Harriet Tubman Military scout and tenacious visionary : from her roots in Ghana to her legacy on the Eastern Shore

Jean Marie Wiesen

Book - 2025

A comprehensive overview of Tubman's life and work, co-authored by one of her descendants, Rita Daniels. For all Harriet Tubman's accomplishments and the myriad books written about her, many gaps, errors, and misconceptions of her legendary life persist. As recognitionand tributes to Tubman's remarkable contributions to American history and civil liberty continues to grow, the time is right for a new biography with the involvement of her family, who have been the caretakers and stewards of her legacy for generations.--

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  • Foreword by Queen Mother Dr. Delois Blakely
  • Preface by Rita Daniels
  • Heritage
  • Castles of torment
  • From one Hell to another
  • Modesty survives the Atlantic Ocean
  • John Green
  • Slave clothing
  • Devil in the neighborhood: Patty Cannon
  • Minty's early life
  • Mind's eye
  • Slave Bible
  • Fugitive Slave Act
  • Songs of code
  • Shoes are made for walking
  • Base of operations
  • Parents in the Promised Land
  • Auburn, New York, and the Sewards
  • John Brown
  • Post-John Brown
  • Pre-Civil War and Lincoln
  • Civil War scout
  • Combahee River Raid
  • Finally, a furlough
  • Surrender and the first Juneteenth
  • A new chapter begins
  • Suffragette era
  • Nelson Davis, marriage and afterward
  • Onward with the Dream
  • Second biography released
  • Widow years
  • Conventions
  • Queen Victoria
  • Harriet undergoes brain surgery
  • Return to Boston
  • AME Zion Church
  • Auburn resident
  • The passing of an American icon
  • Harriet Tubman's funeral
  • World War II Naval ship naming
  • Harriet Tubman Tugboat naming
  • USNS Harriet Tubman-Second Naval ship naming
  • Harriet Tubman CIA statue
  • Commemorative coins
  • Elders honored in Ghana
  • Final thoughts
  • Bibliography
  • Appendix A: Timeline
  • Appendix B: Who's who
  • Appendix C: Family tree
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This biography of Harriet Tubman is coauthored by Tubman's great-great-great-grandniece, and Daniels pours her family stories into the work. She and Wiesen also provide fresh insight into the family's ancestry in Ghana as part of the Ashanti tribe in Accra. Here Harriet's grandmother Modesty was born, captured, and enslaved and made the horrific transatlantic voyage to America. The book then moves on to Harriet's birth in Maryland, her escape from the plantation using the celestial navigation her father taught her, her work in the Underground Railroad (which included rescuing her siblings and parents), her role as the first woman to lead a military raid in the Civil War, and her involvement in the abolitionist and suffragette movements. The post-Civil War chapters include her second marriage, the creation of the first Black eldercare facility, and her death and remembrances, including her relatives receiving honors in Ghana on her behalf. Written in a simple, straightforward manner with short chapters, this book is an excellent choice for both adults and teens wanting to learn more about this courageous woman.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A comprehensive overview of Tubman's life and work, co-authored by one of her descendants. Tubman is best known as a conductor on the Underground Railroad who led her passengers from enslavement in Maryland to freedom in the North and Canada. Yet her acts of heroism, advocacy, and service extend beyond those risky journeys, and Wiesen and Daniels have compiled them all in order "to fill the gaps and correct inaccuracies." As the United States moved into Civil War, Tubman was a spy, scout, and nurse in the Union Army, using her navigational skills and photographic memory to lead raids and advances. In spite of remaining illiterate throughout her life, Tubman spent more than 50 years after the war in Auburn, New York, supporting her family by fighting for equal voting rights, employment, and dignity for formerly enslaved people, culminating in her creation of the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged. Her extraordinary achievements and high-profile collaborators are methodically organized and episodically divided into digestible chunks that sometimes run the risk of being overly simplified, repetitive, or both. However, with Daniels--Tubman's great-great-great-grandniece--as co-author, familiar aspects of Tubman's story are accentuated and expanded with what she has gleaned from family lore. Character traits and sensibilities, like Tubman's famed curative skills as an herbalist, are placed within a powerful context, linked not only to an abridged American narrative, but also to a family's African roots and her descendants' ongoing work. Having had a front-row seat to the many ways Tubman has been studied, dissected, and honored both in the United States and beyond, Daniels grants both authoritative history and authentic humanity to a story frequently segmented for political expediency or specialized study, leaving readers with a fuller understanding of Tubman's unique bravery, fortitude, and leadership. A solid addition to the growing body of work preserving the legacy of one of America's greatest heroes. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.