Taking a Look at the Underground Railroad

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The Underground Railroad was large group of people who secretly worked together to help slaves escape slavery in the south. Despite the name, the Underground Railroad had nothing to do with actual railroads and was not located underground (www.freedomcenter.org). The Underground Railroad helped move hundreds of slaves to the north each year. It’s estimated that the south lost 100,000 slaves during 1810-1850 (www.pbs.org). The Underground Railroad received its name from two events involving masters chasing after the slaves. In 1831 a slave escaped to Ohio and has to swim across the Ohio River because that was the only way to escape his master. His master got into a small and continued to trail him. The slave reached the shore and then disappeared. When his master wasn’t able to find him, he told his friends that, “he must have gone off on an underground road”. Eight years after this incident, spoke of the torture of a captured slave. The reporter said he told of a railroad that went underground all the way to Boston. This is how the Underground Railroad became the Underground Railroad, although it doesn’t deal with railroads or underground (The Underground Railroad by: Shaaron Cosner). The Underground Railroad began at the end of the 18th century, by this time slavery had been abolished in every northern state. The Underground Railroad was most widespread within the 3 decades following the Civil War. When the north made the decision to abolish slavery, the south reacted by making laws against helping slaves to escape and rewards began to be offered to anyone who could return a slave to their master. In 1807 slaves could no longer be brought into the country, this sky-rocketed the value placed on slaves. The Underground Railroad... ... middle of paper ... ...er. The songs spoke of, “going home” or “being bound for the land of Canaan”. People generally assumed they were singing about dying and going to Heaven, but they were actually singing about going north to Canada and freedom (www.pathways.thinkport.org). Quilt code was another way for them to communicate. They used different geometric patterns in quilts to pass messages along through the Underground Railroad (www.ugrrquilt.hartcottagequilts.com). There were various patterns that a seamstress would sew on there. She’d make a sampler quilt for the slaves to memorize and then make big quilts to hang in the window and such. The wrench pattern meant gather your tools and get physically and mentally prepared. The wagon wheel meant pack your belongings, while the bear’s paw symbolized follows the literal footprints of the bear. The tumbling blocks meant pack up and go.

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