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Harriet Tubman

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Harriet Tubman
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  • Hi! My name is Amarinta "Minty" Ross, but you may know me as Harriet Tubman.
  • I was born into a family of slaves.
  • I was born on a plantation in Maryland around 1820.
  • Like most slaves, I did not know the exact date of my birth.
  • I worked in my master's house as a maid, nurse, field hand, cook and wood cutter.
  • In 1849, my first master died. On rumour that I was about to be sold, I made a plan to escape with two of my brothers.
  • My brothers and I became free, but it was not long before they chose to turn back.
  • Where is he going?
  • I returned with them and saw that they were safely home before setting out on the long journey by myself.
  • Come in! Quickly!
  • I first discovered the Underground Railroad when I used it to escape my own enslavement.
  • I travelled over 90 miles from Maryland to Philadelphia.
  • I need to go back.
  • Once free, I immediately yearned to set others free via the Underground Railroad.
  • I went back South and rescued my entire family, including my two brothers and my parents, Harriet "Rit" Ross and Ben Ross.
  • This was one of my many trips back into the Southern States.
  • The Underground Railroad was a network of routes and safe houses that helped slaves escape slavery in the south.
  • Unlike how its name suggests, the Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad.
  • Are you sure?
  • The first mention of this ironic name was when an owner blamed an "underground railroad" for a slave's escape.
  • People, black and white, guided the fugitive slaves to freedom.
  • We were known as the conductors.
  • We led the fugitives to hiding places known as stations, safe houses, and depots. These places included private homes, churches and schoolhouses.
  • The people operating these locations were known as stationmasters.
  • There were many well-used routes, stretching west through Ohio or north through Pennsylvania or Detroit.
  • Most Underground Railroad operators were ordinary people such as farmers, business owners and ministers.
  • Many of them were Quakers.
  • The Quakers are considered the first organized group to actively help slaves.
  • The Quakers were a Christian denomination that believed there was 'something of God' in everyone.
  • They treated everyone equally and were well known for being pacifists.
  • In the early 1900s, a Quaker named Isaac T. Hopper set up a network to help slaves escape.
  • Meanwhile, Quakers in North Carolina were setting up abolitionist groups.
  • This was the beginning of the Underground Railroad.
  • Quilts were often used as a method of communication.
  • They were used to make signals in front of a large audience where only few would understand.
  • They would mean something like "get ready to go" or "head North West"
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