Theodore Roosevelt's words on Lincoln
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05-28-2014, 08:22 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-28-2014 08:38 AM by KLarson.)
Post: #55
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RE: Theodore Roosevelt's words on Lincoln
Thanks Laurie! The Tubman Visitor Center is scheduled to open in early 2016. The 125 mile long Tubman Byway in Maryland is up and running, with wayside markers and a fabulous audio tour that you can download from iTunes or the Byway website http://www.harriettubmanbyway.org/ . the Byway also continues through an additional 70 or so miles in Delaware to the Pennsylvania border.
Thanks Gene! Some of that old web information is incorrect. Tubman purchased a wood frame house on 7 acres from William Seward in 1859. It was a small farm once owned by Frances Seward's father, and it sat on the town line between Auburn and Fleming, NY. Tubman loved the Sewards, and they loved her and supported her efforts. Her debt to them for the property - which she always had trouble paying - was forgiven in 1873 by one of Seward's sons. Tubman's family moved from Canada in the early spring of 1861 and settled into the home. It burned in 1880, and Tubman rebuilt it with bricks made on the property in 1883. This is the residence now undergoing restoration, and it should be open to the public in the next couple of years. (05-26-2014 08:39 PM)LincolnToddFan Wrote: I am a bit confused. I always assumed that Harriet lived in Canada during her repeated raids to free slaves until after the end of the war. Her life was in grave danger in America. There was of course a bounty on her head in the South, and at any time she could have been kidnapped from a Northern city and handed over to the South, couldn't she? Tubman did not move to Canada until 1857 or so, even though she did bring freedom seekers to St. Catharines throughout the 1850s. She purchased a home from Wm. H. Seward in 1859 in Auburn, but did not really move in until 1861. (05-27-2014 09:45 PM)LincolnToddFan Wrote: Her birth name was Araminta Ross...surprised that isn't mentioned on her stone. She changed her own name in 1844, so I feel that what is on the tombstone is what she would have wanted. (05-26-2014 08:39 PM)LincolnToddFan Wrote: I am a bit confused. I always assumed that Harriet lived in Canada during her repeated raids to free slaves until after the end of the war. Her life was in grave danger in America. There was of course a bounty on her head in the South, and at any time she could have been kidnapped from a Northern city and handed over to the South, couldn't she? Tubman could have been arrested, but no one knew she was the one who was repeatedly returning to Maryland to rescue her family and friends. There was no large bounty for her capture - that is a old myth. Her enslaver, Eliza Brodess posted only a $100 reward for her capture and return after Tubman first ran away in 1849. No other rewards were ever posted. She lived in Philadelphia from 1850 until mid to late 1856, though she did stay with family and friends in Canada when she arrived there with freed slaves. |
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