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Informative Press Releases for Travel
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Commemorative events honor Tubman legacy BALTIMORE (March 7, 2013) – Maryland's African-American heritage – dating back to colonial days – resonates with the names of notable Marylanders who achieved distinction in a wide range of endeavors. The names include: Henry Blair (1807-1860, inventor), Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806, scientist), Frederick Douglass (1818-1895, orator), Matthew Henson (1866-1955, explorer) and Thurgood Marshall (1908-1993, Supreme Court justice). Add in these 20th-century baseball players and musical performers: Leon Day and Judy Johnson, and Eubie Blake, Cab Calloway, Billie Holiday and Chick Webb. At the top of any list of notable African-American Marylanders, says the Maryland Office of Tourism, is Harriet Tubman (c.1820-1913), an enslaved Eastern Shore native who became the legendary conductor of the Underground Railroad – a clandestine route to freedom for those enslaved in the area – during the mid-19th-century years leading up to the Civil War. March 10 marks the centennial anniversary of Tubman's passing. To commemorate that milestone and the Tubman legacy, March 8-10 is the first of several Tubman tribute weekends during the year along the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway. The Maryland segment of the byway – a 125-mile corridor that goes through Caroline and Dorchester counties – traces the area where Tubman lived and worked, and the secret locations along the Underground Railroad. The March weekend features the opening of an art exhibition, a banquet and a tribute concert – all tied to the celebration of Tubman's life. Subsequent weekends include the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Conference, May 31-June 1, and the Tubman Centennial Fall Weekend, Oct. 5-6. “The Tubman Byway offers a collection of destinations across the Eastern Shore region where travelers can experience Maryland's rich heritage of African-American culture and history,” says Margot Amelia, executive director of the state tourism office. “The byway also has attractions with special appeal for travelers who enjoy the outdoors – Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, for instance.” Sometimes called “the Everglades of Maryland,” Blackwater is just south of Cambridge. The refuge – a haven for migratory waterfowl along the Atlantic Flyway – has more than 25,000 acres of tidal wetlands. A nearly two-mile Tubman Road Trail is one of four hiking trails on the property. And, on Saturday afternoon, March 9, Underground Railroad historian Tony Cohen leads a one-mile walk during Blackwater's annual Eagle Festival. “Blackwater is an integral landscape in the Tubman story,” Amelia says. Nearby is Bucktown Village Store, where Tubman – in her first-known act of public defiance – refused to help capture a runaway slave. Tours of Tubman-related locations can start from here. The store is also headquarters for Blackwater Paddle and Pedal Adventures , a local family-owned tour operator that rents canoes, kayaks and bicycles. Here is a sampling of other places listed by region where visitors can experience Maryland's African-American heritage while exploring the state. Western Maryland
Capital Region
Central Maryland
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