She also recalls a time her mother had to work late and the baby became irritable. So she toasted a piece of fat and gave it to the baby and he fell asleep afterwards with it still in his mouth. When it was time for her mother to arrive home she assumed that Harriet had murdered him (Larson 2004). This is the perfect example of how unfair and unkind the slaves were treated and how much they truly had to deal with. Women were forced to leave their small children at home to take care of another family; their masters family. Harriet had no education, slave codes did not allow slaves to learn to read and write (Larson 2004). Harriet’s childhood came to an abrupt end at the age of 6. The death of her master’s parents caused Mr. Brodass to takeover and the farm began to decline. The soil on many Maryland plantations began to become worn and tiresome from the constant farming of Tobacco (Schaffer 2001). The Broad’s family also grew other crops across their 442 acres of land such as apples, wheat, rye, corn, and cut as well as sold timber. With a large family came the need for more money. Mr. Broad’s came to the conclusion of selling some of his slaves and renting the others for profit among those slaves was Harriet. He arranged for potential investors to visit the plantation to look over the slaves before selling. Harriet’s two older sisters were sold to the New South to work on larger plantations for the production of cotton and rice. Harriet upsettingly watched her two sisters scream and cry out; as their new Employer loaded them into the back of a wagon and drove away into the distance. Their mother however was heartbroken over her daughters and grieved constantly for days on end after this tragic incident. Harriet on the other hand as rented out to the Cook family. Little Harriet slept on their kitchen floor at night