Harriet Tubman, Secret Agent (Direct Mail Edition): How Daring Slaves and Free Blacks Spied for the Union During the Civil War
Thomas B. Allen
Rated: 3.83 of 5 stars
3.83
· 6 ratings · 192 pages · Published: 01 Jan 2005
You are about to enter the undercover world of African-American spies—enslaved and free—risking everything in the name of freedom. How were the Underground Railroad and slave songs used to pass secret messages? What were "contrabands" and "Black Dispatches?" What did Harriet have in common with the Secret Six and a maidservant in the home of Confederate President Jefferson Davis? You'll discover these answers and more as the action unfolds.
Thomas B. Allen, author of the award-winning George Washington, Spymaster, has sifted through military and intelligence archives, diaries, and little-known memoirs from ex-slaves to bring to light new facts about the role Harriet and other black spies played in helping the Union win the war.
This detailed account combined with powerful archival images supplemented with woodcuts by Carla Bauer, maps, a time line, footnotes, and extensive quote sources make this incredibly detailed account an excellent resource for report writing as well as an exciting true-life adventure.
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Tagged as:
- civil war 3
- historical 3
- female mc 2
- historical fiction 2
- slavery 2
- espionage 2
- children 2
- political intrigue 1
- protagonists of colour 1
- military, war & conflict 1
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- format - reader age
- non-fiction 3
- middle grade 3
- book 1