Harriet Tubman

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19th century
A01=Kristen T. Oertel
abolition
abolitionism
African American history
Author_Kristen T. Oertel
Back Pay
black women's leadership in 19th century
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Central Presbyterian Church
Chicago Defender
civil rights
Civil War
Dorchester County
Edge Field County
emancipation studies
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eq_biography-true-stories
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female suffrage
Free Woman
Freedmen's Aid Movement
Freedmen’s Aid Movement
Fugitive Slave
Fugitive Slave Act
Fugitive Slave Law
gender equality movements
historical activism
Jim Crow
Kunta Kinte
March
Mason Dixon Line
NACW
nineteenth century
Outstanding Negro
primary source analysis
race and social justice
Reconstruction
Runaway Advertisement
Sally Hemings
Secretary Of State
slave resistance
slavery
Smoking Car
South Carolina's Secession
South Carolina’s Secession
Stone Flew
suffrage
Tubman's Life
Tubman’s Life
Underground Railroad
University Of Wisconsin
woman suffrage
women's rights
women's suffrage
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415825122
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Aug 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Escaped slave, Civil War spy, scout, and nurse, and champion of women's suffrage, Harriet Tubman is an icon of heroism. Perhaps most famous for leading enslaved people to freedom through the Underground Railroad, Tubman was dubbed "Moses" by followers. But abolition and the close of the Civil War were far from the end of her remarkable career. Tubman continued to fight for black civil rights, and campaign fiercely for women’s suffrage, throughout her life.

In this vivid, concise narrative supplemented by primary documents, Kristen T. Oertel introduces readers to Tubman’s extraordinary life, from the trauma of her childhood slavery to her civil rights activism in the late nineteenth century, and in the process reveals a nation’s struggle over its most central injustices.

Kristen T. Oertel is the Mary Frances Barnard Associate Professor of nineteenth-century American history at the University of Tulsa. She is the author of Bleeding Borders: Race, Gender, and Violence in Pre-Civil War Kansas, and co-author with Marilyn Blackwell of Frontier Feminist: Clarina Howard Nichols and the Politics of Motherhood.

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