History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Auburn's Story Runs Through Tubman, Seward, and New Guinea
Auburn's identity includes Harriet Tubman's South Street farm, Seward abolitionist ties, and the free Black community of New Guinea.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Auburn’s story is not just a museum stop. Harriet Tubman bought a seven-acre South Street farm in 1859 from Frances Seward, then used that place as a refuge and working home. Auburn also sat inside a mid-1800s abolitionist network, with Frances Seward, Martha Coffin Wright, and others supporting freedom seekers.
The local layer that makes the story feel rooted is New Guinea, an established free Black community Tubman found when she came to Auburn. That detail changes the picture. Auburn was not simply a place where a famous person later lived. It was a small city with reform politics, care work, and Black community history built into the streets.
The landmarks matter because they are tied to people making choices. Tubman’s farm, the Seward connection, Martha Coffin Wright, and New Guinea point to shelter, friendship, political courage, and local networks that helped national history happen at street level.
A visitor can follow the story on South Street and through the museum world. A resident gets a reminder that national history has a very local address here.