Tubman was settled on a vast plantation owned by Anthony Thompson for the majority of her reputable life, prior to operating in the Underground Railroad. “She was born in Maryland in 1820, and successfully escaped in 1849. Yet she returned many times to rescues both family members and non-relatives from the plantation system” (“Harriet Tubman Biography”). Pursuant to her triumph of evading a lifetime of labor, Harriet Tubman was informed of distinguished emancipationists who ventured down into slave territory to liberate slaves through the Underground Railroad. “She led hundreds to freedom in the North as the most famous “conductor” on the Underground Railroad, an elaborate secret network of safe houses organized for that purpose” (Hillstrom). A manifold of people assumed the Underground Railroad was in fact a literal railroad, however, it was genuinely a profuse amount of houses, barns, and shacks that constituted particular pathways that indicated the confines of the northernmost southern state. Harriet Tubman memorized these routes instantaneously, which is why she was able to elude capture. Altogether, Tubman demonstrated that her persistence to do what is right, concluded with reaching her