One day, Arminta Ross, a teenage slave, was sent to a dry-goods store for supplies. While on her way there, she came across a slave who had left the work fields without any permission. The slave overseer demanded Arminta to help him restrain the disobedient slave. When she refused to help him, the overseer grabbed a two-pound weight and threw it at her. The weight hit her in the head and severely injured her. For the rest of her life, Arminta endured many painful seizures, excruciating headaches, and narcoleptic episodes. In addition to those effects, she also experienced intense and crazy dreams, which she claimed were sent from God. Being born to a slave family in 1920 and in Maryland, Arminta Ross’ life as a slave was a challenging one and one …show more content…
After she escaped slavery, a new law was passed that slaves could only be free by arriving in Canada. She quickly became an Underground Railroad conductor and set to work. When she finished her job as a conductor, she had a stunning record. In her ten years working as a conductor, she completed nineteen trips to Canada with slaves, neither she nor any of the slaves she guided got captured, and she completed her goal by guiding her enslaved friends, family, and many more to freedom. All in all, she brought around 300 slaves to freedom.
After finishing her job with the Underground Railroad, she started to work with the Union forces in South Carolina. Not only did Harriet work as a nurse, laundress, scout, and cook in the Civil War, but she also became a spy for the Union side. While she was working as a spy, she helped in a military campaign that freed over 750 slaves. Even though she did more than three years of work for the North, she was only paid $200. She then further supported herself by selling gingerbread, root beer, and