Showing posts with label Underground Railroad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Underground Railroad. Show all posts

March 10 - Harriet Tubman Day – U.S.

 Posted on March 10, 2021

This is an update of my post published on March 10, 2010:



Harriet Tubman was strong, brave, and hard working on behalf of others, and this day commemorates her life; she was born into slavery some time in 1820 or 1821, and she died on March 10, 1913.

After Tubman escaped from slavery, traveling from Maryland to Pennsylvania, she made thirteen trips back to the south to rescue other enslaved people and bring them north to freedom on the Underground Railroad. Because of this, she has been called a conductor on the Underground Railroad and also the Moses of her people.

Tubman's first rescue missions were to bring her family north to freedom. Eventually she guided other enslaved folks north, and she ended up escorting around 70 people to freedom as well as telling many others how to reach the northern states. She said later that she “never lost a passenger.”



Tubman proved her exceptional bravery because any runaway caught in the south would be returned to slavery, and she proved her exceptional strength because she had to withstand a terrible head wound as well as many beatings and other mistreatment. An overseer had thrown a two-pound metal weight at another slave, and it hit Tubman in the head. Just a teenager, bleeding and unconscious, Tubman was given no medical attention. Two days later, she was sent back into the fields. Tubman had problems from this head injury, including severe headaches and seizures, all her life.

During the Civil War, Tubman worked hard to defeat the Confederacy. She acted as a nurse to Union troops, helped enslaved people who took advantage of the war to run away, led bands of scouts to map out unfamiliar land, and acted as a spy for the Union. Tubman even led an armed assault, the first woman to do so in the Civil War, and more than 700 enslaved people were rescued during that raid.

After the Civil War and slavery were ended, Tubman tended to her family (including her aging parents) and also worked for women's right to vote. She donated land to be used for a home for elderly people.

Harriet Tubman was widely known and greatly respected in her own time, but she was seldom paid for her nursing and spying services, invaluable though they were, and she was quite poor. One time that she received an honor, she had to sell a cow in order to afford the railroad ticket to go to the celebrations!

Luckily, some people who were busy heaping praise and honors on her also raised donations to partially pay her back for her service to her country. Unluckily, at one point two men swindled her in what 
sounds like an old-time version of the Nigerian e-mail scam.

All in all, Harriet Tubman had an eventful life, but never an easy one. Her strength and morality won for her fame but never fortune.



Harriet Tubman's image will soon replace Andrew Jackson on U.S. 20-dollar bills - and she will be the first African American pictured on any U.S. money, as well as the first woman on paper currency in the nation in more than a century!

Here are some resources to learn more about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.

Here is a picture of Harriet Tubman that you can print and color.


September 17 – Harriet Tubman Escapes!

Posted on September 17, 2013


Today we can celebrate a woman breaking laws, stealing, and running away from her crimes.

Well—running away WAS her crime!

In the early United States, it was perfectly legal to own other people. You could buy and sell other people, and you could pretty much do what you wanted to do with “your own” people.

What was against the law was for those people to run away. Not only was it illegal for a slave to run away, it was illegal for anyone to help a slave run away. And, in a sense, the runaway was depriving his or her “master” of property that had been paid for.

Of course slavery was horribly wrong, and so in this case, breaking the laws was a good thing, and following the laws was an immoral thing. I wonder if you think that any laws we have today are bad laws that should be broken?

At any rate, on this date in 1849, a woman named Harriet Tubman successfully escaped slavery. She made it to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where slavery was illegal and she was free.

Why do you think that Tubman's
nickname was "Moses"?
But Tubman didn't sit around up north just enjoying her freedom. Instead, she continued her “crime spree” by returning to her home state of Maryland to break out her family. One group at a time, returning over and over again into dangerous territory, Tubman helped dozens of enslaved people find their way to freedom.

Soon, another bad law was created: the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 required law officials in free states to help recapture escaped slaves. So Pennsylvania and other free states were no longer safe. Tubman didn't buckle—she just started traveling further with the groups she led—all the way north to Canada.

When the Civil War began, Tubman worked for the Union Army. She served as a cook, a nurse, an armed scout, and even a spy! She was the first woman to lead an armed expedition during the war—and this raid was very successful, freeing more than 700 slaves!

To learn more about the Underground Railroad, which was a system of safe houses for escaping slaves, check out the Scholastic website.


To learn more about Tubman, check out this earlier post


Also on this date:




















Plan Ahead!


And here are my Pinterest pages on October holidaysOctober birthdays, and historical anniversaries in October.


March 10, 2010

Harriet Tubman Day – U.S.

Harriet Tubman was strong, brave, and hard working on behalf of others, and this day commemorates her life; she was born a slave some time in 1820 or 1821, and she died on March 10, 1913.

After Tubman escaped from slavery, traveling from Maryland to Pennsylvania, she made thirteen trips back to the south to rescue other slaves and bring them north to freedom on the Underground Railroad. Because of this, she has been called a conductor on the Underground Railroad and also the Moses of her people.

Tubman's first rescue missions were to bring her family north to freedom. Eventually she guided other slaves north, and she ended up rescuing more than 70 slaves. She said later that she “never lost a passenger.”

Tubman proved her exceptional bravery because any runaway caught in the south would be returned to slavery, and she proved her exceptional strength because she had to withstand a terrible head wound as well as many beatings and other mistreatment. An overseer had thrown a two-pound metal weight at another slave, and it hit Tubman in the head. Just a teenager, bleeding and unconscious, Tubman was given no medical attention. Two days later, she was sent back into the fields. Tubman had problems from this head injury, including severe headaches and seizures, all her life.


During the Civil War, Tubman worked hard to defeat the Confederacy. She acted as a nurse to Union troops, helped slaves who took advantage of the war to run away, led bands of scouts to map out unfamiliar land, and acted as a spy for the Union. Tubman even led an armed assault, the first woman to do so in the Civil War, and more than 700 slaves were rescued during that raid.

After the Civil War and slavery were ended, Tubman tended to her family (including her aging parents) and also worked for women's right to vote. She donated land to be used for a home for elderly people.

Harriet Tubman was widely known and greatly respected in her own time, but she was seldom paid for her nursing and spying services, invaluable though they were, and she was quite poor. One time that she received an honor, she had to sell a cow in order to afford the railroad ticket to go to the celebrations!

Luckily, some people who were busy heaping praise and honors on her also raised donations to partially pay her back for her service to her country. Unluckily, at one point two men swindled her in what
sounds like her time's version of the Nigerian e-mail scam.

All in all, Harriet Tubman had an eventful life, but never an easy one. Her strength and morality won for her fame but never fortune.

Read more about the raid
that Harriet Tubman led on the National Geographic Kids site.


On the regular National Geographic website, there is a feature about the Underground Railroad.


Do a word-search puzzle about Harriet Tubman at Surfing the Net with Kids.

Check out this slide show to see just a small part of the legacy of Harriet Tubman.

Here is a picture of Harriet Tubman that you can print and color.






















Also on this date...
Happy Birthday, Marcello Malpighi


Born on this date in 1628, Malpighi was an Italian doctor and biologist who was one of the first scientists to use a microscope to study living things.

He confirmed the existence of capillaries, which are tiny, thin-skinned blood vessels that allow blood to move out of the circulatory system and into tissues, as well of course as the other direction, from the tissues back into the circulatory system. (Biologist William Harvey had inferred that there must be such things as capillaries but hadn't been able to see them.)

He made many discoveries, including taste buds and the small holes that insects breathe through, and he contributed to the science of embryology (the science of how creatures develop inside eggs or wombs).

Plus a lot more!

Use a v
irtual microscope.

The Power of Ten takes you from outside the Milky Way Galaxy all the way to teeny-tiny quarks—but along the way, you will see some pretty good microscopic views of an oak leaf.


Here is a neat quiz in which you match the microscopic view of something with the correct label. Try it—it's interesting!