Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by...

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Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Transcript of Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by...

Page 1: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Harriet Tubman

Presentation created by Robert MartinezPrimary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy HakimImages as cited.

Page 2: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Harriet Tubman never knew for sure when she was born, few people recorded slaves’

birthdays. But it was in Maryland, approximately 1820.

http://www.babuf.org/images/harrietTubman2.jpg

Page 3: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Her owner considered her a problem child. He sent her off to work when she was six. He got the wages, she did the work. She was sent to dust and sweep and tend a

baby.

http://www.simonsays.com/assets/isbn/0689848668/C_0689848668.jpg

Page 4: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

When Harriet didn’t dust well she beat her. Hard. When the baby cried, Harriet was

supposed to rock her and make her stop crying. Sometimes little Harriet fell asleep.

Her mistress beat her. Hard.

http://cghs.dade.k12.fl.us/slavery/antebellum_slavery/non_plantation_slave_life/Popup2.jpg

Page 5: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Harriet ran away. But she didn’t know where to go, so she hid in a pig pen. Living with pigs may have been easier than living

with cruel humans, but she didn’t have anything to eat except the potato peelings

the pigs ate.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/joost-ijmuiden/3692733707/

Page 6: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Soon she was starving and had to go back. This time her mistress beat her so hard she

carried scars for the rest of her life. Now Harriet was too sick to work at all….

http://cghs.dade.k12.fl.us/slavery/antebellum_slavery/non_plantation_slave_life/barbara.jpg

Page 7: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

….so she was sent back home. Her mother and father nursed her back to health. The

master sent her out to work again, this time to a house where the woman was a

weaver and the man a hunter.

http://www.nwarctic.org/WebQuests/American_Revolution/abigale%20slave%20and%20dead%20birds.jpeg

Page 8: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She was sent to check the hunter’s traps. She had to wade through cold water. One day she said she was too sick to go. The hunter didn’t believe her. Harriet had the

measles and bronchitis.

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Page 9: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

After going in the cold water she almost died. She was sent back home again. Again

her parents cared for her, but her throat had been damaged. After that she always

had a low, husky voice.

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Page 10: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She was happy to be back home with her parents and her 10 brothers and sisters.

The slave owner could see that she was no good to hire out, so he sent her to work in

the fields.

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAShousing.jpg

Page 11: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Of course, slaves couldn’t go to school, so no one taught Harriet to read or write, but

she learned to listen and to remember, and she soon had an unusual memory.

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Page 12: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She learned that a few slaves were freed by their masters. She learned that others ran

away north, and found freedom. She learned that if a slave tried to escape and

was caught, he would be whipped, branded, and sold.

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Page 13: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

The slave would be sold deep south, to cotton plantations where life was even

harder for blacks than it was in Maryland and there was little chance of escape.

http://cghs.dadeschools.net/slavery/white_south/American_Cotton_Plantation2.jpg

Page 14: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Harriet learned that some people, black and white, helped escaping blacks. They

were part of something called the “Underground Railroad.” It wasn’t a real railroad, although Harriet thought it was

when she first heard of it.

http://www.wereldorientatie.net/htm/posters/images/Underground%20Railroad%20_jpg.jpg

Page 15: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

The Underground Railroad was a way to get north. It was a series of places where

blacks would find help. The places, houses, barns, and boats, were called “stations.”

http://americanabolitionist.liberalarts.iupui.edu/underground_railroad.jpg

Page 16: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

People who traveled the route were called “passengers.” People who led them were

“conductors.”

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Page 17: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

One day Harriet was in a store. An overseer was there. Suddenly he yelled at a slave

who was running away. The overseer threw a lead weight at the running slave. The

weight hit Harriet, right in the forehead. She passed out. For months she lay

unconscious….

http://www.flickr.com/photos/10339278@N07/3625834371/

Page 18: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

….Everyone thought she would die. For the rest of her life she had fainting spells and times when she would fall asleep and no

one could wake her.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pastorjason/320863334/

Page 19: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She was sent to work with her father, who was one of the most trusted slaves on the

plantation. He was in charge of a woodcutting operation. Harriet soon learned to cut trees as easily as the

strongest of men.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/topphotos_flickr/2300701138/

Page 20: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Her father taught her the ways of the woods. He taught her to walk softly, as the Native Americans did. He showed her the

plants she could eat, and the ones that were poisonous.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/11357110@N06/2078277259/

Page 21: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Then she met a white woman who said she could help her. Harriet guessed that the

woman was part of the Underground Railroad. She guessed right.

http://strattonhouse.com/images/underground_railroad_lg.jpg

Page 22: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Soon, Harriet escaped North, to freedom, she didn’t feel free without her family and friends. So she went back and got them.

She got all of her brothers and sisters and her parents. It took many dangerous trips.

http://www.americancivilwar.com/women/tubman_slaves.jpg

Page 24: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She didn’t stop with just her family. She became the most famous conductor on the Underground Railroad. She is said to have

led 300 blacks to freedom.

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Page 25: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

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Page 26: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

Harriet Tubman was daring and ingenious and soon there was a huge reward for her

capture. Often she wore disguises.

http://www.americancivilwar.com/women/tubman_slaves.jpg

Page 27: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

She made Northerners think differently about slavery. The blacks who escaped on the Underground Railroad told of children

being taken from their parents. They showed scars from whippings.

http://www.haitiwebs.com/forums/attachments/art-culture/5324d1164653428-ecrire-la-violence-slavery_scars.jpg

Page 28: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

When the Civil War began she was asked to help the Union army. She went behind

enemy lines as a scout and spy.

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Page 29: Harriet Tubman Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images as cited.

After the war, Queen Victoria of England, heard of Harriet Tubman and wrote her a letter inviting her to England for a visit.

Harriet didn’t have the money to go. Little Harriet Tubman had become famous.

http://www.bridgew.edu/HOBA/Images/Inductees/Tubman.jpg