click image for close-up Harriet Tubman's days as a conductor for the Underground Railroad had long past when this photograph was taken, believed to be sometime around 1880.
"It's critical for us as African Americans to remember what's been happening in this nation with us since 1619." ...
The last time a portrait on a bill was changed was in 1929, when Alexander Hamilton was placed on the front of the $10 bill, replacing Jackson. Jackson was elevated to the $20 bill in 1928 ...
National Museum of African American History and Culture Albumen print of Harriet Tubman National Museum of African American History and Culture Carte-de-visite portrait of Harriet Tubman National ...
The Harriet Tubman $20 bill will replace the current one featuring a portrait of U.S. President Andrew Jackson. In another recognition, Tubman was accepted in June 2021 to the United States Army ...
In 2000, three years after the Maryland State Highway Administration renamed a stretch of Route 50 for Harriet Tubman, an artist painted her portrait there; in 2008, vandals spray-painted over it.
Harriet Tubman, was an abolitionist and slave who worked relentlessly to free enslaved African Americans. Tubman was born ...
Rita Daniels, the great, great, great grandniece of Harriet Tubman and co-author of "Harriet Tubman: Military Scout & ...
Perhaps most fittingly, the U.S. Treasury is redesigning the $20 bill to put her portrait on the front, for release in 2030. Why does Harriet Tubman matter so much? Because she represents ideals that ...
Harriet Tubman is perhaps the most well-known of all the Underground Railroad's "conductors." During a ten-year span she made 19 trips into the South and escorted over 300 slaves to freedom.