...Harriet Tubman is know as Ms.Tubman from being married to Mr. Tubman or better known as John Tubman. She kept the name even when he did not support her trying to escape because he was a free slave. He threatened to turn her in several times and when she escaped he immediately re-married. Harriet Tubman had many names and nicknames. Her nickname everyone knows her by today is Moses the biblical hero who helped free slaves from Egypt. When she was a little kid she was called Minty but her real name that her parents called her by was Araminta Ross. Then she took the name Harriet after her mother died. Harriet Tubman was born a slave and has her birthday recorded as March 1822. Harriet always dreamed of being any slaves. Many times she...
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...passenger.” Harriet Tubman, born Arminta Ross, was widely known for her escape through the Underground Railroad. Harriet Tubman helped many slaves, including her friends and family, find their way to freedom. At night, where it was safer to travel, she would assist other slaves escape. As a result of her successful attempts to escape, she was nicknamed “Moses”. Harriet Tubman Biography interpreted the hardships she experienced during her years in slavery. One particular experience Tubman had was when she was struck in the head with a two-pound iron weight that was meant for another...
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...Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks: Rebellious Historical Heroes Monique Jones ENG/220 Philip Schunk April 25, 2016 Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks: Rebellious Historical Heroes Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks were two incredibly brave women who became heroes in history. They had a calling to stand up for what they believed in from the time they knew the world around them was not a fair place to live. A time when African Americans were sold to Caucasians, to work as slaves, and segregation was alive, black and whites were not allowed to sit together on buses, or learn together in schools. Both Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks were heroes in different eras around the civil war, but both experienced discrimination, wanted freedom, and acted in rebellious ways to stand up to what they believed in. Maturing into the Unbeknownst Heroes Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks were maturing when white supremacy had the upper hand, although in different ways they held the same belief. On one hand, Harriet Tubman was a runaway slave who wanted to help her friends and family, too, escape to their freedom. She was illiterate due to a childhood head injury or furthermore by the law that was against the teaching of enslaved Africans (Singer, 2012). On the other hand, Rosa Parks grew up standing up to the white bullies back talking the whites who treated her in an unfair way. She stated to her grandmother, "I would rather be lynched than live to be mistreated and not be allowed to say 'I don't like...
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...respected. One Hero Many people admire is Harriet Tubman for helping many people to freedom. The life of hero Harriet Tubman had struggles and hard times. Harriet Tubman was born into slavery around 1820 in Maryland, she was one of nine siblings. In 1849 Harriet's owner fell ill and later died, she saw this as her chance to escape. She traveled nearly 90 miles on the underground railroad rather than continuing to live her life in the north, Harriet made it her mission to help her family to freedom.Harriet not only rescued her family from slavery but also rescued hundreds of other slaves.In the few years Harriet was working on the underground railroad she earned the nickname "Moses" and became the most famous "Conductor".When Harriet decided she was done being a conductor of the underground railroad she had rescued her parents, several siblings, and about 60 other slaves. After Harriet rescued her family from slavery she served as a nurse, scout, and spy for union government during the...
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...In the autobiography, Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom by Catherine Clinton, events in Harriet Tubman’s life are highlighted throughout and the legacy she left. From when she was born in Maryland around 1820, up to when she was referred to as a powerful spirit on her deathbed. So many events are highlighted in Harriet’s life such as her escape from slavery, helping others escape, and helping her family out as well. Throughout Harriet Tubman’s life, she showed her heart to help others and showed great strength and bravery during the time she worked on the Underground Railroad. In the biography, Tubman’s life showed her heart for others in need throughout her life. One example of her heart for others is when she went back for her family...
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...bhvbhvcvgcbgchbchnchbcbgcgvcfvxdfxsfxdfsdsdssdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdsdfsdsdvvHarriet Tubman escaped from slavery in 1849, fleeing to Philadelphia. Tubman decided to escape following a bout of illness and the death of her owner in 1849. Tubman feared that her family would be further severed, and feared for own her fate as a sickly slave of low economic value. She initially left Maryland with two of her brothers, Ben and Henry, on September 17, 1849. A notice published in the Cambridge Democrat offered a $300 reward for the return of Araminta (Minty), Harry and Ben. Once they had left, Tubman’s brothers had second thoughts and returned to the plantation. Harriet had no plans to remain in bondage. Seeing her brothers safely home, she soon set off alone for Pennsylvania. Tubman made use of the network known as the Underground Railroad to travel nearly 90 miles to Philadelphia. She crossed into the free state of Pennsylvania with a feeling of relief and awe, and recalled later: “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.” Rather than remaining in the safety of the North, Tubman made it her mission to rescue her family and others living in slavery. In December 1850, Tubman received a warning that her niece Kessiah was going to be sold, along with her two young children. Kessiah’s...
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...Harriet Tubman Biography From Slavery to Freedom: Underground Railroad Conductor, Abolitionist, Women's Rights Advocate by Jone Johnson Lewis [Harriet Tubman] tried to persuade her brothers to escape [slavery] with her, but ended up leaving alone, making her way to Philadelphia, and freedom. Harriet Tubman Courtesy Library of Congress The year after Harriet Tubman's [arrival in the North, she decided to return to Maryland to free her sister and her sister's family. Over the next 12 years, she returned 18 or 19 more times, bringing a total of more than 300 slaves out of slavery. Harriet Tubman's organizing ability was key to her success -- she had to work with supporters on the clandestine Underground Railroad, as well as get messages to the slaves, since she met them away from their plantations to avoid detection. They usually left on a Saturday evening, as the Sabbath might delay anyone noticing their absence for another day, and if anyone did note their flight, the Sabbath would certainly delay anyone from organizing an effective pursuit or publishing a reward. Harriet Tubman was only about five feet tall, but she was smart and she was strong -- and she carried a long rifle. She used the rifle not only to intimidate pro-slavery people they might meet, but also to keep any of the slaves from backing out. She threatened any who seemed like they were about to leave, telling them that "dead Negroes tell no tales." A slave who returned from one of these trips could betray...
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...connect to a short biography of each person. On the line next to each clue, write the name of the person to whom the clue refers. 1. This person was a famous botanist, inventor, and teacher. 2. This person started a newspaper called "The North Star." 3. This person refused to give up a seat on the bus. That led to a 382-day bus boycott by black people in Montgomery, Alabama. 4. When this person was just a few weeks old, he and his mother were kidnapped. His mother was sold into slavery. 5. Because this person led so many slaves to freedom, he or she was sometimes called by the nickname Moses. 6. This person studied in Cuba and Kenya and worked at a Cambodian refugee camp in Thailand before going on to become famous. 7. One of 13 children, this person's birthname was Isabella Baumfree. 8. The president named this person to be the first black to hold a seat on the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land. 9. In 1962, this person became the first black player inducted in the Baseball Hall of Fame. 10. This person's performance at the 1936 Summer Olympic Games made him famous. George Washington Carver Frederick Douglass Mae Jemison Thurgood Marshall Jesse Owens Rosa Parks Jackie Robinson Sojourner Truth Harriet Tubman Booker T. Washington Step 2: Choose one of the famous black Americans above and write a short (2 or 3 paragraphs) biography about him/her...
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...with the bottom of their cleats. Jackie Robinson was on the Brooklyn Dodgers so many of his own teammates did not like him. Many of the pitchers from other teams threw the ball at him which gave him many bruises. Despite all of this, Jackie Robinson became a star in baseball and led the Brooklyn Dodgers to a World Series appearance. This example of Jackie Robinson shows that no matter how much adversity you go through, if you keep on working hard, you can achieve great things. Heroes also show the great quality of perseverance. Harriet Tubman is someone who showed exemplary perseverance. She was a slave that worked hard, but was still abused by her plantation owner. One day she decided that she was going to escape and that’s exactly what she did. She made it off the plantation and eventually found some people that thought slavery was wrong and decided to hide Harriet in their attic. They then helped Harriet find all of the safe houses. Once Harriet made it to freedom in one of the northern states, she had a thought. She thought there were so many other slaves that were...
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...B.C. there were recorded codes regarding sanitation and public health. The Bible even speaks of quarantine to prevent disease and nurses are mentioned as caring for infants and the sick. But, much of today’s nursing practice seems to have evolved from the need to provide care to soldiers during wartimes. Two historical figures that left an impact on the development of modern nursing are Harriet Tubman and Walt Whitman. Araminta Ross, also known as Harriet Tubman, was born into slavery. At age 25 she married John Tubman, a free African American. They did not share the same desire to move north and after 5 years of marriage, Harriet left her husband and escaped to Philadelphia (“Harriet Ross Tubman Timeline”, 1996). After her escape, she became an operator of the Underground Railroad, an abolitionist, nurse and spy for the Civil War, suffragist, and humanitarian. In 1862, in support of Union activities, Harriet joined Northern abolitionists. She provided nursing care during the Civil War to newly freed slaves and black soldiers. After the war she moved to Auburn, New York. Tubman treated dysentery with a brew of boiled roots and herbs, a remedy she brought from her native Maryland (Domrose, 2011). Such accounts were recorded in letters written by others, because she could not read or write. Henry Durrant, the assistant surgeon in charge of the Union’s Contraband Hospital in Beaufort, S.C., wrote: “My position as medical officer in charge of contrabands in...
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...Women against Slavery Sojourner Truth, named Isabella Baumfree by her parents (1797-1883), and Harriet Tubman, named Araminta Ross by her parents (1826-1913). Naturally introduced to slavery, neither could read or write, but both ladies figured out how too offhand around this world with their individual stories of trials and triumph (Gawron 2002). Slavery Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman were African-American slaves who picked up their tractability, changed their names, and rebelled against enslavement. The uniformities between the two ladies make an unmistakable obligation of sisterhood between two of history's most dynamic African-American ladies. Both ladies ascended from the shadows of servitude to unmistakable parts of initiative. They both had reflective and tolerating beliefs in higher energy to direct and ensure them. Truth and Tubman saw the power of music as a technique for correspondence (Humez 2008). Both women had confidence, and followed up on, their hunches, however, the similarities ended there. One fundamental way they differentiated from each other was in appearance. Sojourner Truth was more than six feet tall with a slim figure while Harriet Tubman was a foot shorter and thick (Gawron 2002). Sojourner Truth wearing the Quaker style, with a white cap worn on the head, dresses light in weight and a shawl over the shoulders (Gawron 2002). Harriet Tubman wrapped a tissue on her head, her dresses were made of overpowering and grinding cotton, and she didn't...
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...One of the most influential women of the 19th century was Harriet Tubman. She was born into slavery as Araminta Ross. She was nicknamed Minty by her mother. Her exact birthdate is unknown because slave owners did not keep birth records of their slaves. It is estimated that she was born around 1820 in Dorchester County, Maryland. Her parents were Benjamin Ross and Harriet Green. She had ten brother and sisters. They lived on the plantation of Edward Brodas. Edward would sell many of her sisters to plantations further south which tore her family apart. She started out as a slave but she became one of the most famous conductors on the Underground Railroad, fought on the Union side in the Civil War, and ran an elderly home after the war for African Americans. Harriet was hired out to multiple neighboring masters during her time on the Edward Brodas plantation. Her first job began when she was only five years old. She was hired out to a mistress to be a maid and babysitter. She would tend to her maid duties in the day time and had to stay alert for the baby at night. She dozed off one night and did not get to the crying baby before the mistress woke up. She was punished by being slapped across the face and neck. She was hired out to a new master when she was six years old. Her new master taught her how to catch muskrats and how to weave. She was caught taking a sugar cube from the table one day and ran away to avoid her punishment which only delayed her punishment. She received her...
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...Araminta Ross better known as Harriet Tubman historically broke the mold for people of her time. Although she was best known for her work with the Underground Railroad Tubman was also an African-American humanitarian and abolitionist. In the year 1820 Tubman was born of two slave parents in Dorchester County, Maryland. Since she was born into slavery Tubman got hired out at the young age of six. Later in her life as the result of her abuse she suffered from a major head injury that would lead to other health issues. Due to her medical problems no one would buyer after the sudden of her previous owner; thus causing her the fear of being separated from her family. In her first attempt to run away she was going to bring her brother, but they...
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...The Legacy of Harriet Tubman Often called the ``Moses`` of her people Harriet Tubman is an individual who fought for change and won. She fought for the Abolitionist Movement: and later in life she also helped Women’s Rights in her lifetime. Through Harriett, many great successes were achieved in ending slavery on a large scale, without her slavery may have taken longer to be abolished. Harriet Tubman was born in Bucktown, Maryland on a large plantation in 1820, her parents were Benjamin Ross and Harriet Green: both slaves. Her original name was Araminta, ``Minty``, She changed it later when she married John Tubman, she had no children with her first or second husband, Nelson Davis. She met her husband John Tubman...
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...know that Harriet Tubman will soon be the face of the $20 bill? To accomplish this, she risked her own life by freeing slaves and fighting for rights as the conductor of the Underground Railroad. She was motivated and had a strong character, she was a true hero, and she impacted history. If it weren’t for Tubman's motivation and determined personality many slaves would have never known freedom. According to History.com Tubman was, "born a slave on Maryland's Eastern shore, she endured the harsh existence of a field hand, including brutal beatings." This shows why Tubman was so motivated to be free. After being a slave for approximately 29 years she had escaped (biography.com). The amazing part is that she wasn't satisfied with her own freedom, she wanted everyone to be free. She constantly said, "Mah people mus' go free." -History.com. She wanted everyone to know freedom so badly that she freed more and more...
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