to explain how the slaves would have escaped
Write one.
he learned that he wanted to learn how to read and write while he was working picking cotton
Harriet Tubman did not write a book herself; however, her life and experiences are depicted in the book "Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom" by Catherine Clinton. This biography highlights Tubman's harrowing experiences as an enslaved person and her courageous efforts in the Underground Railroad, showcasing the brutal and inhumane realities of slavery. Through her story, the book illustrates the cruelty of the system and Tubman's relentless fight for freedom and justice.
Harriet Tubman's job after her freedom was cooking and cleaning in New York, and helping elderly folks.
Harriet Tubman had no education and was illiterate throughout her life. Slave owners did not want their slaves to know how to read or write.noHarriet Tubman didn't get any education except maybe in her later years. If you were a slave you weren't allowed ( by law) to read or write. So she might have when she escaped to freedom but no not as a child.. Although Harriet Tubman was illiterate throughout her life and had no formal education, isn't it ironic that many schools are named after her? She was poor and was showed very little respect by people who were "educated" and she did more, by far, to help black people than most of her contemporaries. But Harriet did get an education from her dad. her dad taught a lot about the wild. Harriet Tubman Didn't get an education because she wasn't aloud to go to school...Slaves weren't aloud to go to school.
thirty books was published she wrote more
Write one.
yes she was a journalist
A person would probably be motivated to write a biography about Harriet Tubman by admiration of her role as an abolitionist.
She never new how to write and had nothing to write her signature on.
Rihanna Harriet Tubman!!!
Yes harriet Tubman and alot of others.
The slave owners did want the workers to know how to read or write
he learned that he wanted to learn how to read and write while he was working picking cotton
yes to be a spy for the union and a nurses, but no school she never learned how to read or write.
Harriet Tubman did not write a book herself; however, her life and experiences are depicted in the book "Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom" by Catherine Clinton. This biography highlights Tubman's harrowing experiences as an enslaved person and her courageous efforts in the Underground Railroad, showcasing the brutal and inhumane realities of slavery. Through her story, the book illustrates the cruelty of the system and Tubman's relentless fight for freedom and justice.
Harriet Tubman's job after her freedom was cooking and cleaning in New York, and helping elderly folks.