Society has always been shaped by powerful and influential people, one of which was Harriet Tubman. As an abolitionist hero and suffrage icon, Harriet Tubman was, and still is one of the most significant figures in modern American history, and is remembered with similar notoriety as people such as Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks. She was born into the slave trade as Arminta Harriet Ross in Dorchester County, Maryland. Her real birthdate is unknown, but historians theorise it was between 1820 and 1825, considering her death date and the few records they have of her life. She is renowned for escaping slavery, only to return as many as 19 times to rescue hundreds more enslaved people with the use of the Underground Railroad: a network of pathways …show more content…
Since Harriet Tubman’s time, slavery has been abolished and is viewed as it should be: a grave miscarriage of human rights. Women have since been given the right to vote in the United States. Unfortunately, this did not occur all at once, and significant racial and cultural bias involved due to the almost simultaneous emergence of the abolitionist and suffrage movements. This timing accentuated areas where the two movements overlap, bringing to light many issues that we now consider a substantial part of intersectional feminism in our modern era. At first, the right to vote was exclusive to men and was then given only to American and African American women, which defeated the purpose of broadening the United States electorate as it alienated all of the other races, ethnicities, and cultures that resided there. This was in 1920. It was only in the 1950s and 1960s that women from various parts of Asia could vote, and eventually women of all races and cultures were included in the United States electorate, and the political landscape has never been the same. We also celebrate Harriet Tubman Day on the day of Harriet’s death. This day is used to commemorate Harriet’s life and how she left her mark on the world. It is an annual reminder of how far we’ve come as a civilization and a testament to the solidarity of her