false
Both
well what do you think YES
She didn't have seizures, instead she would fall asleep without warning. This was caused by an accident when she was 14. When one of the field hand slaves ran away, the slave overseer chased after him, but so did Harriet. When the slave tried to escape through a doorway in a store that he had run into trying to escape, the overseer threw a weight at the slave, meaning for it to hit him, but it hit Harriet, who was standing in the doorway. Harriet surprisingly lived, but from then on, Harriet could fall asleep at any given time.
People who help slave escape they will be track down and they are going to kill you or make them one of the slave.
she lived as a slave,she escaped to freedom in canada, she roled the undergrund rail road,and after she escaped she lived in auburn, newyork
false
Escaping slavery was difficult regardless of geographic location, as the entire institution was designed to prevent it. However, some factors like proximity to free states or communities, access to abolitionist networks, and familiarity with the local terrain could make escape slightly easier for slaves living in the southern regions.
they secretly go to path that leads to the north mostly on foot and whenever they see white slave owners they hide and usually they follow the path of the mason dixon line cause they thought it was freedom but slave hunters can still catch theses slaves from escaping farther north so slaves really escaped farther north for slave hunters not to catch them
they didnt escape in the daytime, they escaped in the night, so the slave owners couldn't see them
Kunta Kinte did not escape. He was captured and enslaved in Africa, then transported to America where he lived the rest of his life as a slave. His story is depicted in Alex Haley's book "Roots: The Saga of an American Family."
They will escape
the underground railroad
If they tried to escape in the day there slave masters would see them and call for help to catch the slave
A slave owner may want a slave who had lost hope because they would be less likely to resist or attempt to escape. A slave who has lost hope may also be easier to control and manipulate, making them more compliant and submissive. Additionally, a slave with no hope may be seen as less of a threat to the slave owner's authority and power.
Harriet Tubman
Both
Jonathen Golden.