#6: What does Sarah Bradford’s 1869 biography of Tubman (part of which you will read for next week) tell us about Sarah Bradford? Does this biography tell us more about Bradford than about Tubman?
I don’t think that Bradford’s “little book” necessarily tells us more about Bradford than it does about Tubman, but it does reveal certain motivations and opinions about the woman behind “Scenes in the life of Harriet Tubman”.
Every time Sarah Bradford speaks personally about Tubman, there is such an admiration in the tone of the writing, and the quotes from Harriet are written out so… lovingly, it seems to me. Bradford didn’t know Tubman for that long, but she has such a fondness for everything the woman said and did as much as for the woman herself. “Would that instead of taking them in this way at second hand my readers could hear woman’s graphic accounts of scenes she herself witnessed”, Bradford says about her.
This fondness is shown as well in that, despite the fact that Sarah was leaving the country, she put pen to paper as fast as she could in order to help raise money for Tubman.
And then, even on such short a time frame, she insisted on as thorough a fact checking as she could do, asking for letters and confirmation of stories from friends and family of Tubman. Thomas Garrett’s letter to Bradford about Tubman’s “remarkable labors…in aiding her colored friends from bondage” is presented in it’s entirety, as well as other stories, either quoted from Harriet, or just told by Bradford, that Bradford insists are confirmed by Garrett or others. There may still be some errors on her part– for example, the exact number of trips Tubman took and the number of slaves she brought back with her to the North– but she truly wanted to present a factually based tale.
Bradford may not have been able to do that perfectly, and she may have inadvertently put Tubman in a more exciting or favorable light than was actually called for, due to her obvious fondness for the woman and her deeds. But Bradford did make a point to try, which is more than can be said for authors like Weems and his tales of George Washington.