Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

New face of $20 could be honored with US park

Tubman settled in upstate New York after Civil War

- By MICHAEL HILL

AUBURN, N.Y. — Harriet Tubman’s upcoming debut on the $20 bill is just half the good news in the upstate New York town where the Undergroun­d Railroad conductor settled down and grew old.

A long-sought national historical park here honoring Tubman could be establishe­d as early as this summer. The move would give a boost to preservati­on efforts at her old home and church just as the former slave is poised to replace President Andrew Jackson as the face of the $20 bill.

“It’s about time,” Judith Bryant, Tubman’s 80-year-old great-greatgrand­niece said of the recognitio­n as the first African-American on U.S. paper currency. “People who don’t know about her will now.”

Bryant stood beside a headstone describing Tubman as a “Heroine of the Undergroun­d Railroad,” a phrase that resonates personally with the Auburn resident. Bryant’s great-great grandfathe­r was Tubman’s brother and was among the dozens of slaves she guided north to freedom.

Tubman had been free for a decade in 1859, when she bought a parcel of land on the outskirts of Auburn, about 25 miles west of Syracuse. She was given a good deal by fellow abolitioni­st Sen. William Seward, who would become President Abraham Lincoln’s secretary of state. She settled longterm in the area after the Civil War, during which she served as a spy, a scout, a cook, a nurse and as a leader in a military raid.

She married for a second time, spoke out for women’s suffrage, grew potatoes and apples, took in boarders and spent her time and scarce money helping others. She was able to establish a home for the aged next door to her house before she died in 1913. Accounts of her age at death vary, but most put it between 91 and 93.

Tubman had family in the area, and some latter-day relatives still live in the small city in the Finger Lakes region, like Bryant and 88-yearold great-great grandniece Pauline Copes Johnson.

Tours of Tubman’s property are now run by the not-for-profit Harriet Tubman Home. The old brick house is closed for remodeling, but visitors can visit an interpreti­ve center and walk through the home for the aged, where she died.

The Harriet Tubman National Historical Park would encompass that 31-acre site plus the A.M.E. Zion Church about a mile away where Tubman worshipped. The weathered clapboard church is boarded up now.

The design of the new $20 bill with Tubman on the front is expected to be completed by 2020.

Bryant said the idea of pulling a bill from her pocket with her ancestor’s image on it is still unimaginab­le. But she already appreciate­s the effect the ancestor who died before she was born had on her life. Bryant’s home on a quiet Auburn street was built by Tubman’s nephew, her great-grandfathe­r, and his son.

“Sure I’m proud to have a famous ancestor, but not because she’s famous, because of what she did and what she meant to my family. … I wouldn’t be in Auburn, New York. I would not be in this house,” she said. “I wouldn’t be who I am.”

 ?? MIKE GROLL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Judith Bryant, a great-great-grandniece of Harriet Tubman, poses at Tubman’s grave site at Fort Hill Cemetery in Auburn, N.Y. Bryant’s great-great grandfathe­r was Tubman’s brother and was among the dozens of slaves she guided north to freedom.
MIKE GROLL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Judith Bryant, a great-great-grandniece of Harriet Tubman, poses at Tubman’s grave site at Fort Hill Cemetery in Auburn, N.Y. Bryant’s great-great grandfathe­r was Tubman’s brother and was among the dozens of slaves she guided north to freedom.

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