|
|
|
|
One Way Trip to Freedom
One hot day in 1850, a man named Jeb staggered out of the woods, looked about
him to get his bearings, and plunged down a lane toward the river. He only had
a few moments of freedom before he heard the baying of hounds. He splashed up
to his knees in the shallow stream and wade. The dogs tried desperately to pick
up the scent but the water had destroyed it. He had no time to waste. All he
could think of was the North Star. That was his hope. That was where his
freedom lay. (Flight to Freedom, Henrietta Buckmaster.) The Underground
Railroad was a desire for all slaves. They would use the Underground Railroad
when they were fed up with working for their owners to escape for freedom. The
Underground Railroad is a part of my history. It has always interested me so I
decided to look deeper into the history, the influential people, and the actual
journey of the Underground Railroad.
Slavery had lain like a terrible sore on our country for two hundred years.
Many were ashamed of it. Slave smuggling had became so profitable that the
master of a slave ship could permit nine slaves out of ten to die from neglect
and still lose no money. Humane men were deeply shock. They protested, and then
they did more than protest they helped the Negro. The Black Africans who were
enslaved fought against it from the start. Men like Thomas Jefferson, preparing
the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution tried to have slavery
outlawed. To abolish slavery meant to abolish profits which were astronomical,
profits which were shared North and South. But to not abolish slavery struck at
some of the deepest principles of Americans. For the next sixty years-until the
crash of the Civil War- no issue was as important as slavery. It divided homes,
it spoke for the conscience, it made political parties, it challenged religion,
and it turned men into brutes and into heroes. It created the Underground
Railroad. The first slave who helped a fellow slave to escape drove the spike
in this invisible railroad. The unknown first fugitive, the softly stepping men
and women who dared the dangers of swamps and mountains and of cold and rain,
the outstretched hands of friends, the disguises, the courage, the gunshots
along the border, and a long invisible “train” which chugged so silently and
sent up such invisible smoke- all these proved in the end irresistible. It was
they who really broke the chains of slavery. According to Buckmaster, around
1831, the name came from a furious slaveholder whose slave disappeared after
crossing the river. The slave name was Tice Davids, who eventually became a
conductor on the railroad. The slaveholder became furious when he couldn’t find
the slave. He said Tice must have gone on an Underground Railroad. Friends of
the fugitive slave completed the name in honor of the steam trains. The
operators called themselves conductors, stationmasters, brakemen, and firemen.
These were people who met fugitive slaves (passengers) and guided them along
their way, giving them directions, leading them on foot or by horse, or
smuggling them in carts and carriages. Conductors and stationmasters were often
free blacks, or poor farmers, but they could also be wealthy, well-known
citizens. They called their homes “depots” and “stations”. Stations were places
where runaways could stop and rest, getting a meal and a night’s sleep, and
perhaps fresh clothing or other help. It might be a barn, church, farmhouse, or
a secret room in a town home. There was always talk of catching the next train.
It was operated before and during the American Revolution and throughout the
1800’s. It continued in the U.S. until the Civil War brought slavery to an end.
There has been a long time mystery about the Underground Railroad. The very
term Underground Railroad was a mystery. Was there really a long tunnel, dug
miraculously, into which slaves disappeared? It was not a road or underground.
It was any number of houses, caves, hidden rooms, attics, hay mounds, or any
place that the slaves could stay without getting caught by their slave owners.
There were many people who influenced the Underground Railroad. According to
Susan Altman. A large group called Quakers believed that slavery should be
abolished. They were people with a religious conviction that slavery was
against the will of God. They found out that the slave had been protesting for
many long years and all they had to do was hold out a hand and a runaway would
grasp it. They were among the first whites to help the runaways. White friends
had to assume that a fugitive had no other helper in the world and had to bear
as full a responsibility as the occasion demanded. They formed an important
core group along with black freemen and freewomen. Some Quakers owned slaves in
the south but were so uncomfortable that they allowed their slaves to buy their
freedom. To the Quakers, breaking the law was a grievous matter. In order to
quiet their conscience, they often juggled with the truth. For example, a
Quaker couple named John and Mary Smith proved this. Two women fugitives came
to their house seeking help because the slave catchers were right on their
tail. Mary took the two women into the bedroom, lifted the mattress off the
bed, and told them to lie flat on the ropes. She then replaced the mattress and
remade the bed. She then went down to the door where her husband stood blocking
the slave catchers from entering into the house. She told her husband to let
them come and search the house. She told the slave catchers that there were not
any slaves there. To the Quakers, no such creature as a slave existed. So she
did tell the truth. The “President” of the Underground Railroad was a Quaker
named Levi Coffin. He was based in southern Indiana. When he moved to Indiana
he learned that fugitives were only receiving the scantiest help from white men.
He was a director of the local bank. Coffin used his power as bank director to
strike many a good bargain for a fugitive. The Coffin house had become the
converging point for several underground lines. He helped more than 3,000
slaves escape. There were plenty of black and white people who were conductors
who helped thousands to escape. Elijah Anderson was known as the general
superintendent of the northwestern Ohio Underground Railroad. He sent 1,000
slaves along the Railroad before he was caught and sent to prison. Some black
conductors were John Malvin, Leonard Andrew Grimes, and John Morris. John
Malvin worked on a limited route from one Northern station to the next. He
owned a canal boat that ran from Cleveland to Marietta Ohio, a route that took
him close to the Ohio River. Leonard Andrew Grimes was the owner of a
horse-and-carriage business in Washington D.C. Using his buggies he often
rescued fugitives. One trip he got caught and spent two years in prison. John
Morris dug a tunnel from his home to his barn so that fugitives would have a
chance to crawl to safety. He built a network of false walls in his attic.
Other conductors built trapdoors into the cellars, false cupboards over brick
ovens, or sliding panels where firewood was ostensibly kept. The greatest
conductor was Harriet Tubman, whose nickname was Moses because she led so many
slaves to freedom. According to Jacob Lawrence, sometime during her youth
Tubman was hit on the head by a heavy weight thrown by her owner. The severe
blow caused her to fall asleep whenever she was quiet for longer than fifteen
minutes (pg. 15). However she was able to make 19 trips to Maryland in order to
save slaves. She never lost one slave. There were many other influential women
that played a role in the Underground Railroad and the fight for equality among
blacks. Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were fighting
the twin fight for women’s suffrage and Negro emancipation. Jane Lewis from New
Lebanon, Ohio found her way to the river and rowed runaways from the far side
of the Ohio River to the Ohio freedom. Calvin Fairbanks was one of the first of
the abolitionists to assume the task of going into the South and assisting
slaves at the very start of their flight. He became a master in this dangerous
business. On one trip into Kentucky he brought out seven children whose mother
wanted them free, and on another occasion he rescued a girl from an attic room.
He depended mostly on simple disguises- men in women’s clothes and women in
men’s. He bought out fugitives on foot and on horseback, in buggies, carriages,
and wagons. No fugitive of his was ever captured. When the worst came, it was
he himself taken, and he served five years in the Kentucky penitentiary. John
Mason was another influential person. He was a Kentucky runaway. He assisted
265 slaves to Canada, then was captured and sold back into slavery. However he
managed to escape again. He led over 1,000 slaves to freedom. William Still and
Robert Purvis were famous abolitionists from Philadelphia. Still wrote down the
story of every fugitive who passed through the line. Over their lifetimes Still
and Purvis helped some 1,000 fugitives along the Underground Railroad up
Pennsylvania to freedom. Other major people and events that were involved were Frederick
Douglass (signed the slips for fugitives to go to various “stations” and a very
powerful speaker), Sojourner Truth, Lucretia Mott, Congressman Thaddeus
Stevens, Solomon Northup, Josiah Henson, Benjamin Lay, Dred Scott case, Nat
Turner, Garrison, the Vigilance Committee, and Elijah Lovejoy. These are just a
few out of the many people, organizations, and events that helped with the
Underground Railroad.
Slaves followed different paths, usually north to Canada, but sometimes south
to Mexico, Haiti, and the Caribbean. There were ten to twenty miles between
each underground stop. The runaway line of escape ran its winding course
through every state from Alabama to the Canadian border. The first goal in most
cases was either Ohio or Pennsylvania. The Underground Railroad never really
functioned in the south because it was too dangerous. Those slaves from the
Deep South, who could stow away on a Mississippi River boat, might, with good
luck, find themselves on the Ohio River. There were hundreds of conductors in
Ohio alone. Because Ohio was just across the river from the slave states of
Kentucky and Virginia, it had the most active and numerous Underground Railroad
routes. Ohio had been settled by New Englanders in the northern part and by
Southerners in the southern part. But many of these Southerners were men and
women who had left their homes because they hated slavery, and the fugitive
found helpers at almost any point along the shore. As we have seen with our
friend Jeb, he would be passed from house to house until he would reach the
wilderness of central and western Ohio. Next in importance to Ohio was
Pennsylvania, and runaways coming from Virginia and North Carolina found in the
Quakers quick and ready friends who would hurry them into the northwest tip of
the state from which the final plunge could be taken. Whether the escape route
lay through Ohio or Pennsylvania, Indiana, or New England- the goal was Canada.
In Canada the Negro found safety, opportunity, and self-respect. However it is
true that many fugitives went no farther than New York or Boston, where they
got work and settled down to live as freemen.
When escaping through the Underground Railroad everything was done as secretly
and confusing as possible. Pathways might zigzag and cut through steams and
even double back on themselves. Routes were often changed at the last moment,
just in case word got out. There were even “wild-goose chase” routes, where a
person would tell the slave catcher that the fugitive went one way, when in
actuality they had went the opposite way days earlier. Information was passed
along by “underground telegraph”, which is by word of mouth or by mail from one
conductor to the next. Runaways were referred to as packages or merchandise.
According to Virginia Hamilton (pg.88), a conductor or stationmaster who had a
message that stated “by Tuesday you should receive a shipment of four large
kegs of dark ale and one small one” would prepare for the arrival of four
adults and a child. Running away took courage because of the repercussions. One
man named Henry “Box” Brown sealed himself in a carton and had himself mailed
from Richmond to Philadelphia. Twenty-eight other slaves formed funeral
processions and others traveled in wagons. These are just a few examples of
what some slaves did to get to safety, so they could get one step closer to
freedom. Messages were always in code such as song lyrics. According to
Virginia Hamilton, the song “Swing Low Sweet Chariot” coming forth to carry me
home meant that a conductor of the railroad was in the area and that an escape
was due soon. The Spiritual “Wade in the Water” was a code instructing slaves
to wade in rivers and streams so that dogs tracking them could not pick up
their scent. The spiritual “Follow the Risen Lord, Follow the Drinking Gourd”,
instructed slaves to follow the North Star to safety (pg.90). Most common
messages were passwords- secret words that let runaways and conductors
recognize each other when they had never met before. There were code names for
towns and people. There were also discreet signals: a light in a specific
window of a station, or a cloth or flag hanging in a certain place, would
reassure a fugitive that it was safe to come in the door. Or sometimes runaways
might be told to announce their presence with a special knock or birdcall. All
of these songs, passwords, and signals were used to bring fugitives to safety
and freedom.
The Underground Railroad has always interested me so I did look deeper into the
history, the influential people, and the actual journey of the Underground
Railroad. When I did my research for this paper I was astonished by the
information that I found out. I can say that now I know a little bit more about
my history. Like many other fugitives “Jeb went through five days of hazard and
hardship, of tenderness, care and brotherly love. Finally the wide expanse of
Lake Erie danced in the Sunlight. When he got on land he was a free man”
(Buckmaster). Jeb is just one person out of the many that had a story to tell.
His experience encouraged other slaves to take a chance to get their freedom.
Slaves were tired of belonging to someone else, getting abused for not
responding correctly, and doing hard labor. They wanted to know how it felt to
be called Mr. or Mrs., own a house and bed, and not worry about their master
whipping them. They longed for freedom, they could taste it, and night after
night they probably dreamed about it. This desire for freedom sent more than
two thousand slaves out of the south every year. The slaves that got away had a
chance to start their life over. Even though they will not ever forget the
harsh treatment, the labor, the heartaches, and pain they could die knowing
that they were no longer in bondage, but free.