
|
Tubman,
Harriet Ross (1820?-1913), an African American who fled slavery
and then guided runaway slaves to freedom in the North for more than
a decade before the American
Civil War (1861-1865). During the war she served as a scout,
spy, and nurse for the United States Army. In later years she
continued to work for the rights of blacks and women.
Harriet Tubman,
originally named Araminta Ross, was one of 11 children born to
slaves Harriet Greene and Benjamin Ross on a plantation in
Dorchester County, Maryland. She later adopted her mother's first
name. Harriet was put to work at the age of five and served as a
maid and a children's nurse before becoming a field hand when she
was 12. A year later, a white man—either her overseer or her
master—hit her on the head with a heavy weight. The blow left her
with permanent neurological damage, and she experienced sudden
blackouts throughout the rest of her life.
In 1844 she
received permission from her master to marry John Tubman, a free
black man. For the next five years Harriet Tubman lived in a state
of semi-slavery: she remained legally a slave, but her master
allowed her to live with her husband. However, the death of her
master in 1847, followed by the death of his young son and heir in
1849, made Tubman's status uncertain. Amid rumors that the family's
slaves would be sold to settle the estate, Tubman fled to the North
and freedom. Her husband remained in Maryland. In 1849 Harriet
Tubman moved to Pennsylvania, but returned to Maryland two years
later hoping to persuade her husband to come North with her. By this
time John Tubman had remarried. Harriet did not marry again until
after Tubman's death.
In Pennsylvania,
Harriet Tubman joined the abolitionist
cause, working to end slavery. She decided to become a conductor on
the Underground
Railroad, a network of antislavery activists who helped slaves
escape from the South. On her first trip in 1850, Tubman brought her
own sister and her sister's two children out of slavery in Maryland.
In 1851 she rescued her brother, and in 1857 returned to Maryland to
guide her aged parents to freedom.
Over a period of
ten years Tubman made an estimated 19 expeditions into the South and
personally escorted about 300 slaves to the North. The Fugitive
Slave Law of 1850 (see Fugitive
Slave Laws) had created federal commissioners in every county to
assist in the return of runaways and provided harsh punishments for
those convicted of helping slaves to escape. Harriet Tubman was a
likely target of the law, so in 1851 she moved to St.
Catharines, a city in Ontario, Canada, that was the destination
of many escaped slaves. By the late 1850s a number of Northern
states passed personal liberty laws that protected the rights of
fugitive slaves, so Tubman was able to purchase land and move with
her parents to Auburn, New York, a center of antislavery
sentiment.
Tubman faced
great danger guiding slaves to freedom, as Southerners offered large
rewards for her capture. Tubman brilliantly used disguises—sometimes
posing as a deranged old man and, at other times, as an old woman—to
avoid suspicion when traveling in slave states. She carried a
sleeping powder to stop babies from crying and always had a pistol
to prevent her charges from backing out once the journey to freedom
had begun.
Tubman
constantly changed her route and her method of operation, though she
almost always began her escapes on Saturday night for two reasons.
First, many masters did not make their slaves work on Sundays and
thus might not miss them until Monday, when the runaways had already
traveled a full day and a half. Second, newspapers advertising the
escape would not be published until the beginning of the week, so by
the time copies reached readers, Tubman and the fugitive slaves were
likely to be close to their destination in the North.
Tubman never lost
any of her charges and seemed to have an unusual ability to find
food and shelter during these hazardous missions. Among African
Americans she came to be known as Moses, after the Biblical hero who
led the Hebrews out of enslavement in Egypt.
Tubman also
served as an inspiration to both white and black abolitionists. She
worked closely with black antislavery activist William Still in
Philadelphia and with Underground Railroad conductor Thomas Garrett,
a Quaker who lived in Wilmington, Delaware. Abolitionist John
Brown gave her the title "General Tubman." She consulted with
Brown on his plan to start an armed rebellion against slavery in the
South, but illness prevented her from joining him at Harpers
Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia), in his ill-fated 1859 raid.
When the Civil
War began in 1861, Tubman served as a nurse, scout, and spy for the
Union Army in South Carolina. She helped prepare food for the 54th
Massachusetts Regiment—composed entirely of black soldiers and known
as the Glory Brigade—before its heroic but futile attack on Fort
Wagner in 1863. She later received an official commendation, but no
pay for her efforts. In 1869 she married an African American war
veteran, Nelson Davis. He died in 1890.
Tubman spent the
years after the war in the North, where she continued her work to
improve the lives of blacks in the United States. She raised funds
to assist former slaves with food, shelter, and education. Tubman
also established a care facility for the elderly at her own home in
Auburn. Tubman was not able to read or write, but in 1869 her
friend Sarah Bradford helped her publish her biography, Scenes
from the Life of Harriet Tubman, so that her achievements could
be an inspiration to others.
Tubman became
active in promoting the rights of women, particularly of black
women. In 1895 she was a delegate to the first and only meeting of
the National Conference of Colored Women in America (NCCWA), a group
formed to combat attacks, made by the press and others, on the
morality and civic pride of African American women. The NCCWA
evolved into the National Association of Colored Women in 1896,
although Tubman had only limited involvement in this organization.
She also became a strong supporter of woman
suffrage.
In 1974, more
than 60 years after Tubman's death, the Department of the Interior
designated her former home in Auburn as a national historic
landmark. In 1978 the U.S. Postal Service inaugurated its Black
Heritage Series with a stamp honoring Harriet
Tubman.
 Contributed By: Paul
Finkelman, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Law, University of
Akron School of Law. Author of Slavery and the Founders: Race and
Liberty in the Age of Jefferson. Coeditor of The Macmillan
Encyclopedia of World Slavery.
 HOW TO CITE THIS
ARTICLE "Tubman, Harriet Ross," Microsoft® Encarta® Online
Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2000 Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved.

© 1993-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights
reserved.

|

|
 3 media
items

   
 More
Media
 Related
Items
 EDUCATIONAL
PRODUCTS
 News and
Updates
 PERIODICALS
NEWS
 Internet
Sites
 BEST WEB
SITES Harriet Tubman [National
Women’s Hall of Fame]
 Harriet Tubman
[PBS Online]
 Harriet Tubman
[Stamp on Black History]
 The Harriet Tubman Historical
Society
 More
Details
INTERNET SEARCH

|
 |