In line with this recognition, I am sharing the expressed impact that Harriet Tubman as abolitionist and social activist has ...
Harriet Tubman is perhaps the most well-known of all the Underground Railroad's "conductors." During a ten-year span she made 19 trips into the South and escorted over 300 slaves to freedom.
Harriet did not welcome any children during her first marriage. She would later adopt a girl called Gertie Davis in 1874 but she never had biological kids. John Tubman's second wife welcomed four ...
As a conductor on the Underground Railroad it is estimated that Tubman freed around 70 enslaved people. Harriet Tubman (far left), with a group of former slaves whose escape she assisted Tubman ...
Harriet Tubman has been known by her many names and roles—Araminta Ross (her birth name), Moses (a nickname), conductor, daughter, sister, wife, mother, aunt. All encompass the intersecting identities ...
Tuesday evening, the Harriet Tubman Cultural Center buzzed with energy as residents gathered to reflect on the rich history ...
Harriet Tubman was an abolitionist who was born into slavery in Maryland in 1822. As an adult, she escaped to the North when she learned she was to be sold after the death of her enslaver.
Kate Clifford Larson, Brandeis University (THE CONVERSATION) Harriet Tubman was barely 5 feet tall and didn’t have a dime to her name. What she did have was a deep faith and powerful passion for ...