Harriet Tubman's Struggle For Slave Freedom

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In 1821, Harriet Tubman became one of the foremost activists for slave freedom in history. Born into slavery, she grew up hearing poems and songs, like “Go Down Moses”, which inspired her to become a Moses for her own people, once she had escaped slavery herself. By means of the Underground Railroad, a network of people dedicated to helping runaway slaves to freedom, Harriet eventually escaped to Philadelphia.
Harriet wanted desperately to help runaway slaves, as the people on the Underground Railroad had helped her. She convinced a man named William Still, a strong advocated for slave abolition, to allow her to become a “conductor”. Harriet Tubman worked the Railroad as early as 1850, at age twenty nine. When a law was passed that allowed

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