Harriet
Tubman was one of the most famous American
women in history. She was born on March 10,
1821 in Dorchester County, Maryland, the daughter
of slaves on a Maryland plantation. Her original
name was Araminta Ross and she was nicknamed
"Minty." From an early age she
worked as servant at the plantation house.
As a teenager, she suffered a vicious head
wound as she tried to protect a fellow slave
from a beating. According to legend, the
woman who was beating the other slave hurled
a two pound weight, hitting Harriet in the
head. Her injury would haunt her for the
reminder of her life, resulting in periodic
fainting spells.
Tubman
spent her early life as a slave. In 1844,
she married a free Black man named John Tubman,
who would prove disloyal.
Life as a slave was exremely difficult. They
were forced to work in the merciless heat
without rest. They were often beaten and
forced to live in poor conditions. In the
early and mid 1800's, slaves were often sold
to southern plantations where they would
never have contact with their families again.
Harriet was a particularly strong and powerful
women who would could be sold for a hefty
sum. Fearing that she was about to be sold,
Harriet resolved to run away. Despite the
brutal punishment that would be inflicted
upon her if she was caught, Harriet took
off in the middle of the night sometime in
1849 and headed north to freedom. She gained
assistance along the way by abolitionist
Quaker families who hung specially designed
carpets or lights on the outside of their
houses as a sign that runaway slaves were
welcome and would receive help. She traveled
by night through the dense woodlands of Maryland,
guided north by the North Star and the moss
that grew on the north side of the trees.
She eventually made it to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
a free city where she landed a job and saved
money. After living in Philadelphia for two
years, Harriet decided to return to Maryland,
in the hopes of freeing her family members.
She succeeded in guiding her sister and mother
to freedom along the same path that she had
taken. This path became known as the Underground
Railroad. The Underground Railroad was a
network of woodland paths scattered throughout
parts of the south that led
to freedom in the north. Harriet returned
again and guided her father and brother to
freedom.
Soon,
Harriet became known as the "conductor" on
the Underground Railroad and made more daring
trips to the south to guide more slaves to
their freedom. Harriet devised strategies
to trick various parties that tried to capture
her. If she was traveling with a a baby,
she would use herbal drugs to ensure it didn't
cry. She made sure that she traveled on Saturdays
as "runaway notices" in southern newspapers
could not be printed until Monday. Harriet's
daring "forays" continued to elude slave
hunters who were offered huge bounties for
returning slaves to their owners. By 1856,
a $40,000 bounty was placed on her capture
- dead or alive. She became a serious threat
to southern plantation owners who made large
investments in their slaves. In one famous
story, Harriet was close to being captured
at a bus station. To avoid capture, she pulled
out a book and pretended to read. Since nearly
all slaves were illiterate, the hunters simply
ignored her and continued their search.
By
1860, Tubman was said to have completed 19
successful journeys on the Underground Railroad,
freeing as many as 300 slaves. She was never
captured, nor were any of her "passengers."
During the Civil War, she served as a cook,
nurse, and spy for the Union army. After the
war, she settled in Troy, New York, where she
would die in 1913.