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Harriet Tubman美国人物简介

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发表于 2008-3-18 12:00:00 | 只看该作者

Harriet Tubman美国人物简介

Harriet Tubman

 

  Born in 1820, in Dorchester
                County, Harriet Tubman was a runaway slave from Maryland who became known as the “Moses of her people”. Over the course of 10 years, and at great personal risk, she led hundreds of slaves to freedom along the Underground Railroad, a secret network of safe houses where runaway slaves could stay on their journey north to freedom. She later became a leader in the abolitionist movement, and during the Civil War she was a spy for the federal forces in South Carolina as well as a nurse. Harriet Tubman died on March 10, 1913.

 

Tubman: Conductor of the Underground Railroad

 After Harriet Tubman escaped from slavery, she returned to slave-holding states many times to help other slaves escape. She led them safely to the northern free states and to Canada. It was very dangerous to be a runaway slave. There wee rewards for their capture, and ads described slaves to in detail. Whenever Tubman led a group of slaves to freedom, she placed herself in great danger. There was a fugitive slave herself, and she was breaking the law in slave states by helping other slaves escape.

  If anyone ever wanted to change his or her mind during the journey to freedom and return, Tubman pulled out a gun and said, “You will be free of die a slave!” Tubman knew that if anyone turned back, it would put her and the other escaping slaves in danger of discovery, capture or even death. She became so well known for leading slaves to freedom that Tubman became known as the “Moses of Her People”. Many slaves dreaming of freedom sang the spiritual “Go Down Moses”. Slaves hoped a savior would deliver them from slavery just as Moses had delivered the Israelites from slavery.

  Tubman made 19 trips to Maryland and helped 300 people to freedom. During these dangerous journeys she helped rescue members of her own family, including her 70-year-old parents. At one point, rewards for Tubmans capture totaled 40000. Yet, she was never captured and never failed to deliver her “passengers” to safety.  As Tubman herself said, “On my Underground Railroad I (never) run my train off(the) track (and) I never(lost) a passenger.”

 

 

 (2) Tubman’s Early Years and Escape from Slavery

Tubman’s name at birth was Araminta Ross. She was one of 11 children of Harriet and Benjamin Ross born into slavery in Dorchester County, Maryland. As a child, Ross was “hired out” by her master as a nursemaid for a small baby. Ross had to stay awake all night so that the baby wouldn’t cry and wake the mother. If Ross fell asleep, the baby’s mother whipped her. Form a very young age, Ross was determined to gain her freedom.

  As a slave, Araminta Ross was scarred for life when she refused to help in the punishment of another young slave. A young man had gone to the store without permission, and when he returned, the overseer wanted to whip him. He asked Ross to help but she refused. When the young man stared to run away, the overseer picked up a heavy iron weight and threw it at him. He missed the young man and hit Ross instead. The weight nearly crushed her skull and left a deep scar. She was unconscious for days, and suffered from seizures for the rest of her life.

  In 1844, Ross married a free black named John Tubman and took his last name. She also changed her first name, taking her mother’s name, Harriet. In 1849, worried about that she and the other slaves on the plantation were going to be sold, Tubman decided to run away. Her husband refused to go with her, so she set out with her two brothers, and followed the North Star in the sky to guide her north to freedom. Her brothers became frightened and turned back, but she continued on and reached Philadelphia. There she found work as a household servant and saved her money so she could return to help others escape.

3, Tubman During the Civil War

During the Civil War, Tubman worked for the Union as a nurse, a cook, and a spy. Her experience leading slaves along the Underground Railroad was especially helpful because she knew the land well. She recruited a group of former slaves to hunt for rebel camps and report on the Confederate troops. In 1863, she went with Colonel James Montgomery and about 150 black soldiers on a gunboat raid in South Carolina. Because she had inside information from her scouts, the Union gunboats were able to surprise the Confederate rebels.

At first when the Union Army came through and burned plantations, slaves hid in the woods. But when they realized that the gunboats could take them behind Union lines to freedom, they came running from all directions, bringing as many of their belongings as they could carry. Tubman later said, “I never saw such a sight.” Tubman played other roles in the war effort, including working as a nurse. Folk remedies she learned during her years living in Maryland would come in very handy.

Tubman worked as a nurse during the war, trying to heal the sick. Many people in the hospital died from dysentery, a disease associated with terrible diarrhea. Tubman was sure she could help cure the sickness if she could find some of the same roots and herbs that grew in Maryland. One night she searched the woods until she found water lilies and crane’s bill. She boiled the water lily roots and the herbs and made a bitter-tasting brew that she gave to a man who was dying- and it worked! Slowly he recovered. Tubman saved many people in her lifetime. On her grave her tombstone reads “Servant of god, Well Done.”

 

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