Harriet Tubman was an intelligent, determined, and selfless abolitionist that always put others before herself. She worked as a cook, nurse, and an armed spy and scout for the Union Army when the Civil War began in 1861. During this time, she took many risks with her being an African-American woman choosing to help and serve others. Harriet Tubman was the greatest abolitionist of all time. She was such a brave individual, that she left behind her friends and family to save hundreds of slaves with The Underground Railroad, which she conducted.
Araminta Ross was born a slave in Dorchester County, Maryland in 1822. At an early age, she began working as a house servant and later became a field worker. The caring person that she was, blocked the
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She took his last name, and changed her first name to Harriet in honor of her mother. In 1849, she was scared that she and other slaves were going to be sold because her slave master was ill. Harriet Tubman planned to run away, and set out one night with the assistance from a white woman. She finally reached Pennsylvania where she found a job and saved money for herself. The following year she returned to Maryland to get her sister, and her sister’s children so they could experience freedom as well. Not long after, she made a second trip back to the south to get her brother and two other unknown men. On her third dangerous trip back to the south, Harriet Tubman went to save her husband but only to find out that he had married someone else while she was gone. Harriet Tubman returned to the south repeatedly to save other slaves, and every time she figured out more secretive ways to go unnoticed. She risked her family and most importantly her life to help others, but this just showed how much heart she had towards others. As Harriet Tubman said, “I had reasoned this out in my mind, there was one of two things I had a right to, liberty or death; if I could not have one, I would have the other.” She had thought about the consequences The Underground Railroad would lead to if she would get caught, but she did not let that get in her way of saving hundreds of slaves from the south. This is one of the reasons why