Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Harriet Tubman" ¶ 72
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Harriet and Tubman
This impressive work was followed by a series of paintings of the lives of Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman, as well as a series of pieces about the abolitionist John Brown.
It was marked by the Native Americans, slaves like Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass and slave-owners and others.
* 1849 – American abolitionist Harriet Tubman escapes from slavery.
Harriet Tubman ( photo H. B. Lindsley ), c. 1870.
In fact, one of the most famous and successful abductors ( as people who secretly traveled into slave states to rescue those seeking freedom were called ) was Harriet Tubman, a woman.
* Harriet Tubman
Bound For the Promised Land: Harriet Tubman, Portrait of an American Hero.
* March 10 – Harriet Tubman, American abolitionist ( b. 1820 )
* Harriet Tubman becomes an official conductor of the Underground Railroad.
Harriet Tubman ( born Araminta Harriet Ross ; 1820 – March 10, 1913 ) was an African-American abolitionist, humanitarian, and Union spy during the American Civil War.
Harriet Tubman was born Araminta " Minty " Ross to slave parents, Harriet (" Rit ") Green and Ben Ross.
Tubman changed her name from Araminta to Harriet soon after her marriage, though the exact timing is unclear.
One admirer, Sarah Hopkins Bradford, wrote an authorized biography entitled Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman.
Harriet Tubman, 1911
" She was frustrated by the new rule but was the guest of honor nonetheless when the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged celebrated its opening on June 23, 1908.
Surrounded by friends and family members, Harriet Tubman died of pneumonia in 1913.
Statue by Jane DeDecker commemorating Harriet Tubman, Ypsilanti, Michigan
Harriet Tubman, widely known and well-respected while she was alive, became an American icon in the years after she died.
Bradford's biographies were followed by Earl Conrad's Harriet Tubman: Negro Soldier and Abolitionist.
Dozens of schools were named in her honor, and both the Harriet Tubman Home in Auburn and the Harriet Tubman Museum in Cambridge serve as monuments to her life.

Harriet and home
In 1964, he appeared as Richard Kimble's nephew in ABC's The Fugitive in the 15th episode entitled " Home Is The Hunted "; as Barry in the NBC medical drama The Eleventh Hour, episode " Sunday Father "; as himself three times in the ABC sitcom The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet ; in the Disney film For the Love of Willadena ; and as a troubled orphan taken home with Darrin and Samantha Stephens in Bewitched episode " A Vision of Sugarplums " ( December 1964 ).
One of the first to champion the economics of running a home was Catherine Beecher ( sister to Harriet Beecher Stowe ).
He spent his high school years in San Francisco in the home of his aunt, Henriette Levy ( née Michelson ), who was the mother of author Harriet Lane Levy.
Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, visited the Kennedy home in Garrard County in ger only visit to the South while gathering material for the book.
At the time, Harriet had moved with her family into a home near the campus of Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where her husband was now teaching.
The Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati, Ohio is the former home of her father Lyman Beecher on the former campus of the Lane Seminary.
* Harriet Beecher Stowe House & Center — Stowe's adulthood home in Hartford, Connecticut
Their son's juvenile delinquency did little to enhance the All-American image of Ozzie and Harriet and they quickly put an end to Ricky's involvement with the Rooks by banishing one of the most influential of the club's members from Ricky's life and their home.
When on vacation, the girls stay at the home of their guardians, their uncle, Captain Ned Dana, master of the S. S. Balaska, and his spinster sister, Aunt Harriet Dana.
The Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati, Ohio was the home of her father Lyman Beecher on the former campus of the Lane Theological Seminary.
He left home during the War of 1812 and married Harriet Smith ( 1800 – 1867 ) ( Cambridge, New York, May 12, 1800 – Cincinnati, Ohio, June 21, 1867 ), the daughter of Dr. Sanford Smith ( 1760 – 1815 ) ( Stonington, Connecticut, February 27, 1760 – Scipio, New York, June 15, 1815 ) and his wife Priscilla Whippo Smith ( 1763 – 1838 ) ( Cambridge, New York, c. 1763 – Pottstown, Pennsylvania, August 26, 1838 ), in Rochester, New York on November 8, 1821.
In November 1866, Harriet Jacobs received news that her son, Joseph, was sick in Australia and needed money for the trip home.
Currier & Ives prints were among the household decorations considered appropriate for a proper home by Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, authors of American Woman's Home ( 1869 ): " The great value of pictures for the home would be, after all, in their sentiment.
It was also the home of Harriet E. Wilson, who published the semi-autobiographical novel Our Nig: Or, Sketches in the Life of a Free Black in 1859, making it the first novel by an African-American published in the country.
A few months after returning home from Germany, on May 25, 1853, Clark married Harriet Keopuolani Richards Williston.
Towards Brushford the River Barle is crossed by the New Bridge dating from 1870, which led to Pixton Park, which was the home of John Dyke Acland and his wife Harriet Acland and later the family of Evelyn Waugh and Auberon Waugh.
In 1959, Harriet Sprague had donated funds for the Sprague Building at the Shore Line Trolley Museum at East Haven, Connecticut, not far from Sprague's boyhood home in Milford.
In 1978, Harriet Nelson moved full-time to the Laguna Beach, California beach home the family had built in 1954.
Harriet spent a majority of her day napping at her home pond.
It was formerly occupied by Villa Rosa, the home and estate of Morrison's parents Dorilus Morrison ( 1814 – 1897 ), the first mayor of Minneapolis, and Harriet Putnam Whitmore Morrison ( 1821-1880 ).
Nevertheless, Manning began work of the final novel in The Levant Trilogy, The Sum of Things, in which Harriet agrees to sail home to the UK, but having said goodbye to Guy, changes her mind.
Harriet was a devout Christian, and the Parhams opened their home for " religious activities ".
The Gardens were also the home for over 100 years for ' Harriet ', a tortoise reportedly collected by Charles Darwin during his visit to the Galápagos Islands in 1835 and donated to the Gardens in 1860 by John Clements Wickham, former commander of the HMS Beagle and later ' Government Resident ' for Moreton Bay.

0.232 seconds.