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Harriet Tubman, famous for her role in the Underground Railroad, dies.
1913 (Mar 10)
Harriet Tubman, often referred to as "the Moses of her people," died in Auburn, New York. A leading Black female abolitionist, Tubman was born in Dorchester County, Maryland, in 1823 and had escaped from slavery in July of 1849. She returned to Maryland and Virginia at least twenty times and is credited with freeing between 80-350 enslaved Blacks. While working as a field hand as a young girl, Tubman was injured when, an overseer threw a weight at another enslaved Black but hit Tubman in the head. The blow caused Tubman to suffer from "sleeping seizures" for the rest of her life. In 1844, she married a free Black, John Tubman, but she remained enslaved. In 1849, her master died and rumors emerged that his enslaved people were to be sold in the deep south. With two of her brothers, Tubman escaped. Fearing punishment or death, the brothers returned to the plantation, but Tubman, using the North Star for direction, marched on until she reached Philadelphia. In 1850, Tubman returned to Maryland for a sister and a brother, and in the following year she led a party of eleven Blacks from the South into Canada. She left her husband, who had married another woman, behind. In 1857, Tubman made one of her last trips into Maryland to rescue her parents and three additional brothers and sisters. The family then settled in Auburn, New York. The family home, purchased from the abolitionist Senator William H. Seward, was later turned into a home for elderly and indigent Blacks. After serving in the Civil War as a nurse and a spy, Tubman devoted her energy and earnings to this home.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.