How Did Harriet Tubman Contribute To Freedom

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The Underground Railroad was a secret network of routes through fourteen Northern states and Canada, also known as the promise land. Many different group of people assisted slaves in their movement north including: free black community members, Northern abolitionists, philanthropist, and church leaders of the Quaker religion. The Underground Railroad played a huge part in the lives of millions of slaves trying to seek freedom in the North. The Underground Railroad was in commission from pre-Civil War until after the war officially ended.
One of the most famous Civil Rights abolitionist was Harriet Tubman. Harriet was born into a slavery in Maryland along with eight brothers and sisters. Growing up as a slave Tubman received multiple whippings …show more content…

She eventually escaped to Philadelphia in 1849 because her owner died. Tubman said “ When I found I had crossed that line, I looked at my hands to see if I was the same person. There was such a glory over everything; the sun came like gold through the trees, and over the fields, and I felt like I was in Heaven.” Because she was freed and knew her family was still enslaved, she made use of the Underground Railroad. Harriet explicitly 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 …show more content…

Frederick was a slave and an abolitionist before he escaped his owner.
In early 1859, Tubman bought a piece of land from Senator William H. Seward. Tubman’s family then moved to Auburn, New York to help her farm the piece of land following the years after the war. Harriet married a Civil War veteran named Nelson Davis in 1869 and after adopted a baby named Gertie.
Although everything sounds like it was going uphill for Tubman she was never financially secure. Even though this was troubling for her she still lived in peace with her husband and daughter. In 1903, she eventually donated her small piece of property to the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Auburn. With this donation, the Tubman Home for the Aged opened in 1908. Mentioned earlier, Tubman suffered head trauma from the whippings of her owners. She went to Boston Massachusetts General Hospital to have brain surgery and eventually admitted herself into a rest home. Harriet died in 1913 of