[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 36 (Thursday, March 10, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1531-S1532]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HARRIET TUBMAN
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, 12 years ago this very day, the Senate
passed a joint resolution that honored Harriet Tubman, with Harriet
Tubman Day, on March 10. That resolution was sponsored by Senator
Carper and then-Senator Biden. In the House of Representatives, I
served and I cosponsored a similar resolution.
Harriet Tubman was a remarkable woman. She was born in Dorchester
County, MD, in 1822. She was a slave for greater than 25 years of her
life. At age 25, she married John Tubman. She escaped slavery in 1849.
She returned to the eastern shore of Maryland, not once but 19 times
that we know of within a 10-year period, in order to rescue slaves and
to set them free.
She rescued slaves in Dorchester County and Caroline County in
Maryland and throughout the entire Northeast. She was known as the
modern day ``Moses'' for the Underground Railroad.
In the Civil War, she joined Union forces as a spy, as a scout, and
as a nurse, operating in Virginia, Florida, and South Carolina.
After the Civil War was over, she settled in Auburn, NY, and was very
actively involved in the women's suffrage movement, and she established
one of the first African-American homes for the aged.
She died in 1913.
Harriet Tubman embodies the American spirit. She was a strong-willed
person who fought for the rights and freedom of those who were
oppressed in the barbaric institution of slavery.
[[Page S1532]]
Her personal freedom was not enough for her because she recognized
there was injustice in this country, and she wanted to be involved. As
the joint resolution that passed the Senate 12 years ago said:
. . . Harriet Tubman--whose courageous and dedicated
pursuit of the promise of American ideals and common
principles of humanity continues to serve and inspire all
people who cherish freedom. . . .
A major part of learning and understanding the significance of
history is being able to experience the places where that history
occurred.
From Fort McHenry in Baltimore, MD, to the Lincoln Memorial here in
the Nation's capital, we have preserved our history for future
generations. Millions of visitors and schoolchildren visit these iconic
places in American history.
The Harriet Tubman National Historical Park and the Harriet Tubman
Underground Railroad National Historical Park is legislation I have
filed so we can preserve the history of Harriet Tubman with these
historic places for future generations.
I am joined in this effort by Senator Mikulski, Senator Schumer, and
Senator Gillibrand. The natural landscape on the eastern shore that
existed during Harriet Tubman's day exists today. Her homestead, where
her father was born, Ben Ross, exists today. Stewart's Canal, where her
father worked, exists today. The Brodess Farm, where Harriet Tubman
worked as a slave, exists today. Right adjacent to it, and including
part of that property, is the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge. So
we have the landscape in which the Underground Railroad was operating
to free slaves in the 19th century. It exists today on the eastern
shore of Maryland.
In Auburn, NY, the home in which Harriet Tubman lived still exists,
the home for the aged that she started still remains. The Thompson
Memorial AME Zion Episcopal Church is still there, and the Fort Hill
Cemetery, where she is buried. They are all intact, and all are
available for preservation.
The legislation we have filed will preserve these places in American
history under our National Park System for future generations. I urge
my colleagues to support this legislation, to honor a great American,
and to preserve our heritage for future generations.
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