Of all the abolitionist praise collected and printed as testimonials in the first full-length account of Harriet Tubman’s life, Frederick Douglass’s words are the most perceptive. Douglass named “the midnight sky and the silent stars” as witnesses to Tubman’s actions as she ferried people escaping enslavement along the Underground Railroad, recognizing, as Tubman had insisted all along, that she did not make her stand alone. Read more