Reverend Paul Carter, who has led tours of Harriet Tubman’s longtime home in Auburn, New York, for more than 25 years, is often startled by how little people know of this enslaved woman turned Underground Railroad guide and Civil War spy. He and the property’s president and CEO, Karen Hill, are happy to educate people about Tubman’s remarkable life. Carter leads visitors through part of the property Tubman owned for five decades, which is now part of the national park system. “We absolutely think she is one of the all-time great Americans,” Hill told Mental Floss in 2016. Here are nine facts Carter and Hill share that tend to stun visitors.

Not even close. Harriet Tubman’s birth name was Araminta Ross, and her family called her “Minty” as a child. She changed her name to Harriet, in honor of her mother, when she was a teenager.

Harriet Tubman

An illustration from ‘Scenes In The Life Of Harriet Tubman,’ 1869. / Heritage Images/GettyImages

A weight thrown at another enslaved person hit Tubman in the head when she was young. She nearly died, and for the rest of her life she suffered from headaches, seizures, and visions. She undertook journeys of hundreds and thousands of miles despite deep physical limitations.

After making her own escape from enslavement, Tubman began her work as an Underground Railroad guide by going back to Maryland’s Eastern Shore as many as 13 times for her family and friends. Ultimately, she led more than 70 people to safety, many to St. Catharines, Ontario.

Though she had a reputation for being forceful—she was said to threaten people who balked along the route to freedom with a gun—Tubman was tiny, standing just under 5 feet.

Harriet Tubman, Nelson Davis, Gertie Davis

Tubman, husband Nelson Davis, and their adopted daughter Gertie on their porch in Auburn, New York, circa 1880s. / Heritage Images/GettyImages

While she was gone conducting along the Underground Railroad, her husband, John Tubman, took another wife. After he died, she also remarried. Her second husband, Nelson Davis, was much younger—at least 24 years—but he, too, predeceased her by many years.

Tubman was given $200 for three years as a cook, nurse, scout, and spy for the Union Army during the Civil War. Her service included leading a raid that freed 750 enslaved people in South Carolina—making her the first woman to lead an armed raid in enemy territory in the United States, according to Hill.

Harriet Tubman Home

Harriet Tubman’s home in Auburn, New York, where she began living in 1859. / Epics/GettyImages

She developed a friendship with one of the most powerful men of the time, William Seward, who later served as Lincoln’s secretary of state. It was his house in Auburn that she purchased as her family residence, for a very reasonable price, in 1859.

Harriet Tubman Home For The Elderly

Harriet Tubman Home for the Elderly in Auburn, New York. / Epics/GettyImages

When the war was over, her generosity didn’t stop. Tubman pushed tirelessly for women’s suffrage. And though she always struggled financially, she was a woman of deep faith who shared what little she had, donating a piece of her property as a home for elderly Black Americans. She wound up living there during her own later years, too.

Harriet Tubman American Anti-Slavery Activist C1900

Harriet Tubman circa 1900. / Print Collector/GettyImages

Tubman died in 1913, when she was around 91 years old (she is believed to have been born in about 1822), which means she lived an astonishingly long life for the time period, especially considering the physical strains she’d endured.

A version of this story ran in 2016; it has been updated for 2023.

Lynn Freehill-Maye

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