Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 238
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-5381-6474-7 • Paperback • March 2022 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
Kerry Walters, PhD, is professor emeritus of philosophy at Gettysburg College. He is author or editor of over forty books, including The Underground Railroad, American Slave Revolts and Conspiracies, and Lincoln, the Rise of the Republicans, and the Coming of the Civil War.
Series Foreword vii
Preface ix
Chapter 1
A Peculiar Institution 1
Chapter 2
Neglected Weed 19
Chapter 3
From Bondage to Freedom 37
Chapter 4
The Underground Railroad 53
Chapter 5
Return to the Jaws 71
Chapter 6
Small-Scale Guerrilla Warfare 87
Chapter 7
The Struggle Widens 105
Chapter 8
“This Black Heroine” 127
Chapter 9
Impoverished Legend 147
Chapter 10
Mother Tubman 165
Why Harriet Tubman Matters 183
Timeline 195
Primary Documents 199
Bibliography 217
Index 223
This excellent work is a synthesis... presenting Tubman as the fascinating, headstrong, self-sacrificing, physically damaged, financially destitute, and occasionally gullible person that she was in historical reality. One hopes this book will find its way into many classrooms, and that, in better days to come, she will yet appear on our currency.Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Thanks to Walter’s especially accessible prose, a wide range of potential readers should consider attaining a copy of this book. Rather than bog the book down with convoluted academic jargon, Walters crafts the manuscript in a manner that will at once reach a broad audience and inform more nuanced conversations—academic and public—on Harriet Tubman’s manifold contributions to U.S. history. Her personal life and bonds are integral to a better understanding of the Civil War and its era. Harriet Tubman: A Life in American History is an excellent book. Walters does an exceptional job of interweaving Tubman's diverse lived experiences into larger historical events. After reading it, I found myself revising my lecture notes to ensure that Tubman’s story—both public and personal—is centered in the narrative.
— The Civil War Monitor