Santa Fe New Mexican

Visitor center honoring Tubman set to open in Maryland

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A new visitor center honoring Harriet Tubman opens this weekend in Maryland, where Tubman was born a slave and later became a leading figure on the Undergroun­d Railroad.

The Harriet Tubman Undergroun­d Railroad Visitor Center, located in Church Creek — about 90 miles from Baltimore or Washington, D.C. — was built on a 17-acre site that preserves landscapes and waterways that would have been familiar to Tubman as a child and that she likely would have navigated as an adult leading other slaves to freedom.

The building is located along the Harriet Tubman Undergroun­d Railroad Byway and offers a view of the surroundin­g Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge. The Maryland Park Service and the National Park Service have partnered to manage the visitor center.

Displays in the center tell Tubman’s remarkable story. She was born a slave in Dorchester County in 1822. She did farm work, logging and other hard labor in fields and forests and was repeatedly beaten and whipped by her masters, even as a child. She was also hit in the head by a heavy metal weight thrown at another slave, an injury that resulted in lifelong seizures and headaches.

Tubman ran away from her owners in 1849 but returned repeatedly to Maryland to lead members of her family and others to freedom, about 70 individual­s in all. Nicknamed Moses, she guided them through the wilderness, using stars to navigate, and hid in friendly homes along the route north. Tubman also served as a spy and a nurse for the Union Army during the Civil War. In addition she led troops in a raid that freed more than 750 slaves.

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