Born Araminta Ross, Harriet Tubman lived as a slave on a Maryland
plantation. Frequently threatened, beaten, whipped, and starved, Ms. Tubman’s indomitable spirit could not be broken.
Suffering from a head wound incurred when a furious overseer aimed a two-pound weight at another slave, but missed, Harriet
Tubman suffered from seizures for the rest of her life. But even this daunting physical obstacle could not keep her from her
freeing herself and freeing others from slavery. A Union spy during the Civil War as well as a nurse, Ms. Tubman directed
her consider energies towards humanitarian causes that included women’s suffrage after the war.
Dr. Daisy Century considers Harriet Tubman her role model,
someone who encouraged her to put others first and to lead by example. Like her inspiration, Daisy grew up on a farm, has
a wonderful singing voice and is a determined woman of conviction: once they start a project, they must see it through to
completion. Harriet Tubman reveals a woman who made up her mind as a young girl that things could be better than they were,
“I had reasoned this out in my mind. There was one of two things I had a right to – liberty or death. If I could
not have one, I would have the other.” Tubman shows us a woman who found freedom for herself and then made sure others
were brought to freedom. The brave woman who rescued more than seventy slaves using the Underground Railroad declared, “I
never ran my train off the track and I never lost a passenger.” Harriet Tubman takes each and every audience member
along for this ride.
Invite Harriet Tubman to:
CONVENTION, LUNCHEON, FUNDRAISER, ASSEMBLY PROGRAMS,
CLASS, WOMEN’S DAY, YOUTH DAY, CULTURE EVENT, SORORITY AND FRATERNITY MEETINGS, CLUB MEETINGS