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Harriet Tubman's parents were also born on the Brodas plantation. Although her grandparent were brought to the united states over from Africa and was of the Ashanti Tribe of West Africa. Harriet Tubman's parents were also born on the Brodas plantation. Although her grandparent were brought to the united states over from Africa and was of the Ashanti Tribe of West Africa.
Harriet Tubman played a very large role in the Combahee River Raid. During the raid the captain turned to her and said "Moses, come here and speak a word of consolation to your people!" She then started singing and the people raised their hands and began to rejoice and shout glory! And the rowboats then pushed off. Hope I could help(:
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.
Harriet Tubman assisted the efforts of the Union during the Civil War by becoming an integral member of the Underground Railroad. After her own escape from slavery, Tubman returned to the land of her enslavement to assist family members in escaping their own enslavement. Harriet Tubman completed thirteen rescue missions, saving some 70 slaves from the region where she was formerly enslaved. In 1858, abolitionist John Brown enlisted Tubman to help him recruit former slaves for a raid on Harper's Ferry. Her extensive knowledge of support networks in the Northeast was invaluable to Brown. Her knowledge also proved invaluable to Union officials when the Civil War broke out. Harriet Tubman felt that a Union win was key in the effort to end slavery, and soon became an established figure in the camps around Port Royal, South Carolina assisting the fugitives and serving as a nurse. Shortly after the Emancipation Proclamation, Tubman began leading a band of scouts around the Port Royal area. Her group mapped the territory and provided key intelligence that led to the capture of Jacksonville, Florida. Later that year, Harriet Tubman became the first woman to lead an armed assault in the Combahee River Raid. She continued working for the Union for two more years, until the South surrendered in 1865.
Harriet Tubman (an escaped slave) and John P. Parker (a freed slave) had each worked to aid other escapees on the "underground railroad," a system of safe houses and guides working with abolitionists in the North. Tubman escaped slavery in Maryland, then returned to guide as many as 300 slaves to freedom. Parker was a freedman when he moved to Ohio in 1845 to help conduct those who fled from Kentucky across the Ohio River.
Harriet Tubman's parents were also born on the Brodas plantation. Although her grandparent were brought to the united states over from Africa and was of the Ashanti Tribe of West Africa. Harriet Tubman's parents were also born on the Brodas plantation. Although her grandparent were brought to the united states over from Africa and was of the Ashanti Tribe of West Africa.
She led them to the Ohio River So they could get to Detroit, And later Canada
Harriet Tubman played a very large role in the Combahee River Raid. During the raid the captain turned to her and said "Moses, come here and speak a word of consolation to your people!" She then started singing and the people raised their hands and began to rejoice and shout glory! And the rowboats then pushed off. Hope I could help(:
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.
Harriet Tubman assisted the efforts of the Union during the Civil War by becoming an integral member of the Underground Railroad. After her own escape from slavery, Tubman returned to the land of her enslavement to assist family members in escaping their own enslavement. Harriet Tubman completed thirteen rescue missions, saving some 70 slaves from the region where she was formerly enslaved. In 1858, abolitionist John Brown enlisted Tubman to help him recruit former slaves for a raid on Harper's Ferry. Her extensive knowledge of support networks in the Northeast was invaluable to Brown. Her knowledge also proved invaluable to Union officials when the Civil War broke out. Harriet Tubman felt that a Union win was key in the effort to end slavery, and soon became an established figure in the camps around Port Royal, South Carolina assisting the fugitives and serving as a nurse. Shortly after the Emancipation Proclamation, Tubman began leading a band of scouts around the Port Royal area. Her group mapped the territory and provided key intelligence that led to the capture of Jacksonville, Florida. Later that year, Harriet Tubman became the first woman to lead an armed assault in the Combahee River Raid. She continued working for the Union for two more years, until the South surrendered in 1865.
Harriet Tubman (an escaped slave) and John P. Parker (a freed slave) had each worked to aid other escapees on the "underground railroad," a system of safe houses and guides working with abolitionists in the North. Tubman escaped slavery in Maryland, then returned to guide as many as 300 slaves to freedom. Parker was a freedman when he moved to Ohio in 1845 to help conduct those who fled from Kentucky across the Ohio River.
Harriet Segal has written: 'Catch the wind' 'On flows the river' 'Susquehanna' -- subject(s): Protected DAISY
Harriet Tubman was active in the 'underground railway', helping up to 300 fugitives to reach the northern states and Canada.She became a noted speaker in the abolitionist and women's rights movement.During the Civil war she she worked as a spy and scout for the Union Army. She fought in several raids in Confederate territory. On June 2, 1863, in command of three Union gunboats on a dangerous mission along the Tennessee river, she destroyed a bridge and rescued over seven hundred slaves.-Edited on 11/13/14
Emma Lynch has written: 'Helen Keller (Lives and Times (Des Plaines, Ill.).)' 'On Safari (Let's Get Moving)' 'Literacy World Non-Fiction' 'We're From Pakistan' 'In The Jungle (Sprouts, Let's Get Moving)' 'Under The Sea (Sprouts, Let's Get Moving)' 'Harriet Tubman (Life Of...)' 'We're From Brazil (We're from . . .)' 'We're from Kenya' -- subject(s): Children, Family, Juvenile literature, Social life and customs 'Helen Keller (Lives and Times)' 'We're From China' 'Mary Seacole (Life Of...)' 'Literacy World' 'River Food Chains' 'Harriet Tubman (Lives and Times)' 'River Food Chains (Food Chains and Webs)' 'Up A Mountain (Let's Get Moving)' 'Guy Fawkes (Life Of...)'
Harriet Tubman is one of a abolitionist persons. An abolitionist is a person who wants to stop slaver for morally wrong reasons. Harriet Tubman was also a slave. Harriet Tubman was brave and strong that she freed more than 3,000 people on the Underground Railroad. She is an inspiration to many people.
Harriet Tubman, born into slavery to enslaved parents, escaped slavery at around the age of thirty. She returned to aid her family and other slaves, and eventually completed thirteen rescues of many more (as many as three hundred) through the Underground Railroad; a network of anti-slavery activists and safe houses. At the outbreak of The American Civil War, she worked as a cook and nurse, then later a scout/spy for the Union Army, and became the first woman to lead an armed expedition; she was instrumental in the rescue of several hundred slaves from South Carolina in the Combahee River Raid. After the civil war, she fought for women's suffrage until she succumbed to age and illness, living out the rest of her days in the home for elderly African-Americans that she had once helped to found. Her actions throughout her life, from the liberation of slaves to her battle for women's rights serve as an example and inspiration today.
Um, last time I checked, Omaha was IN Nebraska.