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Harriet Tubman was the escaped slave who helped 300 slaves to go north.
The escaped slave who made 19 trips back to the South to help others was Harriet Tubman. She had created the Underground Railroad to help members of her family and other slaves to escape.
Yes, Harriet Tubman was poor. She was a slave whom escaped from the south via the Underground Railroad. She later went back 19 additional times to help other slaves escape.
Because back in the days when they were slaves, their slave masters called them n*ggers, they got used to it and started calling each other by that too later on.
North dislike The Fugitive Slave Law, because that did not support slavery, and therefore did not want to send escaped slaves back to the south. North brought the slavery issue to their own doorstep , and gave the runawys a heroic victim status.
He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.He was not sent to Ireland when he was 16. He was captured and brought to Ireland to be a slave when he was 16. Later he escaped and eventually came back to Ireland to convert Ireland to Christianity.
back to their masters
No, under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, escaped slaves could still be captured and returned to their owners. Being in a free state did not automatically grant freedom to escaped slaves.
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 required that escaped slaves be returned to their masters even if they were in a free state. It mandated that law enforcement officials in free states assist in capturing and returning escaped slaves.
She didn't have a " career". She was a slave who escaped and went back to free others.
Harriet Tubman was the escaped slave who helped 300 slaves to go north.
The Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1850 as part of the Compromise of 1850 and required the return of escaped slaves to their owners. It was highly controversial and resulted in increased tension between the North and South over the issue of slavery. The act was widely opposed by abolitionists and was eventually repealed in 1864.
The escaped slave who made 19 trips back to the South to help others was Harriet Tubman. She had created the Underground Railroad to help members of her family and other slaves to escape.
It was unpopular in the north because they did not support slavery, and therefore did not want to send escaped slaves back to the south
Patrick was abducted and taken to Ireland as a boy of 16 where he was held as a slave and shepherd by a pagan Druid chieftain. He eventually escaped and returned home to Britain. Years later the Pope sent him back to Ireland where he worked to convert the Druids to Christianity
Not necessarily. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 required free states to aid in the capture and return of escaped slaves. This meant that even if a slave reached a free state, they were at risk of being apprehended and returned to their owner.
From what I understand, it was made for them. It said that any slave who escaped, no matter what state, if found, they would be taken back to their master. Now, I may be thinking of something else, but, that's my take on it.