Harriet Tubman was a leading abolitionist after escaping slavery. She has led hundreds on hundreds of other slaves through the underground railroad. She was born into slavery in Maryland in 1820. She has became the “most famous conductor” of the underground railroad. She took hundreds from safehouse to safehouse to lead them to their freedom. Tubman also helped the union army as a spy during the war including other roles while helping. In honor of her life and also by a high popular demand (in 2016) the U.S.Treasury Department announced that Tubman would be replacing Andrew Jackson on the Twenty Dollar bill. Following the illness and death of her “owner” she decided to escape slavery in Maryland and head for Philadelphia. …show more content…
In 1844, At the time almost half of the African-American people on the eastern shore of Maryland were free, it was not unusual at all for a family to include both free and enslaved people like Tubman did. Little is known about John Tubman or his marriage to Harriet, we don't even know whether and/or how long they lived together. Any children they might have had would have been considered enslaved. John declined to make the voyage on the Underground Railroad with Harriet, preferring to stay in Maryland with a new wife.they later divorced and Harriet did indeed leave without john going. In 1869, Harriet married a Civil War veteran named Nelson Davis. In 1874, the couple adopted a baby girl named …show more content…
When her second husband, Nelson Davis, died in 1888 Tubman was able to collect a veteran’s widow pension of $8 a month. It was the first time she enjoyed a reliable and steady income.
Harriet was a very involved person after her second husband died,Tubman supported the women's rights movement in 1848,by attending meetings and giving speeches.Her friends who supported her during her years under the railroad were leaders of the movement as well. She toured New York, Boston and Philadelphia speaking in favor of women’s suffrage rights, but out of all of the speeches she gave she was specially interested in African American women’s rights. In 1896 she was invited as a speaker at the first meeting of the National Association of Colored