10. The Underground Railroad was an underground system that helped slaves escape from the south into the North as a freed American. Harriet Tubman helped man the Underground Railroad.…
These two passages are about Harriet Tubman. They tell how she lived her life. They also tell about what she did for slaves. She was known for the slaves and how she helped them with the Underground Railroad, but these two passages don't tell you all the same things. They don’ have the same structure either.…
When I hear the word slavery, the only thing that comes to my head is cruelty. I could not even imagine how a human can threat another one like animals, as if they were and inferior or less because of the skin color. The idea of being able to read a book that was written by someone that lived during this years of brutality amazed me. Harriet Jacobs was taught how to read and write by her mothers mistress, this was not common for many of the slaves, and it is the reason why she used the name “Linda” to talk about herself during her stories, because if by any chance her master knew that she could read and write, she would have had the punishment of being whipped and put in jail. During the first chapters of her book we could notice that not all her years as a slave were miserable. In fact the first six years of her life were happy, because she didn’t know she was a slave, once she grew up her innocence started to fade, her days started to turn dark and sad. As described in her book the living conditions were like hell on earth. Slavery not only affected the slaves, it also completely destroyed moral…
While Tubman was growing up she met a few abolitionists there names are Frederick Douglass and John Brown. Harriet Tubman made a secret society underground called the”Underground Railroad”. Harriet tubman grew up freeing slaves band destroying…
Linda Brent is the major character in this story because it is Harriet Jacobs. Linda was a slave girl whom was always told that she would be free. Linda grew up with out knowing she was a slave at first, then her mother dies when she was 6 years old. Not every slave got to read, write, and sew, but she did by her grandmother. She was sold to a master whom sexually abused her. She then had kids with a lover. The main part of Linda is that she would do anything for her kids to have freedom.…
Harriet Tubman led over three hundred slaves to the north. The journey was more than ninety miles to Pennsylvania and took days. She once that ‘’I have two choices, liberty or death, if I cannot have one I will have the other.’’ Harriet Tubman was a figure for slaves to look up to.…
Harriet Tubman was a phenomenal woman. She helped many slaves escape to freedom via the Underground Railroad. She became prominent as a “conductor” of the Underground Railroad during the merciless 1850s. She helped in many ways: Being a liberator of the slaves, being a spy, and a nurse in the civil war, and an Abolitionist.…
1. Harriet was one of the “conductors” who encouraged other slaves to help build the Underground Railroad.…
Araminta Ross was born into slavery around the year of 1820. Her mother and father were owned by separate masters. She first started as a house servant, but as she became older she was sent to work in the fields where she suffered from an irreversible blow to the head. Sometime around 1844 Ross married a free black man, John Tubman. She took his last name a later changed her first name to Harriet, after her mother. Due to the fear of being sold and separated from John, her husband, she talked about going north. John was not happy about this decision and threatened to tell her master. Freedom meant too much to her so she left her husband and headed up north. A white woman helped her with her escape…
In conclusion, the commitment of Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and Thomas Garrett clearly showed the ideas of freedom and sacrifice. The dedication and constant encouragement of Tubman proves that she is a hero of the Underground Railroad. The actions of Douglass and Garrett also helped to develop the future of the world and the lives of the slaves. All in all, these great people assisted in saving hundreds of lives with their tenacity and devotion to succeed in the fight for…
PBS describes the underground railroad, or freedom train as "a complex network of places and people that lead runaway slaves from captivity". Many individuals of varying racial backgrounds provided food and shelter for the runaway slaves. These brave people were known as "conductors". While the underground railroad had many conductors, perhaps the most well-known and influential was African-American woman Harriet Tubman, who used her diverse culture not as a crutch, but as an instrument of leadership. Throughout her life, this inspirational woman challenged stereotypes of race, gender, and social class.…
When we think of the conductors of the Underground Railroad many think of Harriet Tubman and her only, but if we study history carefully we will find out that she is not the only conductor worth mentioning. John P. Parker has to be one of the most underappreciated figures not only in African American history but American history in general. If everyone was aware of this true American hero’s story, without question he would be a household name. The autobiography of John P. Parker is very well written and will have any reader on the edge of their seat throughout the entire book. The accounts of his experiences both as a slave and as a conductor of the Underground Railroad are extremely descriptive and would make any reader feel like they were right there with Mr. Parker feeling his pain, anger, pride, bravery, and even his humor. Although there are many themes that you can find in this book, we are going to focus on his bravery, cleverness, and freedom as the three themes to discuss.…
Since the beginning, heroic leaders are well recognized in society for their distinctive qualities, but as time progressed, the standards for heroic qualities become more known for one’s knowledge and willpower rather than their strength. Heroic leaders share common interests of wanting to protect, to inspire, and to bring joy to others. However, some leaders share the flaw of excessive bragging, where every encounter for them would be a chance to comment on how great they are. For instance, Harriet Tubman has taken part in the real-life controversy over slavery by taking action in rescuing over seven hundred slaves towards their path of freedom. Whereas, in the epic, The Odyssey, by Homer, the “heroic” protagonist, King Odysseus guides his…
A strong and powerful lady said these wise words: “There was one of two things I had a right to, liberty or death; if I could not have one, I would have the other; for no man should take me alive; I should fight for my liberty as long as my strength lasted, and when the time came for me to go, the Lord would let them take me”. The brave women who said these words were Harriet Tubman and she was one of the leaders of the Underground Railroad that helped slaves reach freedom. “Although not an actual railroad of steel rails, locomotives and steam engines, the Underground Railroad was real nevertheless” (encyclopedia The Civil War and African Americans 329) The term “Underground Railroad” referred to the network of safe houses, transportation and the many very kind hearted people who risked their own lives to help the slaves escape from the Southern States to freedom. Many different kinds of transportation were actually used. Sometimes the slaves would travel by foot or they could be hidden on boats, or hide in wagons or carts carrying vegetables or other goods The runaway slaves became known as “passengers”, and the route traveled was the “line” while people who helped out along the way were called the “agents”. Leaders like Harriet Tubman who would travel with the slaves that were escaping, were called “conductors”.…
Gorrell, Gena K. (1996). North Star to Freedom: The Story of the Underground Railroad; Stoddart Publishing Company, Toronto, Canada.…