Authors:
Historic Era: Era 5: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
June/July 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 5: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
June/July 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 3
Like all biographers, I search for compelling figures with universal appeal. I seek someone who will keep me awake nights, who will take me on strange detours, who will make me crazy with curiosity. Those very vital questions that form the core of an individual’s experience will engulf and overwhelm, and perhaps even undermine me—as, once again, I take the plunge. I feel lucky indeed to have found such a subject in Harriet Tubman.
She is a character familiar to 21st-century school-children, but a name all too absent from the annals of the American academy. Born into slavery in the third decade of the 19th century, Harriet Tubman lived into the second decade of the 20th. She emancipated herself by running away from her Maryland owner in 1849, and she joined the growing cadre of black freedom fighters in the North. Committed to the battle against slavery, she took on the dangerous role of rescuing others and conducted hundreds of fugitives to freedom along networks established by the Underground Railroad. During the 1850s, she became a beloved figure among abolitionists, revered as “Moses” within anti-slavery circles.
After the Civil War began—in a sense moving her “underground” struggle aboveground—Tubman joined with federal forces, working behind enemy lines as a spy and scout. (These clandestine activities finally won her a pension of $20 after 30 years of petitions to Congress.) She spent the post-war years in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York and, by the 1870s, was being described in local papers as a philanthropist. After sheltering the needy in her own household for decades, she was finally able to open a charitable home for blacks in her adopted hometown of Auburn. She was outspoken on behalf of women’s suffrage and other movements for social justice at the turn of the century. When she died in 1913, Booker T. Washington and other black leaders hailed her contributions and sacrifices.
Writing a biography of Tubman has been both a joy and a challenge. A joy, in that her life is so full of inspiring material, and a challenge because her status as a folk hero in many ways obscures how little we can really document about it. Although she is often celebrated as a hero of the Underground Railroad, there is hardly any mention in Civil War literature of her extraordinary efforts during that conflict, when her missions took her as far south as Fernandina, Florida.
Because Tubman remained illiterate all her life, there are only a few dictated letters and no diaries on which to draw. Yet, during the past half-century, she has been the subject of, first, a trickle and then a flood of children’s literature, 37 books since 1990 alone, and her image adorns dozens of