The Underground Railroad

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The Underground Railroad

The Underground Railroad was one of the most remarkable protests against slavery in United States history. It was a fight for personal survival, which many slaves lost in trying to attain their freedom. Slaves fought for their own existence in trying to keep with the traditions of their homeland, their homes in which they were so brutally taken away from. In all of this turmoil however they managed to preserve the customs and traditions of their native land. These slaves fought for their existence and for their cultural heritage with the help of many people and places along the path we now call the Underground Railroad.

The Underground Railroad was a secret operation that began during the 19th century, and reached its peak during the time of 1830 – 1865. The story of the Underground Railroad was one of individual sacrifice and great courage in the efforts of the African American people to reach freedom, with the help of many interconnected “stations” (Introduction to the Underground Railroad?).

The number of sites connected with the Underground Railroad was immense. The Underground Railroad was any direction slaves traveled to freedom. It was a huge scheme of paths through marshes, over mountains, along rivers, and by sea. No real trains existed on the Underground Railroad, but guides were called conductors. Runaways escaped to the North along a series of routes that stretched through the southern Border States (“History and Geography”). Slaves who escaped into the western territories, Mexico and the Caribbean, then tried to blend in with the free African American communities, which lived in these areas (Slavery’s Past).

There were many conductors in many different states, all of which were important to the Underground Railroad. The most notable of these was Harriet Tubman. Harriet made nineteen trips back to Slave States to help members of her family and other slaves to escape to freedom. She was a woman who could not read or write, but she helped over three hundred slaves to their freedom. She had many encounters with slave traders and others, who tried to capture her, but she never got caught, and she never lost a single slave (Harriet Tubman).

Another important figure in the Underground Railroad was Stephen Myers. Stephen Myers helped the Underground Railroad from 1830 to 1850. In this time he helped thousands o...

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...ic linking the people of Africa and America. It is a story of places, North and South. It is a story of secrets involving routes and language, codes and music. In the end it is a story of jubilation and freedom, bought at a great price by individuals.

Works Cited

African Genesis. History and Geography of the Underground Railroad. Nov. 7, 2000

Appleseed Recording. Free at Last.1998

Cairnes, John E. Slavery’s Past.

Lilly W. The Underground Railroad. June 16, 1999

Maryland’s African American Heritage. Harriet Tubman.

Siebert, Wilbur. The Underground Railroad from Slavery to Freedom. New York: Arno Press and the New York Times 1968

U.C. Davis Division of Education. The Freedom Sympathizers and Fighters.

May 1996

U.C. Davis Division of Education. What was The Underground Railroad?. May 1996.

Underground Railroad Workshop. Able Brown. 2000

Underground Railroad Workshop. Stephen Myers. 2000

Underground Railroad Workshop. The role of the Quaker Community. 2000

United States. National Park Service. Introduction to the Underground Railroad.

United States. National Park Service & History Association. In Search of Freedom.

August 1996

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