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A bronze statue of Harriet Tubman stands in Harriet Tubman Public School in St. Catharines. It is the second statue of Tubman in Canada. The first one was dedicated in 2010, also in St. Catharines, and stands near the British Methodist Episcopal Church of Canada-Salem Chapel.
Harriet Tubman (1822-1913) escaped slavery in Maryland and set herself free. She then became a conductor on the underground railroad (a secret network of routes and safe houses for fugitive slaves), and returned to Maryland several times, leading hundreds of enslaved people to freedom in St. Catharines, Canada, where slavery was abolished in 1834. She also lived in St. Catharines for ten years, not far from the school that now bears her name. Read more about HerStory here.
The statue was created by former Niagara artists Frank Rekrut and his wife Laura Thompson and unveiled on February 9th, 2016. It depicts Tubman sitting, holding a book titled, The Story of Harriet Tubman. Tubman couldn’t read nor write but was a great believer in the importance of education, and as a wanted fugitive, she used to act as if she was reading to undercover herself.
Harriet Tubman Public School in St. Catharines unveiled a life-size statue of the iconic freedom fighter created by former Niagara artists Frank Rekrut and Laura Thompson.
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