Harriet Tubman Dbq Essay

1168 Words5 Pages

How likely would it be that a slave returns to save and help people in risk of their own freedom? Araminta Ross or Harriet Tubman was one of the unlikely heroes who did so. She was born a slave in year 1822 in Dorchester County, Maryland, and lived in the fear of being separated from her other family members. At least two of her sisters had faced had faced this fate. Slaves were needed from Maryland’s Eastern Shore from the rise of cotton fields and pressure to provide grew. She later married John Tubman, a free black man in 1844. Though John Tubman was free, Harriet’s status remained and instead changed her name from Araminta Ross to Harriet Tubman. When her master died in 1849, she made her escape for freedom. Throughout her life, Harriet …show more content…

The 54th Massachusetts was a group of all-black soldiers who fought on Fort Wagner in Charleston Harbor. THe author describes, “Harriet Tubman served as a nurse for the survivors of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteers” (Doc. D). Serving as a nurse for a hospital to help the wounded soldiers of the 54th Massachusetts is a very important task. The nurses and doctors who healed the soldiers would be a significant part of the assault. Harriet Tubman devoted much of her time in serving them. She supported herself through selling her baked goods from the night. Harriet Tubman never received pay or pension for her four long years and only took 20 rations of food during them (Doc. D). During the day she would nurse the soldiers and in the night she “made about fifty pies, a great quantity of gingerbread, and two casks of root beer” (Doc. D). With the time she devoted, day and night, she helped the wounded people at the risk of being infected or overburdened. However compared to the Combahee River Raid, the hospital work had less people supported with the 800 people compared to around likely 30 people in the hospital at a …show more content…

After the time she devoted rescuing and nursing other people, Harriet Tubman settled down in her home in New York. The author describes, “During the 48 years between the end of the Civil War and her death in 1913, much of Harriet Tubman’s time was spent in taking care of people in her home” (Doc. E). Her accomplishment of caregiving people in her home is important since she dedicated the rest of her life doing so. During her 48 years, Harriet Tubman cared for the old, widowed, epileptic, blind, paralyzed, and other disabled in her home (Doc. E). In her home, she cared for 6 to 8 people as they were poor or disabled in some way. She took in those rejected from her community and cared for them which is important and shows her compassion for others. Though the achievement of caring for people in her community and length of serving were important, it was the last noteworthy achievement since there was little to no risk