Harriet Tubman's descendant horrified by National Park Service erasing underground railroad history on website

Rita Daniels learned at 9 that she is the great-great-great-grandniece of famed abolitionist Harriet Tubman, who led countless enslaved Africans to freedom through the Underground Railroad.
Rita Daniels learned at 9 that she is the great-great-great-grandniece of famed abolitionist Harriet Tubman, who led countless enslaved Africans to freedom through the Underground Railroad. It was a moment that changed how she viewed herself and American history for the rest of her life.
So when Daniels, now 70, learned in recent days that the National Park Service drastically altered its webpage on Tubman and the Underground Railroad in February, she was devastated.
“It tore me apart when I saw the news clip flash across my phone,” said Daniels, who recently co-authored a book about Tubman’s life.
In elementary school, Daniels was assigned to write about Tubman, but books she could access at her school in Auburn, New York — where Tubman settled in 1859 after fleeing enslavement in Maryland — described her as “a thief,” Daniels recalled. “It said she stole slaves, that there was a bounty on her head, those kind of things.”
When Daniels told her mother what she found, her mother not only told her it was untrue, she told Daniels that Tubman was her ancestor.
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