A time when the world was brutal towards a specific group of people. Segregation, racism, hatred, slavery, all those harsh conditions but one slave made it out. Harriet Ross Tubman is a woman who escaped and helped other slaves through the underground railroad system. Born as a slave, she saw how cruel the world was, and with extensive punishment and hard work, she started having this feeling, this desire to escape. When she decided to escape, Harriet had to leave her ex-husband, John Tubman, because he threatened to expose her secret of wanting to escape. Harriet returned to the South approximately 20 more times to help other slaves who were in despair to escape. Soon enough the government had a big bounty on her head. Throughout these …show more content…
Harriet’s first escape was a success but she had to leave someone very dear to her. We know this because the article “Harriet Tubman” states, “In 1848 she escaped, leaving behind her husband John Tubman, who threatened to report her to their master.” It can be inferred that it must have been difficult for her to leave her husband behind but one thing is for sure, she was determined to escape. Eventually, Harriet decided to help other slaves escape and made many successful missions. This is proven by the text in the article “Harriet Tubman”, “Over the following ten years she made about twenty trips from the North into the South and rescued more than three hundred slaves.” Helps the readers infer that Harriet must have been wise and brave if she could escape over three hundred …show more content…
Harriet lived during the times of the Civil War and as an African American woman, she struggled a lot but definitely picked up some very useful skills. This information is known to the readers because the text “Tubman, Harriet” tells us, “During the Civil War, Tubman served as a nurse for sick and wounded Union soldiers. She also acted as a spy, gathering information for the Union”. Also in the article “Harriet Ross Tubman” backed up that information by stating, “In 1861, when the Civil War began, she served as a nurse, spy, and scout for the Union forces.”. This textual evidence informs us of all the jobs she had/titles she had and those weren't easy jobs, she was risking her life. There are no in-depth stories of her life during those times but the article, “ Harriet Tubman” states, “Shortly before the outbreak of the Civil War she was forced to leave for Canada, but she returned to the United States and served the Union as a nurse, soldier, and spy; she was particularly valuable to the army as a scout because of the knowledge of the terrain she had gained as a conductor on the Underground Railroad.” To sum this up, the union must of acknowledged her as an important person considering how her title began to