The hefty object left Harriet with a large, unmistakable scar on her forehead and serious brain trauma. After this traumatic event, Harriet suffered from sleeping spells which arrived randomly and lasted for unpredictable amounts of time. Later in her teenage years, Harriet wished her master dead. Shortly after doing this, her master died unexpectedly. The plantation was passed on to the doctor who came to see Master Edward while he was ill. Harriet felt extremely guilty for wishing her master dead and believed that it was her fault; therefore, she begged for forgiveness and made a deal with God to do whatever He wanted her to do. Harriet made a deal with her master too. She paid him one dollar a week to go and work for Master Stewart. She needed to have a pass anytime she left either plantation or else she would be considered a runaway slave. She was allowed to use a small area of land to grow crops for profit. She had to split whatever she sold with Master Stewart. In addition to growing crops, Harriet received a job washing clothes for a Quaker women in Bucktown, Maryland on Saturdays and Sundays. Her master told her that if she made enough money she could buy her freedom. One day when she was plowing her field, John Tubman, a …show more content…
This did not stop Harriet from rescuing slaves; she continued to lead people north. Harriet became known as “Moses” for leading the people to a better place. She would sing biblical songs to let people know that she was there to take them north. The groups she led could only travel in the darkness of the night; hence, in the day they would hide from sight. The people often had to travel during freezing nights and in terrible conditions, but they did it to achieve their freedom. Eleven people was the largest group Harriet brought to St. Catharines, Canada. This group included her mom, dad, brother, and sister-in-law. These journeys were extremely dangerous and could result in severe punishments if any of the people involved were caught. Harriet was an active abolitionist and motivational speaker. At one point in Harriet’s life, she was a union spy for Abraham Lincoln. She transferred information from the south to the union. She continued to travel to slave states to rescue people until she was quite old. By the end of her life, Harriet saved over three hundred