The Underground Railroad The Underground Railroad n n
- Slides: 37
The Underground Railroad
The Underground Railroad n n n The Underground Railroad was actually an above -ground series of escape routes for slaves traveling from the South to the North trying to gain their freedom. Slaves traveled by foot, wagons, boats, and trains. Slave runaways would usually travel by the light of night and hide during the day in places known as stations. These were safe houses owned by abolitionists.
Abolitionist n n n Abolition-The movement to end slavery Slaves would hide in various places. Abolitionist – a person who believed and worked for the abolishment of slavery.
Henry Box Brown
Henry Box Brown n Henry Brown convinced Samuel A. Smith to pack him in a box and ship him to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Henry Box Brown’s trip to Philadelphia was grueling, in tight quarters. Brown was set free in Philadelphia and eventually made his way to Boston, where he helped fellow escapees on the Underground Railroad.
Would you take the risk? ? ? n If the slaves were caught, they were sold or beaten with a whip; sometimes they were lynched.
Conductors n Conductors were the people who led the runaways to freedom.
Harriett Tubman
n n n Harriet Tubman was born a slave in Maryland. When she learned that her owner was going to sell her, she decided to escape. Tubman made 19 journeys from the South to the North as a Conductor on the Underground Railroad.
Harriet Tubman n n Southern Plantation owners offered $40, 000 for the capture of Harriet Tubman. Plantation Owners also offered rewards for the return of runaway slaves.
Sojourner Truth was born a slave in New York, and she fled to live with Quakers. n Truth spoke for abolition and women’s rights. n
William Lloyd Garrison n n Abolitionist Published an antislavery newspaper The Liberator
Jermain Loguen n Abolitionist and Religious Leader Station master of Underground Railroad Estimated 1500 Fugitive slaves passed through his home
Mary Ann Shadd n n Educated black children in free and slave states Fled to Canada Spoke out against Slavery Educated fugitive slave children in Canada
Lucretia Mott n n n Lucretia and her husband boycotted all goods produced by slave labor. Abolitionist Women’s Rights Spoke at Quaker meetings against slavery Attended World Antislavery Convention in London in 1840
Fredrick Douglass n Abolitionist Speaker n Published an autobiography
William Still Member of the Pennsylvania Antislavery Society n Established a number of safe houses n
Susan B. Anthony n n Fought for women’s suffrage in the 20 th Century She worked for temperance and antislavery movements
John Whittier American Abolitionist Poet n “Quaker Poet” of freedom n
Jonathan Walker n Jonathan Walker became a national hero in 1844 when he was tried and sentenced as a slave stealer following an attempt to assist seven runaway slaves find freedom. He was branded on the right hand with the letters SS signifying "Slave Stealer".
Josiah Henson n n Josiah Henson was one of the first slaves to write his memoirs after escaping to freedom. Harriet Beecher Stowe acknowledged that Henson's writings were the inspiration for her 1852 novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin
Routes to Freedom
THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
Quilts n n During the time of the Underground Railroad fugitive slaves would use quilts as a means of communication. Quilts were used by conductors to help fugitive slaves flee the South and arrive safely in the North.
Quilt Usage in the Underground Railroad n This Quilt represented the NORTH STAR
Quilts n This quilt was the symbol for the wagon wheel
Quilts n This Quilt symbolized a log cabin
Quilts n This quilt symbolized a crossroads
Spirituals
Follow the Drinking Gourd Chorus: Follow the Drinking Gourd For the old man is a-waiting for to carry you to freedom Follow the Drinking Gourd The river ends between two hills Follow the Drinking Gourd There’s another river on the other side Follow the Drinking Gourd When the great big river meets The riverbank makes a very the little river good road, Follow the Drinking Gourd The dead trees will show you For the old man is a-waiting for the way to carry you to freedom Left foot, peg foot, traveling on If you follow the Drinking Gourd Follow the Drinking Gourd
Spirituals n n Spirituals like “Wade in the Water”, “The Gospel Train” and “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” directly refer to the Underground Railroad. Spirituals gradually evolved to serve a variety of purposes in the fight for freedom: 1) Singing as an expression of values 2) Singing as a source of inspiration or motivation 3) Singing as an expression of protest 4) Singing as a communication tool
Task n n n The year is 1854. You are on the Underground Railroad, as a conductor or as a passenger (your choice). Create a diary or journal entry which chronicles your journey. -Where are you from? -Where are you headed? -What problems are you facing? -What actions are you taking?
The Underground Railroad
- Slave haven underground railroad museum cost
- Underground railroad
- Underground railroad painting
- Underground railroad
- Yeoman apush
- Crossroads quilt pattern meaning
- Underground railroad
- Underground railroad timeline
- Tuber stem
- Cavesa
- Underground heat exchanger
- The term geologists use for underground water is
- Explain how water erosion by groundwater can form a cave.
- Caversham tunnel
- Characteristics of cables
- The underground is ____ buses
- Hydrosphere facts
- The underground seamus heaney
- Sanford underground research facility
- Underground hyphae
- Hkn underground guide
- Lec 16
- Underground root
- Boulby underground laboratory
- What is riddle
- Sandvik
- What is the zone of saturation
- Elevation underground
- Travelcard for london underground
- How to find water underground
- Eslpr
- Why do ants live underground
- How is sassafras’s trees roots correctly written?
- Zone of aeration and zone of saturation
- Gas
- Where does underground water come from
- Underground coal gasification
- Thick underground stem that lies horizontally