Directions for questions: Read the passage and answer the questions that…
2023
Directions for questions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:
Harriet Tubman is famous for risking her life as a “conductor” in the Underground Railroad, which helped escaped slaves to freedom in the North. But did you know that the former slave also served as a spy for the Union during the Civil War and was the first woman in American history to lead a military expedition?
During a time when women were usually restricted to traditional roles like cooking and nursing, she did her share of those jobs. But she also worked side-by-side with men, says writer Tom Allen, who narrates her exciting story in the National Geographic book, Harriet Tubman, Secret Agent. Tubman decided to help the Union Army because she wanted freedom for not just the few she could help personally, but all of the people who were forced to become slaves. And she persuaded many other brave African Americans to join her as spies, even at the risk of being hanged if they were caught.
In one of her most dramatic and dangerous roles, Tubman helped Colonel James Montgomery plan a raid to free slaves from plantations along the Combahee (pronounced “KUM-bee”) River in South Carolina. Early on the morning of June 1, 1863, three gunboats carrying several hundred male soldiers along with Harriet Tubman set out on their mission. Tubman had gathered key information from her scouts about the Confederate positions. She knew where they were hiding along the shore. She also found out where they had placed torpedoes, or barrels filled with gunpowder, in the water. As the early morning fog lifted on some of the South’s most important rice plantations, the Union expedition hit hard. The raiders set fire to buildings and destroyed bridges, so they couldn’t be used by the Confederate Army. They also freed about 750 slaves—men, women, children, and babies—and did not lose a single soldier in the attack.
Allen, who writes about this adventure and many others, got to know Tubman well through the months of research he did for the book. The historic details he shares bring Tubman and many other important figures of her time to life. To gather the facts, Allen searched libraries and the Internet, and even walked in Tubman’s footsteps. “I went on the river just south of the area where the raid took place,” he says. “You are in that kind of country she would have known, with plenty of mosquitoes and snakes, and there are still dirt roads there today—so you get a feeling of what it was like.” Allen says his most exciting moment came when a librarian led him to written accounts by people who actually saw Tubman and the raiders in action. “She was five feet two inches (157 centimetres) tall, born a slave, had a debilitating illness, and was unable to read or write. Yet here was this tough woman who could take charge and lead men. Put all that together and you get Harriet Tubman. I got to like her pretty quickly because of her strength and her spirit,” Allen says.
The author talks about Harriet Tubman’s size because
- A.
He likes to give the reader an accurate physical description of the person he has been talking of all the while.
- B.
He wanted the reader feel that she didn’t have much and yet, she accomplished great things in life.
- C.
He wanted to kindle the reader’s pity for Harriet Tubman
- D.
He wanted the reader know the little known fact about Harriet Tubman, that she was a spy.
Show answer & explanation
Correct answer: B
Explanation:
The author mentions Tubman’s small stature and other hardships (she was five feet two inches tall, born a slave, suffered a debilitating illness, and was unable to read or write) immediately before saying that she could take charge and lead men. This contrast shows that the author wants readers to recognize how remarkable her achievements were despite limited physical advantages and difficult circumstances.
Evidence: the passage groups physical and social disadvantages together and then contrasts them with her leadership—"Yet here was this tough woman who could take charge and lead men."
Therefore, the author’s purpose in mentioning her size is to emphasize that, although she had little in the way of physical advantage or formal education, she still accomplished great things.