Harriet Tubman was born a slave in 1821 near the eastern shore of Maryland.
When she heard that her deceased master's property would be sold she escaped
to freedom in Pennsylvania. When she discovered what it was to be free,
she wanted to help other people to freedom. She knew that her efforts would
require money and therefore she worked part-time jobs until she had enough
money for her first mission. She traveled to Baltimore and rescued her
sister and her two children. She made at least fifteen trips to the south
and lead at least 200 people to freedom.
All Harriet Tubman's trips were successful because she was a master in
planning the strategy of each of her escape operations. No detail was missed
by her. She planned for food, clothing, train tickets and forged passes.
She even included sedatives for crying babies. She never lost a passenger.
On at least one occasion, she threatened to shoot a passenger who had second
thoughts about escaping. The overnight stops on what came to be know as
the Underground Railroad were a network of homes and churches. The churches
raised money to assist Tubman's efforts.
With the outbreak of the Civil War, Harriet Tubman supported the war effort
as a nurse, a cook and a scout for the Union Army. Whatever she did, her
services were always welcome. Tubman received official commendations from
numerous Union Army officers. It is said that no officer failed to tip
his hat when he saw her. Despite her efforts for the war, she received
no veterans benefits of her own.
Her reputation for freeing slaves was known throughout the slave community.
She was often compared to Moses who led the Israelites of the Bible
to freedom. Her contemporaries referred to her as a heroine, saying "her
likes it is probable was never known before or since."
Throughout her life Harriet Tubman maintained an interest in the welfare
of others. She raised money for schools, former slaves, destitute children
and assisted the sick and the disabled. Toward the end of her life Harriet
Tubman worked to establish a home for the elderly. She passed away in 1913
in the "Harriet Tubman Home for Aged and Indigent Colored People."
The singer Paul Robeson would sing the spiritual "Go Down Moses"
and explain that it was a protest song of slaves who had Harriet
Tubman in mind.
Go down Moses, Way down in Egypt land, Tell ole pharaoh, Let my people
go.
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