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How Did Harriet Tubman Contribute To Freedom

1063 Words5 Pages

Anastasia Bradley
Mrs.Feliciano
English 5-6
23 November 2016 Harriet Tubman

"' I had crossed the line of which I had so long been dreaming. I was free; but there was no one to welcome me to the land of freedom'. Harriet Tubman spoke of her accomplishment and the intense loneliness that led her resolve to free her family and other slaves"("Harriet Tubman"). During the 19th century African Americans didn't have the same rights as Caucasian Americans which whom they worked for and were treated cruelly. This lead Harriet Tubman to help many slaves trying to earn their freedom from slavery. However, while Harriet Tubman was reviled my most Southern plantation owners, she actually performed some …show more content…

Harriet Tubman was born 1820 in Dorchester, Maryland. She was the 11th child of Harriet Green (Ross) and Benjamin Ross also known as "Old Rit" and "Old Ben" ("Harriet Tubman"). However, her work as a slave began at the age of six. Harriet Tubman started off as a house maid but was later moved to the fields because of her lack of skill. One day as she was working in the field shucking corn, she noticed a young slave slip away without the overseer's permission. Curious, she followed him. The overseer caught up with them and told her to grab him. When she didn't move he got angry and threw a two pound weight at the slave but missed and hit her in the head causing her skull to push against her brain. This injury caused her to have seizures and …show more content…

Thomas Garret a prominent white Quaker abolitionist in Wilmington, Delaware , thought highly of Harriet Tubman's work and provided all the necessities she needed("Harriet Tubman"). However, in 1861 Harriet Tubman returned to the south to assist "contraband" soldiers, also known as enslaved African Americans who lefted home and attached themselves to the Union Army("Harriet Tubman"). Harriet Tubman personally assisted Colonel Montgomery when he led a raid in the Combanee area("Harriet Tubman"). However, the following year Harriet Tubman worked for the Union Army and travelled first to Beaufort, South Carolina to work as a nurse and a teacher to Gullah people who had been abandoned by there owners("Harriet Tubman"). In the spring of 1863 Harriet Tubman went to Florida to help Union officials. Harriet helped organize a scouting service for African Americans males to help lead expeditions into the enemy territory seeking strategic information ("Harriet

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