"I freed thousands of slaves. I
could have freed thousands more, if they had known they were
slaves."
?Harriet Tubman
Harriet Tubman was responsible for the emancipation of
thousands of Africans enslaved by the racist capitalist
slaveowners in the United States. Her actions inspired thousands
more to fight for and achieve freedom.
Tubman?s threat
against the racist institution of slavery was so great that, in
1856, a $40,000 bounty was offered by the
Harriet
Tubman Portrait: Carlito
Rovira
South for her capture. She
became a major leader in the abolitionist movement in the United
States. For her brilliance and determination in the struggle against
slavery, we remember Tubman as a revolutionary woman.
Harriet
Tubman was born Araminta Ross in Dorchester County, Md., around
1820. Both her parents were slaves. By age six, she was forced to
work as a house servant and frequently hired out by her owner to
other "masters." By age 13, she was sent to work in the fields.
Ross endured cruel and violent treatment from slaveowners.
She was beaten and had scars until the day she died. Even as a
child, she was subjected to whippings.
While a teenager,
Tubman blocked a doorway to protect another slave from an angry
overseer. The racist overseer threw a two pound dry goods store
weight at the slave which fell short and struck Tubman in the head.
This blow caused Tubman to suffer from epileptic seizures and
narcolepsy for the rest of her life.
In 1849, Tubman?s
"owner" died, leaving his wife to pay his debts. Fearing that she
would be sold to a slaveowner in the Deep South, Tubman decided that
if she wanted to be free, she would have to take her emancipation
into her own hands.
One night in the fall of 1849, Tubman
set out on foot and headed north, carrying a piece of paper with
names of safe houses given to her by a white neighbor. With the help
of other abolitionists, Tubman eventually arrived in Philadelphia.
?Conductor? Tubman
In Philadelphia, Tubman met
William Still. He was the Philadelphia stationmaster of the
Underground Railroad and member of the Philadelphia Anti-Slavery
Society. Tubman quickly became a leader of the anti-slavery movement
and one of the most active "conductors" of the Underground Railroad.
Within 10 years, she made 19 trips to the South to escort
slaves to the North by way of covert routes and a network of safe
houses. She personally escorted over 300 slaves to freedom,
including her parents who were then 70 years of age.
When a
passenger wanted to turn back due to fear or exhaustion, Tubman
would pull out her gun and declare, "You?ll be free or die!" In all
of her journeys on the Underground Railroad, she never lost a single
passenger.
Tubman?s activism went beyond the Underground
Railroad. She was the first American woman to plan and lead a
military operation.
In 1863, during the Civil War, Tubman
engineered and commanded the raid at Combahee Ferry that freed over
750 slaves. She also acted as a spy for the North. Yet, following
the war, the U.S. government denied her payment for her wartime
service. She was forced to ride in baggage car during her return
trip home to Auburn, New York.
Tubman later helped found a
home for ill and elderly African Americans in Auburn. The home was
built on land that Tubman had purchased. She spent the last years of
her life at this home. Tubman died in 1913.
Tubman was
greatly admired by other abolitionists. John Brown described Tubman
as "one of the bravest persons on this continent." Tubman helped
Brown recruit soldiers for the 1859 Harper?s Ferry raid. Brown
affectionately referred to her as "General Tubman."
Frederick Douglass said of Tubman, "Excepting John Brown?of
sacred memory?I know of no one who has encountered more perils and
hardships to serve our enslaved people."
Harriet Tubman?s
bravery and ceaseless struggle against the enslavement of Africans
paved the way for many women revolutionaries who followed?from Ida
B. Wells to Assata Shakur and beyond. Tubman?s legacy is a reminder
for all women warriors today that revolutionary change is possible
to achieve through organized struggle.