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Who Was Harriet Tubman An Abolitionist

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There were many abolitionists back when slavery was a thing in the US, but one main abolitionist was Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman was a black woman born into slavery in March 1822 in Dorchester County on Maryland's eastern shore, she was known as a “Conductor” of the underground railroad, but she was mainly known for her many feats as an abolitionist where she helped many African American slaves escape to the north and the many hardships she faced while attempting to do so while inspiring others. The underground railroad was a system Harriet Tubman was a part of where abolitionists or slaves would aid other slaves in escaping slavery; the name “Underground railroad” is just a metaphor for the many underground networks conductors like Tubman used to lead enslaved people to the north, where slavery is outlawed. …show more content…

But although she did a lot, there were many hardships she faced during her life. Harriet Tubman suffered from epilepsy, in the article called “A Beacon of Resilience and Love: Harriet Tubman”, It states, “At 13 years old, Tubman suffered a traumatic injury that almost killed her when a two-pound weight missed its intended target and hit Tubman in the head instead”. This made living, and her mission as an abolitionist more difficult as she would suffer through debilitating seizures and other painful conditions. Later Harriet would marry a freeman, John Tubman, but her husband refused to join her on as she was aiding slaves, and by 1851 he had married a free black

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