I simply can add nothing more to a book about American history's most amazing woman. Here, then, are the words of those who knew her best, and interviewed her :
-------
“… I know of no one who has willingly encountered more perils and hardships to serve our enslaved people than you have. Much that you have done would seem improbable to those who do not know you as I know you…” - Frederick Douglass, preface
"I had crossed the line. I was free; but there was no one to welcome me to the land of freedom. I was a stranger in a strange land; and my home, after all, was down in Maryland; because my father, my mother, my brothers, and sisters, and friends were there. But I was free, and they should be free.”
“She came to Philadelphia, and worked in hotels, in club houses, and afterwards at Cape May. Whenever she had raised money enough to pay expenses, she would make her way back, hide herself, and in various ways give notice to those who were ready to strike for freedom. When her party was made up, they would start always on Saturday night, because advertisements could not be sent out on Sunday, which gave them one day in advance.Then the pursuers would start after them. Advertisements would be posted everywhere. There was one reward of $12,000 offered for the head of the woman who was constantly appearing and enticing away parties of slaves...”
“… She went back and forth 19 times, according to the reckoning of her friends. She remembers that she went 11 times from Canada, but of the other journeys she kept no reckoning.”
“By night she traveled, many times on foot, over mountains, through forests, across rivers… Sometimes members of her party would become exhausted, foot-sore, and bleeding, and declare they could not go on, they must stay where they dropped down, and die; others would think a voluntary return to slavery better… then there was no remedy but force; the revolver carried by this bold and daring pioneer would be pointed at their heads. ’Dead niggers tell no tales’ said Harriet. ‘Go on or die’ and so she compelled them to drag their weary limbs on…"
“After nightfall, the sound of a hymn sung at a distance comes upon the ears of the concealed and famished fugitives in the woods, and they know that their deliverer is at hand. They listen eagerly for the words she sings, for by them they are to be warned of danger, or informed of safety.“
“But after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law, she said, ‘I wouldn't trust Uncle Sam wid my people no longer; I brought 'em all clar off to Canada.’ “
“They were taken in by Sam Green, the man who was afterwards sent to State Prison for 10 years for having a copy of Uncle Tom's Cabin in his house.”
“The fugitives were on the bottom of the wagons, the bricklayers on the seats, still singing and shouting; and so they passed by the guards, who were entirely unsuspicious of the nature of the load the wagons contained, or of the amount of property thus escaping their hands.”
“… An added reward had been put upon her head, with various threats of the different cruel devices by which she should be tortured and put to death; friends gathered round her, imploring her not to go…"
“... She worked, day after day, till late at night; then she went home to her little cabin, and made about fifty pies, a great quantity of ginger-bread, and two casks of root beer. These she would hire some contraband to sell for her through the camps, and thus she would provide her support for another day; for this woman never received pay or pension…”
“Harriet had acquired quite a reputation for her skill in curing [dysentery] by a medicine which she prepared from roots which grew near the waters which gave the disease. Here she found thousands of sick soldiers and contrabands, and immediately gave up her time and attention to them. At another time, we find her nursing those who were down by hundreds with small-pox and malignant fevers. She had never had these diseases, but she seems to have no more fear of death in one form than another.”
“This fearless woman was often sent into the rebel lines as a spy, and brought back valuable information as to the position of armies…”
“She described a midnight funeral which she attended; for the slaves, never having been allowed to bury their dead in the daytime, continued the custom of night funerals from habit.”
“…She said that God told her to stop, which she did; and then asked Him what she must do. He told her to leave the road, and turn to the left; she… came to a small stream of tide water; there was no boat, no bridge… She was told to go through. It was cold, in the month of March but having confidence in her Guide, she went in; the water came up to her arm-pits… she had soon to wade a second stream…"
"She at one time brought as many as seven or eight, several of whom were women and children.”
“Some 12 months after, she called on me again, and said that God told her I had some money for her… I had, a few days previous, received the net proceeds of 1 pound 10 shillings from Europe for her. To say the least, there was something remarkable in these facts, whether clairvoyance, or the divine impression on her mind from the source of all power, I cannot tell; but certain it was she had a guide within herself…"
“She has often been in Concord, where she resided at the houses of Emerson, Alcott, the Whitneys, the Brooks family, Mrs. Horace Mann, and other well known persons. They all admired and respected her…"
"When these turns of somnolency come upon Harriet, she imagines that her ‘spirit’ leaves her body, and visits other scenes and places, not only in this world, but in the world of spirits. And her ideas of these scenes show, to say the least of it, a vividness of imagination seldom equaled in the soarings of the most cultivated minds.”
“Hon. Wm. H. Seward, Secretary of State, would present a petition to Congress for a pension to Harriet Tubman, for services rendered in the Union Army during the late war. I can bear witness to the value of her services in South Carolina and Florida. She was employed in the hospitals and as a spy. She made many a raid inside the enemy's lines, displaying remarkable courage, zeal, and fidelity.”
“Pass the bearer, Harriet Tubman, to Beaufort and back to this place, and wherever she wishes to go; and give her free passage at all times, on all Government transports.”
“Harriet resolved not to be sold, and so, with no knowledge of the North — having only heard of Pennsylvania and New Jersey — she walked away one night alone.”
“… It was not till the fall of 1851 that she found her husband and learned of his infidelity. She did not give way to rage or grief, but collected a party of fugitives and brought them safely to Philadelphia.”
“… She journeyed to Canada, and there spent the winter, for this was after the enforcement of Mason's Fugitive Slave Bill in Philadelphia and Boston, and there was no safety except ’under the paw of the British Lion' as she quaintly said.”
“They earned their bread by chopping wood in the snows of a Canadian forest; they were frost-bitten, hungry, and naked.”
"In the spring she returned to the States, and as usual earned money by working in hotels and families as a cook.”
"Up to this time she had expended chiefly her own money in these expeditions — money which she had earned by hard work in the drudgery of the kitchen.”
“She declares that before her escape from slavery, she used to dream of flying over fields and towns, and rivers and mountains, looking down upon them 'like a bird’ ."
“She says she inherited this power, that her father could always predict the weather, and that he foretold the Mexican War.”
"... She had several interviews with Captain Brown, then in Boston. He is supposed to have communicated his plans to her, and to have been aided by her in obtaining recruits and money among her people. At any rate, he always spoke of her with the greatest respect, and declared that 'General Tubman,' as he styled her, was a better officer than most whom he had seen, and could command an army as successfully as she had led her small parties of fugitives.”
“… She brought away 7 fugitives, one of them an infant, which must be drugged with opium to keep it from crying on the way, and so revealing the hiding place of the party.”
“She asks nothing for herself, except that her wardrobe may be replenished, and even this she will probably share with the first needy person she meets.”
“ ‘Don't you think we colored people are entitled to some credit for that exploit, under the lead of the brave Colonel Montgomery? We weakened the rebels somewhat on the Combahee River, by taking and bringing away 756 head of their most valuable livestock, known up in your region as contrabands, and this, too,without the loss of a single life on our part… Nearly or quite all the able-bodied men have joined the colored regiments here.’ ”
“This woman of whom you have been reading is poor, and partially disabled from her injuries; yet she supports cheerfully and uncomplainingly herself and her old parents, and always has several poor children in her house, who are dependent entirely upon her…"
“On asking Harriet particularly as to the age of her mother, she answered, ‘Well, I'll tell you, Missis. Twenty-three years ago, in Maryland, I paid a lawyer $5 to look up the will of my mother's first master. He went back 65 years, and there he found the will… she was actually emancipated… But no one informed her of the fact…’ "
.