Harriet Beecher Stowe's home is in Connecticut, specifically in the town of Hartford. She lived in a house called Nook Farm from 1873 until her death in 1896.
Catharine Beecher
This is true. Harriet Tubman deeded her land to the AME Zion church in 1903, and the Harriet Tubman Home for Aged and Indigent Colored People was founded. She later became a resident of the home. The name is shortened to The Harriet Tubman Home or Harriet House, and is a National Historic Landmark.
no she gave her home to an ederly person before she died
The web address of the Harriet Tubman Home is: http://harriethouse.org
Catharine Beecher :o)
Harriet Beecher Stowe, wrote many, including:Old Town Folks (1869)Little Pussy Willow (1870)Lady Byron Vindicated (1870)My Wife and I (1871)Pink and White Tyranny (1871)Woman in Sacred History (1873)Palmetto Leaves (1873)We and Our Neighbors (1875)Poganuc People (1878)The Poor Life (1890)As Christopher CrowfieldHouse and Home Papers (1865)Little Foxes (1866)Probably the best known novel was "Uncle Tom's Cabin" in 1852.
She did make a nursing home that held 12-15 people at a time. It was called "The Harriet Tubman Home."
Eunice White Bullard Beecher has written: 'Motherly talks' -- subject(s): Home economics, Cookery
Ruler of Home and Estate
home of the liberty bell
Harriet Tubman helped the special people she took into her home by helping them to escape through the Underground Railroad.
The address of the Harriet Tubman Home is: 180 South Street Rd, Auburn, NY 13021-5636