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HARRIET TUBMAN: THE ROAD TO FREEDOM by CATHERINE CLINTON
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SummaryEvery schoolchild knows of Harriet Tubman's heroic escape
and resistance to slavery. But few readers are aware that
Tubman went on to be a scout, a spy, and a nurse for the
Union Army, because there has never before been a serious
biography for an adult audience of this important woman.
This is that long overdue historical work, written by an
acclaimed historian of the antebellum era and the Civil
War. Illiterate but deeply religious, Tubman left her
family in her early 20s to escape to Philadelphia, then a
hotbed of abolitionism. There she became the first and only
woman, fugitive slave, and black to work as a conductor on
the Underground Railroad. So successful was she in
spiriting away slaves that the state of Maryland put a
$40,000 bounty on her head. Within a year of starting her
work, fellow slaves and Northerners began referring to
Tubman as "Moses" because of how many people she had freed.
With impeccable scholarship that draws on newly available
sources and research into the daily lives of slaves,
HARRIET TUBMAN is an enduring work on one of the most
important figures in American history.
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