How Was Harriet Tubman A Hero?

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I had reasoned this out in my mind, there was one of two things I had a right to, liberty or death; if I could not have one, I would have the other.
In this quote, Harriet Tubman implies that she would rather be dead than be alive with no freedom. During the time of slavery, all Harriet wanted was to be free. She didn't just want freedom for herself but she also wanted freedom for all enslaved people. Harriet Tubman has been recognized as a person who took a stand in history. What does taking a stand in history mean? It means that she impacted many people in the past or in a historical time and place. It means that she didn't give up in what she believed in. Her bravery and ambition for freedom was what led her to become a hero. She never gave …show more content…

The causes and effects of slavery led Harriet Tubman to become a hero during a time of hatred.
Harriet Tubman's family and early life transformed her into the heroic person she was. Much of her childhood and early life isn't well known. Her parents were born in Dorchester County, Maryland (Larson 10). Both of her parents were enslaved by unalike owners (Larson 10). Araminta "Minty" Ross also known as Harriet Tubman was most likely born in February or beginning of March on the Thompson Plantation, where her parents were imprisoned (Larson 10). According to the article Housing: Harriet Tubman's Last Work, Harriet Tubman was one of eleven children born into slavery. At the age of thirteen she suffered from an accident when she was trying to help an enslaved man escape to freedom. (Crewe 6). An overseer tried to hit the fugitive but instead hit Harriet in the head (Harriet Tubman). This accident caused a life long disability called somnolence that would make her fall asleep at random times (Crewe 6). It took months for Harriet to recover so her master didn't want her anymore but he could not find a buyer (Harriet Tubman). Although being enslaved did prohibit slaves from doing a lot of things, Harriet Tubman …show more content…

Many slaves found an escape system that led them to freedom. Although the Fugitive Slave Act was passed which meant that it was harder for former slaves to live in the United States (Crewe 8). This confidential system was called the Underground Railroad and the system circulated rapidly from plantation to plantation and from one slave to another (Ray 45). The Underground Railroad was a system which assisted fugitives to flee to the north, ran by genuine townspeople (Ray 46). The helpers on the Railroad provided nourishment, clothing and protection from the slave catchers (Ray 46). They illegally transported fugitives in wagons through threatening regions and led them along the independence path. The most brave among them was Harriet Tubman who fled to independence in 1849 (Ray 46). Tubman would voyage the north by night and would hide every time she heard sounds of horses (Ray 46). She assisted for ten years and helped free slaves (Ray 46). Time after time, she would go back to the South to guide more than three hundred blacks on a unpredictable get away path (Ray 46). Harriet never gave up because at one point, slave hunters proposed twelve thousand dollars for the catch of the heroic "Railroad conductor" (Ray 46). Of course, that didn't stop her. This led to Harriet carrying a gun to prevent scared slaves from going back (Ray 46). At once, Tubman got asked if she would really shoot a fugitive who endangered the other

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