...1800’s A miraculous hero once said “[M]y people must be free” -Harriet Tubman. Tubman was born into slavery which ignited her desire to free the colored. The “Underground Railroad” became born and led the people to freedom. Her heroic acts weren’t finished, she later became a spy and created a home where runaway slaves could stay. Harriet Tubman may have started her life as an abused slave, but the woman known as Moses determined to become not only a spy, but a hero. As a child, Tubman was having a rocky time being the color she was born with, yet through it all she still had faith as strong as an ox. All hero’s struggle in the beginning and “[P]hysical violence was part of daily life for Tubman and her family”(“Tubman, Harriet”)....
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...The Railroad Worker She was a hero, a woman, an African American, and a former slave who risked her life to bring many slaves to freedom on the Underground Railroad. She escaped to freedom herself but then returned to the south many times risking that freedom to rescue not only her family but people she didn't know. She was a hero. She was also as wife, a daughter, a mother, a spy, a nurse, a cook, and an army scout for the Union Army. She was a woman of strong moral character who didn't back down from what she believed in. She was brave, she was just. She was small and petite but she never backed down. She never lost a passenger on any of her journeys. Harriet Tubman during the civil war in any possible way she could such as cooking food,...
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...know Harriet Tubman as the woman who got freedom and went back to bring other people to freedom. Also you can probably guess that she didn’t like slavery. Thing that you did not know is where she lived and probably don’t even no how old she was when she did it. You probably don’t even no when this came to her mind. Well let me tell you it happened when she was 15 years old in Bucktown, Maryland this was stated in “The Woman Called Moses.” Now there’s two text that talks about Harriet Tubman. That is “The Woman Called Moses” by: Walter Oleksy and Meg Mims, then in “Leaders of the Civil War Era: Harriet Tubman” by: Ann Malaspina. These two authors wrote these passages to inform us about Harriet Tubman and what she did. These two passages are similar but are...
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...Harriet Tubman was an amazing hero with a lot of bravery. Harriet Tubman was born into slavery, but that did not keep her away from what she thought was important. Harriet Tubman was always a active person from being a slave, to a cook, and nurse in the civil war, started scouting and at the end of her heroism she became a scout for south states to check if they still had slaves, because slavery had ended but the North wanted to know if they followed that law. Harriet Tubman was also a writer at one time which i did not know. Harriet Tubman's name first was known when she became a conductor, then everyone knew her when she had escaped slavery, she also was known for many other things like map creator, creator of the underground railroad,...
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...Araminta ross, later changed to Harriet tubman achieved many things in her 91 years of life but her most known about achievement is being a underground railroad worker. The second most important is her being a caregiver.Third is her being a civil war spy.Lastly is her being a civil war nurse.In my opinion her most important achievement is her being a underground railroad worker because of the fact that she made a difference in about 300 people's lives making all of them free. First let's start off with tubman's greatest achievement The underground the Underground Railroad was a network of secret routes and safe houses used by enslaved people in efforts to escape to free states or Canada. Harriet was one of the people who helped...
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...expectations and standards for a hero; a person with abnormal abilities. We’ve all been taught to believe what’s on tv since childhood, giving us a different point of view on life. For example, thinking it is all fake because it’s exactly what we want for life to be like, to become our fantasy. In a way, we all grow out of that thought as we get older and mature but it has also just been a way to kill our dreams. But, as you’ve most likely heard, not all heroes wear capes. Sometimes, our hero might be someone we never thought had existed or sometimes it’s somebody who we acknowledge the presence of on a daily basis. Truth is, a hero is simply...
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...Born into slavery, Harriet Tubman was originally named Araminta Ross and was often called by her nickname “Minty”. Her mother Harriet Green was owned by Mary Pattison Brodess, and her father Ben Ross was owned by Anthony Thompson. She also has eight siblings, but her exact date of birth is unknown, but she was born around 1825. Her parents were separated and she had multiple slaveholders. She was often disobedient and stubborn. She looked up to her mother as a strong and powerful role model. Daily life as a child was hard. She was often abused by her slaveowners and she was away from her family. She had many scars and bruises. One day when refusing to obey her slaveholder’s commands, she got hit in the head with rock that was thrown at her....
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...Walker English 10H 20 February 2024 The Life of Harriet Tubman Who is Harriet Tubman? Many would say she was an escaped slave who helped others like her gain freedom using the Underground Railroad. However, she is so much more than that. Harriet Tubman is not only a role model for all women who want to make a difference in the world and have all odds stacked against them, but also, a determined, strategic, and powerful person. She has faced many trials and tribulations over the course of her long, eventful lifetime. As she once said, "I had reasoned this out in my mind; there was one of two things I had the right to, liberty or death; if I could have one, I would have the other.”(Dawson). Her early life, accomplishments,...
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...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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...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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...needs heroes, but what really is a hero? A hero is someone who shows remarkable perseverance and courage. Perseverance means that you never give up and courage is when you are not afraid to do something. A hero should also be hard working which means they always do their best and does it diligently. Anyone who shows any of these qualities is a hero. A true hero is a person that is hard working. Jackie Robinson is perfect for this. He was the 1st African American to play major league baseball in history. His road to success was not so easy though. He was mistreated by all of the other white players in the league because they didn’t like him. Jackie Robinson was constantly getting big cuts on his legs because when he would slide into base, the other players would get him 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...
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...Heroes need a hero for the injustices they face. Most heroes in society have been thought of as criminals at one point or another. They are constantly being bashed by members of society, even though they have sacrificed more than anyone else. In the novel 1984 by George Orwell, the author provides a warning for the reader about what we should not let happen to our society. Much like 1984 our treatment of them draws a parallel between our two societies. In society and 1984, people thought of as heroes have even been considered criminals because of their actions towards society in addition to this they are constantly face inequalities. Historically, many people who were viewed as heroes were once considered to be criminals as well. Harriet Tubman, a civil rights hero who freed slaves once had,”Rewards offered by slaveholders for Tubman’s capture eventually totaled $40,000”(”Harriet Tubman”). Harriet...
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...The Life and Work of Harriet Tubman One of the most memorable African American women known to this day is Harriet Tubman. Everyone knows her by Harriet Tubman, but what society does not know her by, is Araminta Harriet Ross. She decided to change her name to Harriet in her teens because it was her mother’s first name. She did not have any choice but was to be born into slavery. Ever since she was a baby, that was all she known. She was born in the 1820’s in Dorchester County, Maryland on a plantation. Died on March 10th, 1913 in Auburn, New York. Harriet is known to be an African American abolitionist, humanitarian and was a Union spy during the American Civil War. Tubman had made a choice and escaped from slavery. She made thirteen missions to rescue more than seventy slaves all around. The Underground Railroad was a way she used antislavery activists and safe houses. Later in her days, she helped a man named, John Brown who recruited men for his raid on Harpers Ferry. There soon was a post-war era that struggled for women’s suffrage. Harriet Tubman was a very strong, independent woman and never gave up to help other African Americans from becoming marketed in the slave trade. Harriet’s mother had been selected to be apart of the big house where they sold off slaves to people. Tubman acted like a big sister and took care of her younger brother and a baby in the house. When Harriet Tubman was about five or six years of age, Brodess hired her out to Miss Susan...
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...A hero doesn't have to be a character on the cover of a comic book with a cape and a symbol on their chest. A hero doesn't have to be someone on the headline of a news article. A hero can be anyone and everyone. A hero can be someone who does a good deed or were there at the right moment and helped. A hero can be defined by being humble, selfless, and courageous. One way a hero can be defined is how humble they are, how they own up to the deeds they have done and not presenting them to people. Being humble is not needing extra attention for something you did and believing that you did was what you thought was right. A great example of a humble hero is Wesley Autrey. A student had a seizure and fell onto train tracks as a train came rushing toward him. Wesley went out of his way to save this student and after carried on with his day and went to work. “Autrey said he was just in the right place at the right time." (https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2012/0416/Everyday-heroes-11-tales-of-American-heroes/Wesley-Autrey-the-subway-hero) Wesley believed that he did what anyone would do in this situation and help this kid from a problem that could have been much worse. Humble is not bragging and not strutting the good things you have done. Humble is not being modest, humble in a character trait in which you are not overbearing....
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...An epic hero is a larger-than-life figure who undertakes great journeys and performs deeds requiring remarkable strength and cunning. In the “Odyssey” by Homer, Odysseus is a man who is traveling home to Ithaca after 10 years until the end of the Trojan War and comes upon many thrilling, dangerous adventures along the way. The heroic traits of Odysseus in “The Odyssey” by Homer can be compared to those of three contemporary heroes. An epic hero shows courage. Odysseus shows courage when risks his own life to visit Tiresias, a blind prophet, in the underworld. Circe, the witch of the land of Aeolus, informs Odysseus that he must visit the underworld and hear “ … a prophecy from the ghost of Tiresias.” Odysseus, familiar with the idea that he might not be able to return back to Earth,...
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