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harriet tubman
In 1978 she became the first black woman honored on a U.S. postage stamp
Trivia about harriet tubman
In 1994 a Liberty ship was named in honor of this Underground Railroad leader
In 1978 she became the first African-American woman to appear on a U.S. postage stamp
The African-American museum on Walnut St. bears the name of this female "railroader"
Of the Underground Railroad, she said she never ran a train off the track & never lost a passenger
During the war this former slave & Underground Railroad conductor was a spy for the Union in South Carolina
The novel "A Woman Called Moses" recants the heroic struggles of this abolitionist
John Brown called this woman a "general" because of her bravery in helping slaves escape
Jacob Lawrence did a well-known series of paintings of Frederick Douglass & this Underground Railroad leader
This "conductor" usually carried a gun, not a whistle
This Underground Railroad conductor served as a spy for the Union in the Civil War
She appeared on a 1995 Civil War stamp & the 1978 Black Heritage stamp seen here:
"I had crossed the line. I was free... and they should be free. I would make a home in the north and bring them there"
This woman's work on the Underground Railroad later inspired an opera called "She Never Lost a Passenger"
On Feb. 1, 1978 this 19th century heroine became the first black woman honored on a U.S. stamp
Thea Musgrave's opera about her, "Harriet, a Woman Called Moses", has 2 acts: "From Bondage" & "To Freedom"
Rewards offered for the capture of this Underground Railroad conductor once totaled $40,000
This 19th century woman boasted, "I never ran my train off the track and I never lost a passenger"
(Sarah) The "Voices of Struggle" Gallery includes this woman, who told her passengers, "You'll be free or die"
This 19th century woman boasted, "I never ran my train off the track & I never lost a passenger"
Her life inspired the historical novel "A Woman Called Moses"
"The Moses of her people", she helped hundreds of slaves escape along the underground railroad
Called the "Moses of Her People", she served as a cook & a nurse for the Union Army during the Civil War
A 2007 Caldecott Honor book was called "Moses: When" she "Led Her People to Freedom"