There has been a lot of criticism surrounding the idea of Harriet Tubman's face on the new $20 bill. Although I have no qualms about Harriet Tubman being the one to grace the $20 bill, I don’t believe there is any need to change the current money. Instead of focusing on which face goes on which bill, the government should be focusing on more important topics such as our national debt. I find it ironic that although The United Stated is "currently plunged into a $19-trillion debt", the people in charge still contunue to find new ways to waste money (Thornton). Yes, Andrew Jackson did many wrong things, but is there that much of a rush to get his face off of our money that the U.S. has to increase our national debt level?…
Harriet Tubman was a slave. She was against slavery and wanted every African American free. She decided that one day she would become free. Since she worked closely by the Underground Railroad, she led the slaves to the Underground Railroad and freed them. Today she is known for her bravery and saving over 300 slaves in the late 1800’s.…
The Underground Railroad was a chain of safe houses during the 1900’s for slaves trying to escape to Canada for freedom from their masters. Without the abolitionists hard work the Underground Railroad might have not been a success. Harriet Tubman had helped the Underground Railroads cause by saving slaves and bringing them to the free states. Thomas Garrett had hid runaway slaves and contacted William Still to tell him that new slaves would arrive. William Still had kept runaway slaves in his house and recorded their stories in his diary.…
It took a lot of bravery to risk your own life for others. Harriet Tubman was a really inspiring woman. That's why she is so important. She helped people realize that people are not that different. Harriet Tubman helped us see colored people differently.…
Harriet Tubman was born a slave and grew up working as a servant on the plantation. She escaped from the South to the North with thousands of other slaves using the Underground Tunnel, a network of secret routes and safe houses used by southern slaves in efforts to escape to free states. Tubman became a conductor who assisted the slaves to escape from the south using the tunnel. She made 19 trips into slave-owning states of the South, rescuing some 300 men, women, and children just before the Civil War. U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney in Document E states, “Altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior, that they had no rights which the white man was bound to…
Harriet Tubman was admirable, caring, and brave. Ms. Tubman had many books written about her. An admirer of Harriet, Sarah Bradford, wrote a book about her named, Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman. She cared for everyone not just slaves. She wanted everyone to make everyone in the world equal.…
Simultaneously, Harriet Tubman was risking her life to help African American slaves escape slavery. These people were true African American Heros. Douglass would represent the slaves and Tubman would free the slaves. But, what could have happened if theses heros were not as successful? Still, Frederick Douglass had lived a wonderful life, compared to the little white boys he made friends with when he was a kid.…
Harriet Tubman remained active during the Civil War. Working for the Union Army as a cook and nurse, Tubman quickly became an armed scout and spy. The first woman to lead an armed expedition in the war, she guided the Combahee River Raid, which liberated more than 700 slaves in South Carolina. (http://www.biography.com/people/harriet-tubman-9511430). She was born in Maryland 1820 and escaped in slavery in 1849”.…
Often acknowledged as the Moses of enslaved people, Harriet Tubman was an influential leader in her time and moved many people into freedom during the slave era. Born circa 1820, Harriet Tubman accomplished the seemingly impossible throughout her life; leader of the Underground Railroad, an abolitionist, Union nurse during the Civil War, and supporter of the suffrage movement. She amazingly did all this being a minority woman in a time where white men were the only ones in a place of power. Harriet Tubman’s birth name was Araminta Ross, and she kept that name until she changed it to Harriet upon adulthood, to honor her mother. She was born a slave on a plantation in Maryland, and lived through dreadful conditions until she escaped circa 1850.…
Harriet Tubman did many spectacular things throughout her life. She was a great leader, not only for African Americans, but for everyone. There were many things that tried to stop Harriet, for example: bounties, and the Fugitive Slave Law, but no matter what-Harriet succeeded. In her life, she was mostly supported by friends, family, and herself. There is one thing left to say, “She was the conductor of the Underground Railroad for eight years, and she could say what most conductors can’t say: She never ran her ‘train’ off the track, and she never lost a passenger”…
Not only was Tubman a cook and nurse for the Union Army, she was also a skilled spy. Tubman recruited groups of her own from former slave populations to hunt and report the movement of rebel camps and Confederate troops. She devised multiple surprise missions to raid or infiltrate places behind enemy lines with the information she collected from her scouts. She rescued many African and Indian slave people and weakened enemy defenses this…
Lastly, the last thing she did was help a bunch of kids in with no parents after slavery ended. She took them in as if they were her own. I know this because it states that,"Tubman welcomed several young children into her home and raised them as if they were her own. She also provided shelter and support for a number of aged, impoverished, former slaves." (about education, April 26, 2015).…
Harriet Tubman was one of America’s very first civil rights activists, escorting 300 of the estimated 60,000 slaves that escaped the iron grips of slavery. These missions made her one of America’s most iconic heroes. In her time period, this was a title unheard of for women and blacks, making this an achievement especially astounding for Tubman. The influence she built through many efforts in the fields of equality dissipated through America and contributed to a fight that paved the way for the enduring and current struggle against racial oppression still in the country today. The legacy of Harriet Tubman first begins with the establishment of Jamestown in 1619 when ships mainly from the African west coast brought the first generation of enslaved Africans to America.…
Harriet Tubman once was a slave, slaves were considered properties and don’t have any rights. Harriet ran away but she decided to come back and help more slaves escape to freedom. Like slavery in the 1800s, child labor is occurring all around the world, they get paid a very low wage for working long hours and dangerous jobs. Harriet Tubman is relevant to today’s society because Harriet Tubman is a inspiration to today’s brave people and her actions can be learned to revise other issues today like child labor. Like the other abolitionists, Harriet Tubman is a brave woman.…
The book Harriet Tubman: the road to freedom, by Catherine Clinton gives provides details on Harriet Tubman’s life. Harriet Tubman is an important person, because of her actions during the era of slavery. She was able escape from chains slavery, and Fugitive Slave Acts. Harriet risked her life by going to back in forth into the south to rescue her family members and others that were enslaved. Harriet was able rescue the enslaved people with the help of the Underground Railroad.…