yes
Yes, Harriet Tubman indeed did work as a nurse and cook during the US Civil War.
harriet Tubman
Harriet worked for the Union Army during the American Civil War, working first they say, as a cook and a nurse. Later she became an armed scout and spy for the Union Army.
One of them was James Cook!
Harriet Tubman proabably had special training for becoming a cook and nurse for the Civil War.
She was a nurse,a cook, and a spy
She served the U.S army in south Carolina as a nurse, scout, spy, and soldier.
Harriet Tubman contributed to the Civil War by being a nurse, soldier, spy, and scout. Under the command of James Montgomery, she led the Combahee River expedition to help blow up Southern supply and free hundreds of slaves.
it is about how harriet spied for the union a cook and more. it mostly about how she helped many slaves get to a safer place in the usa
Harriet Tubman freed dozens of slaves( there is no exact amount) and during the war she worked as a cook, nurse, scout, and a spy in the union army. She also helped some soldiers escape north to canada where slavery was prohibited. This happened during the war.
Harriet Tubman was an abolitionist who believed that, while under a "sleeping spell", a vision was a message of God. It was her leading other slaves to Canada, or the Freedom Land. Throughout her lifetime, she made 19 trips to and from the south, and rescued 300 or so slaves. During the Civil War (1861-1865), Harriet supported the Northern Soldiers, or Union, who were against slavery. Harriet was a cook, nurse, and spy for the Union. If she hadn't helped, not as many slaves would have escaped, and the Union wouldn't have had as big a victory
she was a cook nurse armed scout plus a spy in the union army