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Chronology of Harriet Tubman
(Circa 1820–1913)
ОглавлениеTubman and Her Times
1785–1790
Benjamin Ross (owned by Anthony Thompson) and Harriet “Rit” Green (owned by Athon Pattison), the parents of Harriet Tubman, likely were born in Eastern Shore, Maryland.
1808
Ben Ross and Rit Green were married.
Circa 1820
Araminta, or “Minty,” (later Harriet) Ross was born in Eastern Shore, Maryland, likely Dorchester County, to parents Rit and Benjamin Ross.
1820s
During her early childhood years, Harriet was hired out to tend to muskrat traps, babysit, and weave.
1834
Harriet received a major head wound in the Bucktown General Store as she blocked a doorway to prevent another slave from being captured.
1840
Benjamin may have been freed through the will of his owner, Anthony Thompson, who had died about 1836.
1844
Harriet probably married John Tubman, a free black man. This is also about that time that she became known as Harriet.
1847
Harriet began working for Dr. Anthony Thompson.
1849
On September 17, Harriet Tubman escaped with her brothers Ben and Henry to Philadelphia.
Edward Brodess died and Harriet learned she and her brothers were to be sold to recover some of the Brodess family debts. A runaway slave notice was published a month later in October offering a reward for their return.
1850
The second Fugitive Slave Act was passed on September 18 (effective 1851).
Harriet conducted her niece to freedom in Canada.
1851
Harriet raised money for more Underground Railroad rescues by working as a cook and a domestic in private homes and hotels in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Cape May, New Jersey, areas.
Harriet returned to Bucktown to bring her husband north so they could be together in freedom, but found he had married another, so she rescued a small group instead.
1852
While maintaining a home base in St. Catharines, Ontario, Harriet began making several trips into slave-holding areas to conduct people north to St. Catharines. Her route took her near Albany, Syracuse, Auburn, Rochester, then over the railroad bridge and on to St. Catharines.
1854
Using the extended break created by the celebration of Christmas, Harriet conducted three of her brothers out of Bucktown. They briefly visited with Ben and Rit in Caroline County and were assisted by the abolitionists Thomas Garrett (Wilmington, Delaware) and William Still (Pennsylvania).
1855
Ben purchased Rit’s freedom from Eliza Brodess.
1857
Due to being accused of helping people escape, Ben and Rit were conducted to St. Catharines and lived there for at least two years before moving to Auburn, New York. Harriet was again assisted by abolitionists Thomas Garrett and William Still.
1858
Harriet met John Brown in southern Ontario and agreed to recruit supporters for his cause — a fight to end slavery.
1859
Harriet worked with U.S. Senator William Henry Seward to purchase a house on seven acres of land in Auburn, New York.
On October 16, John Brown led a group of 21 men on a raid against Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. Unfortunately, the raid failed, and the men were captured.
Harriet was too ill to assist John Brown, and his famous raid took place without her active involvement.
1860
Harriet brought out seven freedom seekers, including a baby, from Maryland.
Harriet participated in a women’s rights convention in Boston.
Harriet rescued Charles Nalle in Troy, New York, in broad daylight as he was about to be sent to Virginia to be charged with being a runaway slave.
1861
The American Civil War began on April 12, with the Confederates firing on Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina.
1862
Harriet was asked to help the many “contrabands” (enslaved Africans who escaped to the Union side) in Hilton Head, South Carolina, by Governor John Andrews of Massachusetts.
Harriet acted as a scout and spy for the Union forces as ordered by General Stevens.
1863
The Emancipation Proclamation, co-authored by William Seward, was issued on January 1.
Harriet planned, and successfully carried out, a rescue mission on the Combahee River, South Carolina, which freed over seven hundred formerly enslaved Africans.
Franklin B. Sanborn wrote the first published biographical sketch of Harriet Tubman in his anti-slavery newspaper, The Commonwealth.
Harriet began serving as a Union nurse, cook, spy, and scout in South Carolina, Virginia, and Florida. She continued in this position until 1865.
1865
Harriet nursed sick and wounded soldiers at Fortress Monroe.
Harriet was injured aboard a train when thrown into the baggage compartment by a bigoted conductor who disbelieved she was given a seat. The seat was given to Harriet as part of her payment for her duties at Fortress Monroe, and she was attempting to travel to Auburn, New York.
1867
John Tubman was killed by Rob Vincent in Dorchester County.
1868
Harriet submitted her claim for three years of military services and for her role leading the raid on the Combahee. Her claim was rejected at the time, but paid later.
1869
Harriet married Nelson Davis in Auburn, New York.
Sarah H. Bradford’s biography, Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman, was published.
1871
Benjamin Ross, Harriet’s father, died.
1873
Two men took advantage of Harriet’s generosity by swindling her out of some gold and assaulting her.
1880
Rit Green, Harriet’s mother, died.
1886
Sarah H. Bradford’s second biography, Harriet Tubman: The Moses of Her People, was published.
1888
Nelson Davis died and was buried at Fort Hill Cemetery, Auburn, New York.
1896
Harriet purchased 26 acres, including several buildings, adjoining her property to create a home for the aged.
Harriet Tubman was the oldest woman to attend the National Association of Colored Women in Washington, D.C.
1903
Harriet deeded her Auburn property to the AME Zion Church to continue as the Harriet Tubman Home for Aged and Indigent Negroes.
1913
Harriet Tubman died in Auburn, New York, after her years as an enslaved person, a conductor on the Underground Railroad, and a nurse, scout, cook, and spy for the Union Forces during the American Civil War. She was buried at Fort Hill Cemetery, Auburn, New York.
Canada and the World
Circa 1604
Mathieu Da Costa was the first named African, a free person, to arrive in Canada. He was an interpreter for Samuel de Champlain and facilitated communication between the indigenous peoples and Europeans.
1619
The first group of enslaved Africans reached British North America, landing at Jamestown.
1628
Olivier Le Jeune, a child of about 6–8 years of age owned by David Kirke, was the first enslaved African to arrive in Canada. After being sold to a Catholic cleric, Father Paul Le Jeune, and being baptized, he was named Le Jeune, but remained a slave.
1665
The Code Noir, a decree passed during King Louis XIV’s reign, established how enslaved Africans were to be treated. It was primarily intended for the West Indies but came to be the standard globally.
1689
Slavery was given limited approval for New France by Louis XIV since colonists complained about needing more servants. Now Pawnees (indigenous people) and Africans could be kept as slaves.
1701
French fur-trader Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac built Fort Pontchartrain (Detroit) with the support of enslaved Africans.
1709
Louis XIV formally established the enslavement of Africans to meet the demands of French colonists in what is now Canada by law.
1734
Marie-Joseph Angelique, in the process of making herself free or in the process of protesting her owner’s actions, caused a fire to start. This fire destroyed her owner’s home as well as most of the Montreal area nearby. For her role in this accident, or act of defiance, she was tortured and hung.
1775
In Virginia, Lord Dunsmore recognized the significant number of enslaved Africans that could be conscripted to defend the Crown against the growing Rebel forces. “Every person [man] capable of bearing arms … including servants, negroes, or others” were to be included in the Ethiopian Regiment. Three hundred men joined through the Lord Dunsmore Declaration.
1776
During the American Revolutionary War, General Henry Clinton extended the Dunsmore Declaration and invited all black persons to join the side of the Crown in order to defeat the rebel forces. They were known as the Black Pioneers. Skilled black men worked as buglers and musicians through to woodsmen and general labourers.
To weaken American forces during the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783), the British promised black people freedom and land for their support upon arrival in Nova Scotia. At the time, Nova Scotia included present day New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. The Company of Negroes (some were free, some were enslaved) left Boston with the British and began to settle the area.
1777
Sir Henry Clinton’s Philipsburg Proclamation guaranteed rebel-owned blacks who joined the British side their freedom, land, and start-up provisions. It further promised freedom to all enslaved Africans who requested protection. At least 100,000 enslaved African Americans flocked to the British side with the incentive further enhanced by British Commander-in-Chief Sir Guy Carleton promising freedom to all who formally requested it. Freedom was now possible for men and women and children for their connection to the British side.
1781
Reverend John Stuart, a Loyalist leader and the first minister established in the Church of England in Upper Canada, brought enslaved black people with him that had been purchased from the Mohawk Valley.
1784
Reverend David George, a black Loyalist Baptist preacher from Virginia settled in Shelburne, Nova Scotia. There to meet the needs of the large black Birchtown settlement, his sermons were soon valued by all Christians no matter what their race. With money raised through his efforts within the black community, Reverend George established many black Baptist churches.
1790
The Imperial Statute of 1790 permitted settlers coming into Upper Canada to bring their enslaved Africans with them as long as they were clothed and fed. Any children born to an enslaved woman was automatically deemed to be a slave and could become free at twenty-five years of age. No enslaved person could be set free unless they could prove that they could be financially independent.
1793
The invention of the cotton gin, invented by Eli Whitney, made it faster and easier to separate the tiny seeds from the cotton fibre. Producing cotton became more profitable and therefore the interest in having more enslaved people also increased.
The first Fugitive Slave Act was passed and allowed for the return of enslaved Africans who managed to cross into another state.
Upper Canada’s first Lieutenant-Governor, John Graves Simcoe, was shocked to learn that an enslaved woman in the Queenston area was forcibly bound and taken across the Niagara River and sold to slave traders. Fearing other slave owners would do the same thing, Simcoe sought to abolish slavery but was only successful in having compromise legislation passed limiting the length of time a person could be a slave.
1794
Black Loyalists in Upper Canada petitioned the government to have a separate black settlement in recognition of their military service during the American Revolutionary War. While this petition was not granted, later events supported the idea of having an all black settlement based near Barrie, Ontario. The Oro settlement was created in 1819.
1796
After successfully fending off the British from taking their land for almost one hundred years, the Jamaican Maroons were finally vanquished through the use of fighting dogs. About 600 Maroons were removed to Halifax and tasked with the building of the Citadel.
1808
The importation of Africans was ended by U.S. Congress
1812
Richard Pierpoint, a black Loyalist in the Niagara area, petitioned the government of Upper Canada to raise a company of black men to defend the Niagara frontier. While initially not approved, it was later decided that a company be formed under the command of a white officer, Captain Robert Runchey.
Americans declared war on the British Empire on June 18, beginning the War of 1812.
Motivated by a hatred of enslavement and the concern that the American forces might win, thousands of black volunteers served to defend the British. They wanted to have freedom from enslavement for themselves and their families.
1813–1816
As the War of 1812 waned, British Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane extended an invitation to leave the United States and be transported to British territories. Four thousand black refugees accepted the invitation and two thousand headed for the Maritimes.
1815
The Underground Railroad began slowly with the end of the War of 1812 and the reputation that Canada had started to develop regarding slaves.
1819
John Beverley Robinson declared that residence in Canada made black people free and that this would be supported by the courts in Canada.
Lieutenant-Governor Peregrine Maitland of Upper Canada provided land grants to black veterans as part of a black settlement plan in the Township of Oro near Barrie, Ontario.
1829–1830
In response to newly introduced “Black Codes” (severe rules to restrict black activity and mobility) in Ohio, many black people from Cincinnati opted to create a huge settlement called Wilberforce near London, Ontario. Many other black settlements were smaller, and there were about forty in Upper Canada by the end of the eighteenth century.
1830
Josiah Henson, after years of faithful service to his owner, reached Canada with his family after escaping from Kentucky. Using his skills in the Dresden area, he created a settlement to be self-sufficient for blacks by creating their own materials for sale. Fine timber was among the better products made for sale. He may have been the inspiration for the book Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
1831
Nat Turner, a charismatic enslaved African, used his freedom of movement from his preaching to organize a slave revolt in Virginia. Discovered before too long, he and his followers were hung and the freedom of movement of enslaved Africans was increasingly restricted and monitored.
1834
On August 1, 1834, slavery was abolished throughout the British colonies, which included Canada. The act formally freed nearly 800,000 slaves but there were probably fewer than fifty slaves in British North America by that time. Enslaved people throughout the world celebrated this important Emancipation Day.
1837
Solomon Moseby stole a horse as part of his escape from Kentucky on his way to Canada. His arrest in Newark sparked hundreds of supportive free blacks to protest by standing around the jail for three weeks to keep him from being moved to another facility. Finally, police forced their way through and in the process a riot took place resulting in the deaths of at least two supporters.
With the beginning of the Mackenzie Rebellion, black enlistees were encouraged to join the military. When a call was issued for volunteers by Captain Thomas Runchey and Captain James Sears, fifty black men joined within four days.
1838
Lieutenant-Governor Sir Francis Bond Head praised the brave service and loyalty of the black volunteers during the Mackenzie Rebellion.
1841
The British North America Act united Upper and Lower Canada as equals; together Canada West and Canada East, as they are now called, formed the Province of Canada.
1842
On a slave ship called the Amistad, Africans led an uprising as the ship was nearing Cuba. Eventually, they landed in the United States and waged a legal battle over their situation that raised awareness about the slave trade and the people being enslaved.
1844
The Globe newspaper in Toronto and its anti-slavery/abolitionist editor George Brown used the power of the press to attack events and situations that were oppressive towards free and enslaved black people.
1846
The Oregon Treaty set the forty-ninth parallel as the border between British North America and the U.S. from the summit of the Rocky Mountains west to the Strait of Georgia.
1849
The Elgin Settlement was challenged by the bias of Chatham’s Edwin Larwill. Larwill was opposed to the Elgin Settlement and attempted to organize resistance to its growth resulting in a debate with Reverend William King, a debate that turned favour towards the continuation of the settlement.
1851
The publication Voice of the Fugitive was published by Henry Bibb in Windsor with a focus on colonization schemes and the Refugee Home Society.
The first Convention of Colored Freemen held outside of the United States met in Toronto at St. Lawrence Hall. Hundreds of black men, encouraged by the abolitionist hub that Toronto had become, joined the event, including Josiah Henson, Henry Bibb, and one woman, Mary Ann Shadd.
1853
The first issue of the Provincial Freeman was produced by Mary Ann Shadd, effectively making her the first black woman to found and edit a newspaper, although initially she had to conceal her identity. The first masthead indicated that Reverend Samuel Ringgold Ward was the editor, but his name was just a front for the work carried out by Shadd knowing that her gender would be problematic at that time.
1857
Through the debates connected to the Dred Scott case, it was determined that Congress could not ban slavery in the United States and that enslaved Africans were not citizens of the United States.
Navy man William Hall was awarded the Victoria Cross for his efforts to defend British interests in India. He was the first recipient and the first black man to be so honoured.
1858
James Douglas, the governor of British Columbia and himself a person of African origin, extended an invitation aimed at the black people of California to settle in Victoria. Within a short while, eight hundred black people came by boat and settled in British Columbia.
1860
In the U.S., Abraham Lincoln was elected president. The Civil War broke out, pitting northern Union forces against the southern Confederates. The abolition of slavery in the South was at the heart of the conflict.
1861
The Anderson Case had aspects of slavery questioned. In the process of making himself free, John Anderson killed Seneca Diggs, who pursued him. Captured, tried, and ordered extradited, the case was handled by abolitionists who saw the case discharged on a technicality.
Anderson Abbott was the first Canadian-born black doctor and served on the Union side during the American Civil War.
1865
The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was declared passed on December 18 by Secretary of State William H. Seward. This proclamation outlawed slavery.
U.S. Congress created the Freedmen’s Bureau to assist newly freed enslaved Africans deal with life in their new status.
Shortly after the South surrendered, ending the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in Washington.
With the end of the Civil War, the Underground Railroad essentially came to an end. While the numbers are not exactly known, at least 20,000 and as many as 100,000 enslaved Africans may have found their way to Canada, largely Ontario, on the secret routes and connections of the Underground Railroad.
1866
Mifflin Gibbs, a businessman in Victoria, helped to raise a company of black militia men and then ran for office. While initially unsuccessful in 1862, he was later elected to the Victoria Town Council in 1866. Gibbs was the first elected black politician in Canada.
1867
On July 1, Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick were officially united to form the Dominion of Canada. Sir John A. Macdonald became the country’s first prime minister.
1870
Manitoba joined Confederation.
The 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was passed, giving black men the right to vote.
1871
British Columbia joins Confederation.
1873
Prince Edward Island joins Confederation.
1891
Canada’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, died in office.
1905
Alberta and Saskatchewan joined Confederation.
1909–1911
Black Oklahoma residents accepted the invitation offered by Canada to help to settle the prairies. Hundreds were ultimately allowed to enter since they were of good health, had financial resources and the skills to develop the land although racist attitudes tried to keep them out.