Friday, November 15

Just call her General North Star

Harriet Tubman has (finally!) been posthumously recognized as a one-star brigadier general in Maryland’s National Guard. At a ceremony on Nov. 11, 2024, officials in her home state honored her military service during the American Civil War.

Born Araminta Ross about March 1822 in Dorchester County, Maryland, Tubman escaped slavery in 1849 and settled in Philadelphia.

She established the Underground Railroad and guided many "passengers" to freedom. Tubman then acted as a scout, spy, and nurse for the Union Army during the Civil War, before she led an expedition of 150 Black soldiers of the 2nd South Carolina Infantry on a gunboat raid in South Carolina.

The Combahee River Raid (also known as the Raid on Combahee Ferry) was conducted on June 1-2, 1863, along the Combahee River in Beaufort and Colleton counties in the South Carolina Lowcountry.

There the Union ships rescued and transported more than 750 former slaves freed five months earlier by the Emancipation Proclamation, many of whom joined the Union Army.

Gov. Wes Moore called the Veterans Day occasion not just a great day for Tubman’s home state but for all of the United States.

“She knew that in order to do the work, that meant that she had to go into the lion’s den,” Moore said. “She knew that leadership means you have to be willing to do what you are asking others to do.”

Something many of our current leaders have forgotten.

General Tubman, I salute you.


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