Hariet Tubman Abolition: the action or an act of abolishing a system, practice, or institution. From the early 1800s to the end of the civil war in 1865, the abolition movement worked to end slavery in the United States of America. Several figures played important roles in this movement, one of said figures being Hariet Tubman. Hariet Tubman is one of the most well-known members of the Abolitionist Movement, and she was an extremely important part of it by conducting the underground railroad, pushing past the challenges that she faced, and making several trips from the north to the south without getting caught or losing a passenger. Hariet Tubman was known as a “conductor” on the Underground Railroad, which wasn’t actually an underground or …show more content…
The Underground Railroad was a path up through the south leading to places where slaves could be freed, and according to the National Women's History Museum, “Tubman returned to the South several times and helped dozens of people escape. Her success led slave owners to post a $40,000 reward for her capture or death.” Her actions allowed dozens of slaves to become free, which was the main goal of the Abolitionist Movement; to free slaves and abolish slavery. By conducting the Underground Railroad, Hariet Tubman played a huge role in aiding the Abolitionist Movement. In the words of Kate Clifford from ProQuest, “four able-bodied young slaves represented thousands of dollars in assets to their enslavers. Slave catchers relentlessly tracked the group along the heavily trodden paths of the Underground Railroad in Delaware and Pennsylvania.” If the slave catchers were to have caught Hariet Tubman, her passengers would be beaten and returned to their slave holders. Hariet. She would’ve been killed. Despite the aforementioned danger that running the Underground Railroad posed, Hariet Tubman pushed past the danger and trouble and overcame the challenges facing her, which were more than just helping …show more content…
Not only that, but she even went on to help others! Hariet Tubman didn’t just run on the Underground Railroad, though. She faced lots of challenges and worked to fix lots of issues throughout her life, and in the words of Janell Hobson, “She is perhaps the most famous African American woman in the world, yet she is often overlooked or referenced as a mere footnote when the events for which she is famous—abolitionism, women’s suffrage, emancipation, and the Civil War—are commemorated.” In Hariet’s time, demanding rights could take a long time and it wasn’t easy, especially when you were a part of the group whose That makes it even more amazing to think about just how much she did; she was a former slave who escaped slavery and helped others to do the same, she was a woman who spoke above the voices fighting to drown her out. Think about how much effort and hope it must’ve taken her to keep pushing, even when things seemed hopeless! To follow up on the previous statement, Hariet Tubman went on several trips through the Underground Railroad with passengers, and yet she never got caught and never lost anyone, as well as helping out with other