She worked as a conducter of the Underground railroad
Underground railroad - a secret chain of ways to get from the slave states to Canida
Sojourner Truth, originally name Isabella Baumfree (also spelled bomefree) was born in Hurley, Ulser County, NY, US of A
Sojourner Truth spoke against slavery all over the US
abolitionists like harriet tubman, fredrick douglass, and sojourner truth
Sojourner Truth received various honors for her activism, including being recognized by the National Women's Hall of Fame, the National Abolition Hall of Fame, and having a US Navy ship named in her honor. She was also posthumously inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame.
an expanded knowledge of the world around us
No. There are roads that will take you around the US but there is not one single road that will take you around the US.
Truth was one of the ten or twelve children born to James and Elizabeth Baumfree (or Bomefree). She was born a US slave but became an African-American abolitionist and women's rights activist and renamed herself Sojourner Truth.
I'm not sure the question is meaningful. Sojourner Truth lived at a time when women could not legally vote in the US, so it's not clear that she ever had an opportunity to officially join either party. (She did attempt to vote in the 1872 election, but was turned away.) That said, she was almost certainly Republican in her leanings, since that was the party of Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses Grant, both of whom she visited during their term as president.
It is impossible to drive around the perimeter of the US, although there are roads that travel near the coastline and near the borders.
Since we all live in the universe, everything that we observe, all around us, tells us some of the truth about the universe. To understand the truth about the universe more deeply, I would recommend a study of science.
by a train or us army jet
Sojourner Truth did not win any particular award during her lifetime. She was a prominent African American abolitionist and women's rights activist known for her powerful speeches and advocacy for social justice.