This quote describes how Harriet Tubman tried really hard to freeing every single one of her passengers. Harriet Tubman was an amazing hero to many slaves. She was a really committed, industrious, and courageous conductor of the Underground Railroad. Tubman was born in 1820 on the Brodas Plantation located in Maryland. Since her parents were slaves, she was born into slavery. Her …show more content…
She escaped to Philadelphia with her two brothers, Ben and Henry, leaving her husband behind in 1849. Later on she decided to join the Underground Railroad as a conductor. She then made her first 19 trips to the south in 1850. She undertook the most hazardous mission yet, she guided a group of fugitives northward. Not long after that, she helped free her parents, setting them in Auburn, New York. In the year 1858 she met the abolitionist John Brown, who had said she had been one of the best people he met. Not only did she save about 300 slaves, but she also guided the Combahee River Raid liberating over 700 people. Since the Civil War started she served there as a nurse, cook, scout, and even a spy for the Union Army. This wasn’t it she also was the first woman to lead an armed army. Her work and dedication has inspired many generations of Americans who struggling for civil rights, with her bold and brave actions. With the land she had purchased, she built a home for sick and elderly blacks. A book was written about her by Sarah H. Bradford named “Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman”. When she died in 1913 of pneumonia, there was a monument built in her memory and was buried with military honors. Today many schools are named after