University of Virginia Library


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Page 441

INDEX

  • Abbot, Major J. B., host of John Brown,
    164.
  • Abbot, Bev. J. S. C., on effect of Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1850, on family of
    " fugitives, 247, 248.
  • Abduction, Harriet Tubman, a practitioner
    in, 6; of slaves from Missouri
    by John Brown, 8, 9, 338; Rufus King
    on, 29 n.; of abolitionists, rewards for,
    52, 53; of slaves from Covington,
    Ky., by Fairbank, 61; of slaves by
    John Fairfield, the Virginian, 66, 67;
    methods of, employed by Dr. A. M.
    Ross, 104; Still on abductions through
    agency of the U. G. R. R., 118 n.;
    sentiment of abolitionists against, 150;
    by negroes, 151; by refugees of Canada,
    152, 153; by Southern whites,
    153, 154; by Northern whites, 154,
    155; by Burr, Work and Thompson,
    155, 156; by Joseph Sider, 157; by
    Calvin Fairbank, 157–160; by Seth
    Concklin, 160–162; by John Brown,
    162–165; in Brown's plan of liberation,
    166, 167; by Charles T. Torrey,
    168–170; by Capt. Jonathan Walker,
    170, 171; by Laura S. Haviland, 171,
    172; by Capt. Daniel Drayton, 172,
    173; by Richard Dillingham, 174, 175;
    by Wm. L. Chaplin, 175, 176; by
    Josiah Henson, 176–178; by Rial
    Cheadle, 178, 179; by Dr. A. M. Ross,
    179–182; by Elijah Anderson, 183; by
    John Mason, 183, 184; by Harriet
    Tubman, 185–189; of friends from the
    South planned by Canadian exiles,
    231, 232; of a free negro from New
    York in 1850, 269; of negroes from
    southeastern Pennsylvania, 280; of
    free negroes from Northern state under
    law of 1793, 295; failure of Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1850 to recompense
    South for losses through, 341; disappearance
    of slavery from District
    of Columbia attributed to the U. G.
    R. R. and, 341, 342.
  • Abolition, gradual, 17; boats, 148; in
    Canada, 190, 191; sentiment of, in
    Northern states prevents reclamation
    of fugitives, 241–243; immediate, before
    Garrison, advocated by Bourne
    in 1816, 303, 304; immediate, advocated
    by Duncan in 1824, 304–306;
    immediate, advocated by Rankin in
    1824, 306–308; immediate, germination
    of idea of, 307; immediate, formulation
    of the principle of, in U. G. R. R.
    neighborhoods, 357.
  • Abolitionists, hidden methods of, 2; recollections
    of, main source of history
    of Underground Railroad, 11; characterization
    of, 12; convictions of, 17;
    Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 detested
    by, 24; in Iowa, 43; testimony of,
    regarding activity of the U. G. R. R.
    (1830–1840), 44, 308; social disdain
    borne by, 48–50; espionage endured
    by, 50–54; rewards for abduction of,
    52, 53: known as "conductors," 60;
    destitution, of fugitives relieved by
    expenditures of, 76–78; waterway extensions
    of U. G, R. R. established by,
    82; temper of, shown in rescue of
    fugitives under arrest, 86; political
    affiliations of, 99–101; United States
    Constitution burned at meeting of,
    101; treated with justice in history,
    101; penalties paid by, 102, 103; settlements
    of, in Maryland, 119; Brown
    Thurston of Portland, Me., a veteran,
    133; on number of U. G. R. R.
    lines in Ohio, 135; devices of, to
    secure safety of fugitives, 141; sentiment
    of, against abduction, 150; dine
    with Fairfield the abductor, 154 n.;
    risks taken by an, in abducting a
    slave, 155; abductions by, along the
    borders of slave territory, 155; appeals

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    of fugitives to, for aid for friends in
    bondage, 168; arrest of Charles T.
    Torrey for being an, 169; number of
    fugitives early aided by, in southern
    Ohio, 192; testimony of, on the effects
    of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, 193;
    underground work in Iowa and Illinois
    by, 194, 195; Canadian refugees
    visited by, 199–201; refuge found by
    runaway slaves among, in Northern
    states, 212, 213, 275; visitation of
    communities of, by slave hunters, 239,
    240; prevent reclamation of fugitives,
    241, 242; irritated by mode of arrests
    under Slave Law of 1793, 259; efforts
    to use Northwest Ordinance in defeat
    of law of 1793, 262, 263; law of 1850
    objectionable to, 267–273; possibility
    of abduction of free negroes from the
    North under law of 1850, declared
    by, 268, 269; on commissioners' fees
    under law of 1850, 271, 272; secrecy
    observed by, 272; characteristics of
    pre-Garrisonian, 307; grateful employment
    of, in helping slaves, 310;
    societies of, criticised by Webster,
    314; information about, among slaves,
    316; exultation of, over rescue of
    Jerry McHenry, 320; residence of Harriet
    Beecher Stowe among, in Cincinnati,
    O., 321; various activities
    of, 326; increasing number of fugitives
    aided by, 327; restiveness of,
    under jurisdiction of United States
    Courts in fugitive slave cases, 335; of
    Lawrence, Kan., abused by Missourians,
    347; aid rendered fugitives by,
    at Lawrence, Kan., 348; efficiency of
    underground work of, compared with
    work of American Colonization Society,
    350, 351; support of U. G. R. R.
    by, alleged, 351; multiplication of,
    due to the U. G. R. R., 357.
  • Adams, Robert, 130.
  • Agents of the U. G. R. R., significance
    of the name, 67; in Baltimore, 68;
    employment of regular, 69, 70; number
    of, 87; hospitality of, 87–89;
    admitted principles of, 89, 90; nationality
    of, 90–92; church connections
    of, 93–98; churches of Massachusetts
    appealed to by, 99; political affiliations
    of, 99–101; character of, 101;
    penalties suffered by, 102, 103; Defensive
    League of Freedom for payment
    of fines of, proposed in Boston,
    103, 104; notable persons among,
    104–112; limited area of operation
    of, 113; in Pennsylvania, 121; in
    New York, 122–127; in New Jersey,
    123, 124; in Massachusetts, 129, 130;
    in Vermont, 130, 131; devices of, 137;
    work of abduction by Seth Concklin
    as one of the, 160; fearless work of,
    at Sandusky, O., 276, 277; Harriet B.
    Stowe and John Brown as, 290; Rev.
    John Rankin, active in ranks of, 307;
    J. R. Giddings one of the most enthusiastic
    of, 315; appealed to by Canadian
    refugees for abduction of friends,
    231, 232; among fugitive settlers in
    the North, 251–253.
  • Alabama, purchase of slaves by, 26;
    underground line from northern, 119;
    Canadian refugees from, 195; attempted
    abduction of Peter Still's
    family from, 160; operations in,
    planned by Brown, 167.
  • Alcott, A. B., friend of Harriet Tubman,
    186; part of, in the Burns case, 331.
  • Alleghanies, the use to be made of, in
    Brown's plan of liberation, 166.
  • Allen, Abram, special conveyance of,
    for fugitives, 59, 60; visit of, to
    Canada, 199.
  • Alum Creek Quaker Settlement, leaf
    from diary of station-keeper in, 10;
    activity of station in, 76, 77; facsimile
    of record kept by Daniel
    Osborn of, 344, 345.
  • American Baptist Free Mission Society,
    ministrations to refugees in Toronto,
    Canada, 3, 183.
  • American Colonization Society, objects
    and work of, compared with those of
    U. G. R. R., 350, 351.
  • American Historical Review, on Underground
    Railroad, 5.
  • Amherstburg, Canada West as a receiving
    depot for fugitives, 194; visit of
    Levi Coffin to, 200; supplies for Canadian
    refugees in, 214; congregation of
    fugitives in 225; negro mechanics in,
    226; Dr. Howe on condition of colored
    people in, 226 n; Drew on condition of
    refugees in, 227; separate schools for
    negroes in, 229; first "True Band"
    organized in, 230; comparison of
    amounts of property owned by whites
    and blacks in, and in other places, 232.

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  • Anderson, Elijah, abductor, 183.
  • Anderson, William, extradition of the
    fugitive, from Canada refused, 352,
    353.
  • Andrew, Bishop James O., church proceedings
    against, 95.
  • Andrew, John A., 103; appreciation of
    Harriet Tubman, 189.
  • Andrews, Ex-Pres. E. Benjamin, on
    route in Massachusetts, 129.
    "Anti-Slavery Days, History of," in
    Illinois, 6.
  • Anti-Slavery in the State and Nation,
    on refugees forwarded to Brunswick,
    219.
  • Anti-slavery men, Theodore Parker on
    the first duty of, 109; meetings of, in
    New England, 171. See Abolitionists.
  • Anti-slavery movement, Chas. T. Torrey
    engages in, 168, 169; humane motives
    of, 286; U. G. R. R., a causal factor
    in development of, 290, 302; character
    of pre-Garrisonian, 307; continuity of
    development of, 307, 308; failure of
    Uncle Tom's Cabin to produce election
    gains for, 323.
  • Anti-slavery sentiment, among people
    from the Southern states, 31, 32, 41;
    revenge on Mission Institute for, 156;
    in Congress, 173; settlement of fugitives
    in communities characterized
    by, 212, 242; proof of early, in free
    states, 300; influence of U. G. R. R.
    in spreading, 302; in the North, 309,
    310.
  • Anti-Slavery Society, of Philadelphia,
    of New York, Harriet Tubman a well-known
    visitor of the, 189; of Massachusetts,
    193; of Canada, 204; benefactions
    of, for fugitive slaves, 222,
    223; persons of respectability in societies,
    308; encouragement given by, to
    bondmen to flee, 310; reports of Pennsylvania
    and Massachusetts societies
    on increasing number of fugitives
    after 1850, 327; of New England,
    meeting of, at time of rendition of
    Burns, 332.
  • Appalachian route of escape for slaves,
    118.
  • Appleby, Capt., master of lake boat
    carrying fugitives, 82.
  • Arkansas, abducting trip of Fairbank
    into, 65.
  • Armstrong, abductor, 153.
  • Armstrong, J. H. B., operator, 42, 43.
  • Arnold, Hon. Isaac N., counsel in fugitive
    slave case, 284.
  • Arrest, of abductor Calvin Fairbank,
    158, 159; of abductor Charles T. Torrey,
    169; of abductor Capt. Walker,
    170; of abductors Drayton and Sayres,
    173; of abductor Dillingham, 174; of
    abductor Chaplin, 176; of fugitive
    slaves in the North between 1850–1856,
    240, 241; mode of, under law of 1793,
    257–259; right of private, under law
    of 1850, 267; of fugitive slave, penalties
    for hindering, 279; of operators,
    283; of negroes in the South during
    the War, 287; of free negro in Philadelphia,
    317; of Jerry McHenry in
    Syracuse, 318; of rescuers in Christiana
    case, 319; of Burns in Boston,
    331.
  • Articles of Confederation (1643), clause
    for rendition of fugitives quoted, 19;
    absence of provision for return of fugitives
    in, 293.
  • Ashburton Treaty, extradition of the
    fugitive Anderson from Canada sought
    under, 352, 353.
  • Ashley, Congressman James M., operator,
    92, 106.
  • Association for the Education and Elevation
    of the Colored People of Canada,
    233.
  • Atchison, of Kentucky, on loss sustained
    by slave-owners of border states, 341.
  • Baine, Patrick, owner of Harriet Hayden,
    158.
  • Bains, Eliza, operator in Portsmouth,
    Va., 118.
  • Baird, Thomas D., 96.
  • Baltimore, fugitive shipped in a box
    from, 60; agents in, 68, 91, 117, 151;
    anti-slavery sentiment in Friends'
    Yearly Meeting of, 93; abductions
    of Harriet Tubman from, 186; petition
    of Quakers of, against kidnapping,
    296.
  • Baptist Church, appeal to societies of,
    in Massachusetts, 99.
  • Barbour, American Minister, on negotiations
    with England concerning fugitive
    slaves, 300.
  • Baxter and Grant, owners of Lewis
    Hayden, 158.
  • Bayliss, James, on canal route, 142.

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  • Beacon, the, reminiscences of "Early
    Settlement and Growth of Western
    Iowa," in, 7.
  • Beard, William, visit of, to Canadian
    refugees, 199.
  • Bearse, Capt. Austin, doorkeeper of Boston
    Vigilance Committee, 73; rescues
    from vessels by, 81; on stowaways
    from the South, 144.
  • Beck, Dr. Isaac M., brief mention of,
    32 n.; reward for abduction of, 53.
  • Beecher, Henry Ward, counterpart of,
    in Uncle Tom's Cabin, 322.
  • Benedict, Aaron, reminiscences of
    U. G. R. R,, 6.
  • Benedict, Aaron L., runaways entertained
    by, 76, 77.
  • Benezet, Anthony, precepts of, 49.
  • Benton, Thomas H., 159; on passage of
    Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, 311 n.
  • Berrien, Col., conductor, 144.
  • Bibb, Henry, projector of Refugees'
    Home, 209; stock of supplies maintained
    by, 214; passenger on U. G.
    R. R., 340.
  • Bibb, Mrs. Mary E., school-teacher
    among Canadian refugees, 215.
  • Bigelow, Jacob, operator, 117.
  • Bigelow, L. H., 130.
  • Bingey, Anthony, on escape of his
    family to Canada, 76; on increase of
    fugitives arriving in Canada, 194;
    desire for freedom of, 196; on refugee
    population of Ontario, 221; on effects
    of Slave Law of 1850, 249.
  • Bingham, Dr. J. A., 89.
  • Blake, Capt., fugitives carried by boat
    of, 83.
  • Blake, of Ohio, bill of, for repeal of
    Fugitive Slave laws, 286.
  • Boat service for transportation of absconding
    slaves, 81–83, 118, 145–148,
    219, 252.
  • Bolding, John, seizure of, under Slave
    Law of 1850, 241.
  • Booth, Sherman M., power of commissioners
    questioned in case of, 270;
    penalty imposed in case of, 279; case
    of, before the courts in Wisconsin, 329;
    limits of state authority defined in
    case of, 330; protest against Douglas
    legislation in case of,
  • Borden, Nathaniel P., 130.
  • Boston, conveyance of fugitives by
    William I. Bowditch of, 61; Vigilance
    Committee of, 71–73; escapes by vessel
    to, 81; early rescue in, 83, 84;
    rescue of Shadrach in, 86; appeal of
    Vigilance Committee of, for aid, 98,
    99; attempted rescue of Burns in, 103,
    330–332; aid rendered fugitives by
    Theodore Parker in, 109, 110; slaves
    sent to New Bedford and, from Virginia,
    118; James Freeman Clarke on
    protection of fugitives in, 132; refugees
    sent from New York to, 145; to
    England from, 145; estimate of fugitives
    in, 235; law of 1850 denounced
    by meeting in, 244; consternation
    among fugitives in, 246–248; continued
    residence of refugees in, after
    1850, 250, 251; Lewis Hayden in, 251,
    252; early pursuit of fugitives in, 302;
    Shadrach, Sims, and Craft cases in,
    317.
  • Boston and Worcester Railroad, 80.
  • Boston Public Library, scrap-book of
    Theodore Parker in, 8.
  • Bourne, Rev. George, early advocate of
    immediate abolition, 303, 304, 306;
    political action against slavery proposed
    by, 305 n.
  • Bowditch, William I, 61, 132.
  • Bowles, Col. J., letter of, on U. G. R. R.
    depot at Lawrence, Kan., 347–350.
  • Brace, Avery, 16.
  • Bragdon, George C., on stations on the
    St. Lawrence, 127 n.
  • Brainerd, Hon. Lawrence, 107; fugitives
    shipped by rail by, 145.
  • Bramlette, Gov. Thomas E., opposed to
    pardon of Fairbank, 159, 160.
  • Brant, Chief, fugitives received by people
    of, 92, 203.
  • Brennan, Mr., escape of slave from, 65.
  • Brisbane, W. H., hiding-places provided
    by, 64.
  • British and American Manual Labor Institute,
    colored children, 200; origin
    of Dawn Settlement, 205; work of,
    for Canadian refugees, 214; visited
    by Levi Coffin, 220; lumber industry
    established at, 223; colored settlers
    attracted by, 229, 230.
  • Brooks, Prof. W. M., on stations in
    southwestern Iowa, 33, 98.
  • Brooks family, of Concord, Mass.,
    friends of Harriet Tubman, 186.
  • Brown, David Paul, counsel for fugitive
    slaves, 284, 285.

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    Page 445
  • Brown, Eli F., hiding-place provided by,
    64.
  • Brown, Henry Box, shipment of, in a
    box, 60.
  • Brown, John, notes of, relating to his
    raid, 8; father of, a friend of fugitives,
    37; League of Gileadites organized
    by, 73, 74; transportation of party
    of, through Iowa, 79; entertained by
    J. B. Grinnell, 108; strategy of, 118;
    North Elba home of, a terminus of
    the U. G. R. R., 127; route followed
    by, with his abducted slaves, 136, 164,
    165; Missouri raid of, 162, 163; effect
    of his raid, 165; plan of liberation of,
    166–168, 357; Dr. A. M. Ross, a friend
    of, 183 n.; on Harriet Tubman, 185;
    concern of, for fugitive settlers in
    Canada, 199; influence of U. G. R. R.
    upon, 290, 301, 338, 339; Col. J.
    Bowles on, 349, 350.
  • Brown, Mary, owner of James Hamlet,
    269.
  • Brown, Owen, father of John Brown,
    early operations of, 37, 301.
  • Brown, Wells, befriends the fugitive
    William Wells Brown, 77.
  • Brown, William Wells, befriended, 77;
    conveyance of fugitives to Canada by,
    83, 252; qualities of leadership in, 340.
  • Buchanan, James, amendments to Constitution
    in regard to fugitive slaves
    recommended by, 286; Booth pardoned
    by, 331; appealed to in Addison
    White case, 334; on enforcement of
    Fugitive Slave law during his administration,
    353.
  • Bucknel and Taylor, slave-owners, 196.
  • Buffalo, boat service to, 83; release of
    alleged fugitives in, 317.
  • Burns, Anthony, Theodore Parker's
    memoranda on rendition of, 8; Vigilance
    Committee fails to rescue, 73;
    attempt to rescue, 103; case of, 251,
    271, 283; rendition of, 331–333.
  • Burr, James E., one of abducting party
    of, Work and Thompson, 155, 156.
  • Burronghes, George L., agent of Underground
    Road, 70.
  • Bushnell, Simeon, case of, 270; penalty
    paid by, 279.
  • Buswell, N. C., on abduction by Canadian
    refugee, 152.
  • Butler, of South Carolina, on loss sustained
    by slave-owners, 341.
  • Buxton Settlement in Canada. See Elgin
    Association.
  • Buxton, Thomas Fowell, 207.
  • Cabot, Samuel, Jr., 103.
  • Calhoun, on Drayton's expedition with
    the Pearl, 173, 174; on an enactment
    making it unlawful to aid fugitives,
    309; on the need of a new fugitive
    slave law, 313; championship of the
    Slave Law of 1850, 314.
  • California, sanction of, to Slave Law of
    1850, 246.
  • Calvinists. See Presbyterian Church.
  • Campbell, C. B., 58.
  • Campbell, Dr. Alexander, reward for
    abduction of, 53.
  • Canada, escapes from the American
    colonies to, 20, 292; Clay's negotiations
    for extradition of fugitive slaves
    from, 22, 299, 300; knowledge of,
    among slaves, 27–30, 180, 182, 197,
    198; underground routes through New
    York to, 35; early arrival of fugitives
    in, 43, 44; entered from Detroit, 66;
    number of fugitives forwarded to, by
    one abolitionist neighborhood before
    1817, 87; number sent to, by Chas. T.
    Torrey before 1844, 88; fugitives
    received by people of Chief Brant in,
    92; terminals in, 127, 133, 134; route
    to, via Portland, Me., 133; Ontario,
    the goal of the great majority of runaways,
    140, 148; extent of the region
    in, settled by refugees, 148, 149;
    hospitality of, 149; abductions by
    refugees of, 152; excursions of the
    abductor Fairfield to, 153, 154; reception
    given Fairfield and his protégés
    on their arrival in, 154; enthusiasm
    in, over John Brown's Missouri raid,
    165; part to be taken by refugees of,
    in Brown's plan of liberation, 167;
    Dawn Institute in, 168; delight of
    fugitives on reaching, 178, 196, 197;
    ministrations of American Baptist
    Free Mission Society among refugees
    at Toronto, 183; number assisted to,
    by abductor John Mason, 184; trips
    of abductor Harriet Tubman to, 187,
    189; position of Canada on slavery
    question, 190, 191; early arrival of
    fugitive slaves in, 192; increased influx
    of fugitives, 193, 194; refugees in,
    a representative body of the slave

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    class, 195, 196; severity of conditions
    ia, 198; treatment of refugee settlers
    in, 199, 200; attitude of government
    of, toward refugees, 201–203; conditions
    favorable to settlement of
    fugitives in, 203–205; fugitive aid
    societies in, 204, 205; Dawn Settlement,
    205–207; Elgin Settlement, 207–
    209; Refugees' Home Settlement, 209,
    210; objects of the colonies, 210, 211;
    Dr. Howe's criticism of the colonies,
    211, 212: defence of the colonies, 212,
    213; services of the colonization societies,
    213–215; conclusions concerning
    the colonies, 216, 217; fugitive
    settlers in towns of, 217, 218; movement
    of fugitives to the interior of,
    218, 219; refugees in the eastern
    provinces of, 219; refugee population
    in, 220–224, 313; occupations of refugees
    in, 223; congregation of refugees
    in towns of, 225, 226; prosperity of
    refugees in, 226, 227; their domestic
    life in, 227, 228; their school opportunities
    in, 228, 229; their societies for
    self-improvement in, 230, 231; their
    efforts for the rescue of friends from
    slavery, 231, 232; their taxable property
    in, 232; their political privileges
    in, 232; their value as citizens, 233,
    234; return of many from, 235; increased
    influx of fugitives into, after
    passage of law of 1850, 246–250,
    316; escape of Shadrach and Jerry
    McHenry to, 317, 318; Glover forwarded
    to, 328; escape of Addison
    White to, 334; extradition of Anderson
    refused by, 352, 353.
  • Canadian Anti-Slavery Society, on employment
    for Canadian refugees, 204;
    on refugee population in Canada West,
    221; on congregation of Canadian
    refugees in towns, 225.
  • Canadian Magazine of Politics, Science,
    Art, and Literature
    , on Underground
    Railroad, 5.
  • Canal routes, 142.
  • Cape Breton Island, sea routes to, 219.
  • Capron, Effingham L., operator, 131,
    132.
  • Capture, of fugitive slaves thwarted,
    83–86; under Slave Law of 1850,
    240–242; of fugitive settlers in the
    North, 316; of Sims in Boston, 317;
    of boy John near Oberlin, 335, 336.
  • Carpenter, Philo, operator, 88, 147.
  • Carpenter, slave-hunter, 53, 54.
  • Cass, Gen., Secretary of State, appealed
    to in the Addison White case, 334.
  • Caton, Judge, 283.
  • Cavins, E. C. H., on route through
    Indiana, 142.
  • Censor, the, containing "Sketches in
    the History of the Underground Railroad,"
    4.
  • Census reports of Canada, on refugee
    population, 220.
  • Census reports of United States, on
    fugitive slaves, 26, 44, 342, 343.
  • Chace, Mrs. Elizabeth Buffum, 49; on
    New Bedford route, 130.
  • Chamberlain, Hon. Mellen, 36.
  • Channing, Dr. Walter, 170.
  • Channing, Prof. Edward, on prosecutions
    of anti-slavery men, 317n.
  • Chaplin, William L., abductor, 168, 175,
    176.
  • Chapman, Capt., on delight of slaves
    reaching Canada, 196, 197.
  • Charles, John, 53.
  • Chase, Salmon P., on the Ordinance of
    1787, 262; on the fugitive slave clause
    in the Constitution, 263, 264; in the
    Van Zaudt case, 282; counsel for
    fugitive slaves, 308, 309; in the Addison
    White case, 334, 335.
  • Cheadle, Rial, abductor, 178, 179.
  • Cheney, Rev. O. B., 37, 134.
  • Chicago, a place of deportation, 83, 88,
    147; terminus for line through Livingston
    and La Salle counties, Ill.,
    139; multiple routes of, 141; hostility
    of, to law of 1850, 333.
  • Chicago and Rock Island Railroad, 79,
    144, 165.
  • Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad,
    79, 144.
  • Child, E., receiver of goods for Canadian
    refugees at Toronto, 202.
  • Chittenden, subscription of, for release
    of W. L. Chaplin, 176.
  • Christiana case, 280, 281, 317; Thaddeus
    Stevens in, 282; effort of the government
    to enforce the law of 1850 in, 319.
    Church connection of U. G. R. R. helpers
    or agents, 93–99; of Canadian refugees,
    216.
  • Church of fugitives, in Boston, 246;
    in Buffalo, Rochester, Detroit, and
    Boston, 250.

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    Page 447
  • Cincinnati Enquirer, the, on contention
    over Addison White case, 335 n.
  • Cincinnati, supplies for fugitives provided
    by Woman's Anti-Slavery Sewing
    Society of, 77; Dr. N. S. Townshend
    conductor in, 104; home of
    Harriet Beecher Stowe a station in,
    105; work of Levi Coffin in, 110–112;
    multiple routes in, 135, 141; appeal of
    colored people in, to Mr. Dillingham,
    174; seizure of McQuerry in, 241;
    counsel for fugitive slave cases in,
    282; effect of the Margaret Garner
    case in, 302, 303; observations used
    in Uncle Tom's Cabin made in, 321.
  • Civil War. See War of Rebellion.
  • Claiborne, on loss sustained by slave-owners
    from 1810–1850, 341.
  • Clark, George W., coöperation of, with
    Capt. Walker in anti-slavery work,
    171; on the abductor Wm. L. Chaplin,
    176.
  • Clark, Lewis, 171.
  • Clark, Milton, 171.
  • Clark, Wm. Penn, friend of John Brown,
    164.
  • Clark, Woodson, informed against
    slaves, 278.
  • Clarke, Rev. James Freeman, on northern
    opposition to rendition, 25, 103;
    on extent of U. G. R. R. system, 113,
    114; on protection of fugitives in
    Boston, 132 n.
  • Clay, Henry, negotiations of, with England
    for extradition of fugitives, 22,
    44, 299; flight of slave of, 27; on the
    execution of the law of 1850 in Indiana,
    48; on the escape of slaves to
    Canada, 192; on the Canadian refugees,
    201; on the difficulty of recapturing
    fugitives, 242; championship
    of new Fugitive Slave Law
    by, 312, 314; compromise of, 315;
    proposition of, that the President be
    invested with power to enforce the
    law of 1850, 319.
  • Cleveland, boat service for fugitives
    from, 83, 252; deportation station,
    146; eminent attorneys of, in Oberlin-Wellington
    case, 282; trial of Oberlin-Wellington
    rescuers at, 336; celebration
    in, over victory of abolitionists
    in Oberlin-Wellington case, 337.
  • Cleveland and Canton Railroad, 79.
  • Cleveland and Western Railroad, 79, 143.
  • Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati
    Railroad, 79, 183.
  • Cleveland Plain Dealer, on results in
    Oberlin-Wellington case, 337.
  • Clingman, of North Carolina, on value
    of fugitive settlers in Northern states,
    341.
  • Coffin, Addison, early operator in North
    Carolina, 40, 117.
  • Coffin, Levi, author of The Reminiscences
    of
    , 2, 4; early service in
    North Carolina and Indiana, 40, 117;
    methods of, 61, 64; reputed president
    of the U. G. R. R., 69; largest
    company of fugitives entertained by,
    76; devotee of underground work, 78,
    110–112; on John Fairfield the abductor,
    153; visit of, to Canadian
    refugees, 199–201, 218–220; on acquisition
    of land by Canadian refugees,
    201, 202; on the number of Canadian
    refugees, 221; association of, with R.
    B. Hayes, 282.
  • Coffin, Vestal, organizer of U. G. R. R.
    near Guilford College, N.C., 1819,
    117.
  • Coleman, family of refugees near Detroit,
    236.
  • Collins, James H., counsel in defence of
    Owen Lovejoy, 283.
  • Colonies, fugitive slave clause in treaties
    between Indian tribes and, 91, 92; of
    fugitive slaves in Canada, 205; Dawn
    Settlement, 205–207; Elgin Settlement,
    207–209; Refugees' Home Settlement,
    209, 210; Dr. S. G. Howe on refugee,
    211, 212; his criticism of, answered,
    213, 214, 217; services of, 215, 216; conclusions
    concerning, 217; question of
    extradition between American, 290.
  • Commissioners, duties of, under the second
    Fugitive Slave Law, 265; creation
    of, due to decision in Prigg's case, 266;
    surrender of James Hamlet by one of,
    269; power of, questioned, 269–271;
    observations of, regarding their own
    authority, 271; remuneration of, 271.
  • Committees of Vigilance. See Vigilance
    Committees.
  • Communication, methods of, 56; facsimile
    and other illustrations of messages,
    10, 57, 58, 59, 79 n.; use of
    signals across Delaware River, 125;
    ease of, contributes to swell number
    of fugitives 316.

  • 448

    Page 448
  • Compromise of 1850, relation of second
    Fugitive Slave Law to, 265, 311; repetition
    of, with modifications, proposed
    in 1860, 285, 286; not a finality, 320;
    how regarded by Northern people,
    324; failure of, 357
  • Coneklin, Seth, abductor, 157, 160–162.
  • Conductors, methods of, 60, 61, 64; significance
    of the title, 67; regularly
    employed, 69, 70; number of, 87;
    their hospitality, 88, 89; their principles,
    89, 90; their nationality, 90,
    91; their church connections, 93–98;
    political affiliations of, 99–101; character
    of, 101; penalties suffered by,
    102; proposed Defensive League of
    Freedom in behalf of, 103, 104; notable
    persons among, 105–112.
  • Confederation, New England (1643),
    provision in, for delivery of fugitives,
    19; Articles of, quoted, 19.
  • Congregational Church, operators
    among members of, 96–98, 168; abductor
    Charles T. Torrey, clergyman
    of, 168.
  • Congress, speech of J. R. Giddings in
    lower House on fugitive slaves, 105;
    speech of Owen Lovejoy in lower
    House on fugitive slaves, 107; the
    expedition of the Pearl subject of
    debate in, 173, 174; resolution of 1838
    in, providing for punishment of persons
    aiding fugitives, 193; petitions
    presented by Kentuckians in upper
    House declaring danger of slave-hunting
    in Ohio, 242; Fugitive Slave Law
    of 1793 in, 254; power of, to legislate
    on subject of fugitive slaves, 255, 263,
    264, 268; cases growing out of differences
    between slave laws of the state
    and of, 260, 261; counsel for fugitives
    elected to, 282; excitement in, caused
    by last case under law of 1850, 285;
    agitation in, for new slave law in 1860,
    memorials to, praying for repeal of law
    of 1850, attacks on slavery in, 286;
    repeal of fugitive slave legislation by,
    288, 289, 358; Continental, incorporation
    of fugitive slave clause in Northwest
    Ordinance by, 293; attempts at
    amendment of law of 1793 in lower
    House, 295, in both Houses, 296; agitation
    for new slave law (1817), 296,
    297, 301, 309–311; Kentucky resolutions
    against admission of fugitives
    to Canada, presented to, 299; Slave
    Law of 1850 adopted by, 311, 312, 314,
    315; message of President Fillmore to,
    December, 1850, 318; Senate supports
    the President in enforcing Fugitive
    Slave Law, 319; Gerrit Smith, member
    of, 320; Sumner in Senate, on execution
    of, 325; Racine mass-meeting
    declares null and void the law of,
    327, 328; charged with improper assumption
    of powers by convention
    in Cleveland, 336; complaints of
    Southern members of, on account
    of loss of slaves, 340–342; Southern,
    members of, on existence of Underground
    Railroads, 351, 352; argument
    in, to prevent secession of border
    states, 355; caution of, in dealing
    with fugitive slave question in crisis
    of the War, 355; inexpediency of return
    of fugitives by the army, recognized
    by, 356; acts of, leading up to
    repeal of Fugitive Slave Law, 356; agitation
    in and out of, for rigorous
    Fugitive Slave Law, 357.
  • Congressmen, operators among, 92, 105–
    108; anti-slavery champions among,
    173; pro-slavery champions among,
    173.
  • Conlisk, James, 92.
  • Connecticut, colony of, 19; underground
    work of Samuel J. May in, 36, 109;
    anti-slavery men from, organize Scioto
    Company, 38; reward offered Indians
    by, for apprehending fugitives, 92;
    personal liberty law of, 245, 246, 309;
    law of colony of, against aiding fugitives,
    292; emancipation by, 293.
  • Conservative party, affiliation of negro
    voters in Canada with, 233.
    Constitution of United States, fugitive
    slave clause in, quoted, 20; effect of
    incorporation of fugitive slave clause
    in, 30; burned at meeting of abolitionists,
    101; Giddings on relation of
    the law of 1850 to, 105; quoted in
    support of immediatism, 206; ineffectiveness
    of the fugitive slave clause
    in, 255; trial by jury provided for in
    amendments of, 257; amendment of,
    quoted against Fugitive Slave Law,
    258; slaves not parties to, 259; slave-owner's
    rights under, 259, 261; paramount
    to Ordinance of 1787, 263;
    legislative warrant of Congress under,

    449

    Page 449
    264; effect on execution of, due
    to Prigg decision, 265; Prigg decision
    on language of, 267; amendments to,
    proposed by Buchanan in 1860, 286,
    353, 354; adoption of Thirteenth
    Amendment to, 289, 356; fugitive
    slave clause embodied in, 293; disavowal
    of fugitive recovery clause
    of, by Liberty party, 310; Webster
    on disregard of the slave clause in,
    314; limitations of state courts under,
    330; Ohio urges repeal of laws injuring
    efficiency of, 354.
  • Contemporaneous documents, rarity of,
    7; Still's collection of, 7, 8; Parker's
    memoranda, 8; notes left by John
    Brown, 8, 9, 165; records of Jirch
    Platt, 9; leaf from diary of Daniel
    Osborn, 9, 10; extant letters, 10; letter
    of William Steel, 51, 52; memorandum
    of David Putnam, Jr., 55;
    facsimile of message of John Stone,
    other messages, 57, 58; letter of
    Thomas Lee, 58, 59; letters of E. F.
    Pennypacker, 79 n., 143 n.; letter of
    Francis Jackson, 99; item from Theodore
    Parker's Journal, 109; letter
    of Parker, 110; letter of Rev. N.
    R. Johnston, 161; letter of McKiernon,
    161, 162; letters relating to Harriet
    Tubman, 185, 186, 188, 189;
    certificate of clerk of court in Sloane's
    case, 277 n.; advertisement of runaway
    slave, 287; facsimile of Osborn's
    record, 344, 345; letter of Col. J.
    Bowles, 347–350.
  • Continental Congress, incorporation of
    slave clause in Northwest Ordinance
    by, 293.
  • Contributing members, significance of
    name, 67.
  • Conveyance of fugitive slaves, schedule
    of "trains," 55; variety of methods
    of, 59; by vehicle, 60, 61; as freight, 60,
    155; by rail, 78–80, 142–145; by water,
    81–84, 144, 145; methods employed by
    abductor Fairbank, 158, 160; in
    Brown's raid, 164, 165; in Drayton's
    expeditions, 172, 173.
  • Conway, Judge, 347.
  • Cook, Hon. B. C., counsel in fugitive
    slave cases, 283, 284.
  • Cornell, Cornelius, 124.
  • Corwin, R. C., 39.
  • Cotton-gin, effect of invention of, 26.
  • Counsel for fugitive slaves, 281–285,
    308, 309, 353.
  • Court, decisions terminate slavery in
    Canada, 191–193; provision in state
    Fugitive Slave laws for action by, 237,
    238; Wright vs. Deacon in, 256, 257;
    Peter alias Lewis Martin in, 257;
    Commonwealth vs. Griffith in, 258;
    Prigg vs. Pennsylvania in, 259–261, 264;
    State vs. Hoppess in, 262; Vaughan
    vs. Williams in, 262; Jones vs. Van
    Zandt in, 262; various courts on irreconcilability
    between law of 1793 and
    Ordinance of 1787, 262, 264; authority
    of United States commissioners, 265,
    271; case of Sims in, 269, 270; Scott's
    case in, 269, 270; Miller vs. McQuerry,
    269, 270; Booth's case in, 270, 279,
    329, 330; case of ex parte Robinson
    in, 270; case of ex parte Simeon Bushnell
    in, 270; speech of Justice Nelson
    to grand jury in, 272; action for penalty
    under law of 1798 in, 273; prosecution
    in, 274; prosecution of John
    Van Zandt in, 274; Norris vs. Newton
    in, 276; Oliver vs. Weakley in, 276;
    case of Sloane in, 276, 277; case of F.
    D. Parish in, 277; Oberlin-Wellington
    rescue case in, 279, 336; arguments of
    Chase and Seward in, 282; hearing of
    fugitive Jim Gray in, 283, 284; provision
    for appeal to United States Circuit
    in proposed Fugitive Slave Law
    of 1860, 286; provision in House fugitive
    slave bill of 1817 in regard to
    proof of title before, 296, 297; constitutionality
    of law of 1850 contested in,
    327; constitutional limitation of state,
    330; clash between federal and state,
    334, 335; effect of jurisdiction of
    United States, on abolitionists, 335;
    trial of the fugitive Anderson before
    the Canadian, 353.
  • Covenanters, friends of fugitives, 13–15,
    32, 90, 115, 235. See Presbyterian
    Church.
  • Cowgill, Dr. Thomas, 38.
  • Craft, Ellen and William, 82, 252; rescue
    of, 317.
  • Crittenden, Gov. John J., pardons abductor
    Fairbank, 159.
  • Crocker, Mrs. Mary E., operator, 132.
  • Cross, Rev. John, prosecution of, 50, 51.
  • Crosswhite family, seizure of, 102.
  • Crothers, Rev. Samuel, 32.

  • 450

    Page 450
  • Cruse, David, victim of Brown's raid,
    163.
  • Cummings, Jacob, 154.
  • Curtis, George T., on the power of a
    commissioner, 271.
  • Cushing, Deacon, arrest of, 283.
  • Dalby, Mr., fugitive slave of, 33.
  • Dana, Richard H., visit of, to Brown's
    farm at North Elba, 127; counsel for
    runaways, 283; counsel for Burns,
    331.
  • Dane, Nathan, on rendition of slaves in
    Northwest Territory, 293.
  • Daniels, Jim, appeal of, to John Brown,
    162.
  • Danvers Historical Society, report of,
    on route of U. G. R. R., 133.
  • Davis, Charles G., counsel for fugitives,
    283.
  • Davis, Jefferson, on escape of slaves
    from Mississippi, 82, 312, 313; on prospects
    of non-execution of law of 1850,
    315.
  • Davis, Joel P., map by, 140.
  • Dawes, Gen. R. R., on communication
    in underground service, 56 n.
  • Day, Dr., capture and incarceration of,
    349.
  • Deacon, case of Wright vs., 256, 257.
  • Dean, John, counsel for fugitive slave,
    285.
  • De Baptiste, George, agent, 70.
  • Declaration of Independence, quoted by
    abolitionists, 24; principles of, 30; as
    an "abolition tract," 31; preamble of,
    89; quoted in support of immediatism,
    306.
  • Defensive League of Freedom, proposed,
    103, 104.
  • Delaware, reminiscences relating to, 11;
    anti-slavery Quakers in, 31; Joseph
    G. Walker of Wilmington, 67; Thomas
    Garrett, of Wilmington, 110, 111, 117,
    322; route in, 117, 118; refugee from,
    195; loss of slaves by, 312.
  • Democratic party, legislative action
    against Oberlin College proposed by,
    97; character of, 100; congressional
    vote of, on Slave Law of 1850, 315;
    Compromise of 1850 regarded as a
    finality by, 320; governors belonging
    to, on personal liberty laws,
    354.
  • Dennett, Mrs. Oliver, operator, 133.
  • Deportation, places of, for fugitive
    slaves, 36, 66, 82, 83, 145–148.
  • Destitution, among fugitives, 76–78, 109,
    222, 223.
  • Detroit, crossing-place for runaways,
    66, 147; agents in, 70; J. M. Howard,
    operator at, 106; secret paths leading
    to, 135, 138; arrival of John Brown and
    his abducted slaves in, 165; supplies
    for Canadian refugees shipped to, 203;
    fugitive settlers near, 236; loss of colored
    members from church of, 250.
  • Detroit River, escape of thousands
    across, 147.
  • Devices for secrecy, 14; need of, 47;
    midnight service one of the, 54–56;
    guarded communications one of the,
    56–59; hidden methods of conveyance
    one of the, 59–61; zigzag routes one
    of the, 61, 62, 302; concealment of
    fugitives one of the, 62–64; use of disguises
    one of the, 64–67; multiple
    routes and switch connections one
    of the, 70, 137, 141; employed by abductor
    Rial Cheadle, 179; employed
    by Dr. A. M. Ross, 181, 182, 187; employed
    by Harriet Tubman, 187, 188;
    often neglected during period 1840–
    1860, 337.
  • Dewey, Rev. Dr., loyalty to Slave Law
    of, 238.
  • Dickey, Rev. William, 32.
  • Dickey family, 87.
  • Dillingham, Richard, charged with belonging
    to organized band of abductors,
    30; attempted abduction by, 174, 175.
  • Disguises, used in helping fugitives,
    64–67; employed by Fairbank, 160;
    kept by Joseph Sider for use in abductions,
    157.
  • Dismal Swamp, place of refuge, 25.
  • District of Columbia, abduction from,
    155; disappearance of slavery from,
    attributed to U. G. R. R., 341, 342.
  • Dixon, Richard, 38.
  • Dobbins, Rev. Robert B., 32.
  • Dodge, Hon. Simeon, on U.G. R.R. from
    1840 to 1860, 36, 37; on route in New
    Hampshire, 132; an operator, 133.
  • Dodge, of Indiana, vote on Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1850, 314.
  • Doherty, Fisher, 65, 66.
  • Dolarson, George, agent, 70.
  • Donnell and Hamilton, Ray vs. case of,
    278.

  • 451

    Page 451
  • Dorsey, Basil, rescue of, 84, 85.
  • Douglas Bill, U. G. R. R. work before
    and after, 194.
  • Doaglass, Frederick, aided in New York
    City, 3; collections made for fugitives
    by TTS; refugees shipped over Sew
    York Central by, 80; as agent in the
    South before his "escape, 91, on
    excitement involved in his sec ret work,
    104; ou Albany route, 125, 126; on
    Brown's plan of liberation, 166; on
    Harriet Tubman, 185; many runa
    ways assisted by, 251, 253; a noted
    passenger of the U. G. R. R., 340.
  • Doyle, Dr., host of John Brown, 164.
  • Drayton, Capt. Daniel, abduction of
    slave family by, 172; expedition of,
    with steamer Pearl, 172–174.
  • Drayton, Hon. William, fugitive slave
    of, 33.
  • Dred Scott decision, denounced in eastern
    Ohio, 336.
  • Drew, Benjamin, on employments of
    Canadian refugees, 204; on Dresden
    and Dawn Colonies in Canada, 207;
    on effect of Slave Bill of 1850 on fugitive
    settlers in Northern states, 213;
    on morality in Dawn Settlement, 216;
    on early arrival of refugees in Canada,
    218; list of refugee communities mentioned
    by, 219; on thrift of colored
    settlers in Canada, 227; on schools for
    refugees, 229.
  • Duncan, Rev. James, on immediate
    abolition, 304–306; political action
    against slavery early advocated by,
    305 n.
  • Durkee, Chauncey, 278.
  • Dutch, agreement of New Haven with
    the, for surrender of fugitive slaves,
    19.
  • Dutton, A. P., runaways sent by boat to
    Canada by, 82, 83.
  • Dyer, Dr. C. V., conductor, 144.
  • "Early Settlement and Growth of
    Western Iowa." chapters of, valuable
    for history of U. G. R. R., 7.
  • Eastern states, hidden routes leading to,
    120.
  • Edgerton. Hon. Sidney, operator. 106.
  • Edwards, William, cause of flight of,
    27.
  • Eells, Dr. Richard, case of, 278, 282.
  • Elgin Association, formation and purpose
    of, 202, 207; growth of, 208; improvement
    of, 209; Dr. Howe on, 212;
    regulations of, 215–217; new settlers',
    of, 218; special schools for negroes of,
    229.
  • Elgin, Lord, participation of, in securing
    lands for Canadian refugees, 202,
    207; on extradition of fugitive Anderson,
    353.
  • Eliza, escape of, in Uncle Tom's Cabin,
    322.
  • Emancipation, celebration of West Indian,
    by Canadian refugees, 226, 227;
    gradual, criticised by Rev. James
    Duncan, 305.
  • Emancipation Proclamation, Philadelphia
    Vigilance Committee terminated
    by, 75; restricted operation of, 287,
    356.
  • Emerson, R. W., friend of Harriet Tubman,
    186.
  • England, Rev. W. M. Mitchell in, his
    book entitled Underground Railroad
    published in, 3; fugitive slaves shipped
    to, 82, 133, 145; Cowper's stanza on
    hospitality of, to slaves, quoted, 149;
    act abolishing slavery in colonies of,
    190; refuses extradition, 192; Clay
    on England's admission of fugitives
    to Canada, 201; money collected in,
    for benefit of refugees, 206; escape of
    fugitives to, after passage of law of
    1850, 249; negotiations with, regarding
    extradition, 299, 300, 302; escape
    of William and Ellen Craft to, 317.
  • English Colonial Church and School
    Society, schools for refugees maintained
    by, 215.
  • English settlers, underground work of,
    92.
  • Episcopal Church, appeal to societies of,
    99.
  • Estimate of fugitives escaping into
    Ohio, same for Philadelphia, 346.
  • Eustace, Hon. J. V., counsel in fugitive
    slave case, 284.
  • Evans, John, 197.
  • Evans, Philip, 70.
  • Everett, John, conductor, 124.
  • Experiment, the, on number of lines of
    escape in Ohio, 135.
  • Fairbank, Calvin, abductor, 28, 61,
    150, 157–159, 251; devices of, 65, 160;
    on refugee settlers near Detroit, 236.

  • 452

    Page 452
  • Fairehild, James H., pamphlet on The
    Underground Railroad
    by, 5; on
    Oberlin as an anti-slavery centre,
    89, 97.
  • Fairfield, John, the abductor, devices
    of, 65–67, 153, 178.
  • Falley, Lewis, map of underground
    routes in Indiana by, 137–139.
  • Federal Convention, a concession of, to
    slavery, 20; fugitive slave clause embodied
    in United States Constitution
    by, 293; work of, ratified by state conventions,
    294.
  • Fessenden, Gen. Samuel, operator, 106,
    133; address of, at funeral of Charles
    T. Torrey, 170.
  • Fifteenth Amendment, adoption of, celebrated
    in Cincinnati, 111.
  • Fillmore, Millard, pardon of Capt. Drayton
    by, 173; signed Fugitive Slave
    Law of 1850, 314; on the Fugitive
    Slave Law, 318; attempt of, to enforce
    the law, 319; connection of, with the
    Shadrach rescue and Christiana
    tragedy, 319.
  • Firelands Pioneer, on Underground
    Railroad, 5.
  • Fisher, Hon. M. M., on New Bedford
    route, 130.
  • Florida, a refuge for runaways, 25; escape
    of slave from Jacksonville, 81,
    145; Capt. Walker's attempted abduction
    of slaves from, 170.
  • Foote, Mr., 173.
  • Forsyth, J. M., reminiscence of, 13.
  • Fort Malden, C.W. See Amherstburg.
  • Foster, Stephen and Abby Kelley,
    operators, 132.
  • Fountain, Capt., abduction by, from
    Virginia, 81.
  • Fountain City, Ind., work of Levi Coffin
    in, 111; multiple routes of, 141.
  • Fox, George, anti-slavery principles of,
    93.
  • Frances, Dr., 109, 110.
  • Frazee, John H., operator, 88.
  • Frazier, Wim. A., reward for abduction
    of, 53.
  • Free Presbyterian Church, formation
    of, 96.
  • Freedman's Bureau, establishment of,
    111.
  • Freedom, slaves' love of, 14, 25, 178,
    195–197.
  • Free Soil party, 100, 306; principles of,
    321; abolitionists' share in organization
    of, 326; state convention of, at
    time of attempted rescue of Burns, 332.
  • From Dixie to Canada, by H. U. Johnson,
    4.
  • Fry, Gen. Speed S., 159, 160.
  • Fugitive slaves, memoranda of, in transit,
    9, 10; hiding-places of, 13, 63, 64;
    routes of, in southern Illinois, 14, 15,
    135, 139, 141; in eastern Indiana, 16,
    137, 138, 141, 142; rendition of, in the
    colonies, 19, 20; refuges of, in the
    Southern states and adjoining regions,
    25; United States census reports on, 26,
    342, 343; by whom encouraged along
    the way, 32; rescue of, 38, 39, 83–86,
    240, 273, 275, 276, 284, 336; earliest
    arrivals of, in Canada, 43; pursuit of,
    51, 52; methods of conveying, 59–62;
    transportation of, over steam railroads,
    59, 78–81, 122–124, 128, 130, 132,
    133, 142–145, 164, 165; disguises furnished,
    64–67; destitution among, 76–
    78, 109; transportation of, by boat,
    82, 83, 146–148; escapes of, to England,
    82, 133, 145, 249, 317; friends of, in
    Iowa, 95, 98, 194, 195; Oberlin, a well-known
    refuge for, 97; prosecutions for
    aiding, 102, 103, 254, 273–281, 283–285,
    317; notable friends of, 104–112;
    main routes of, 118, 119, 134; routes of,
    through Pennsylvania, 120–123, through
    New Jersey and New York, 123–128,
    through Massachusetts, 128–133,
    through Vermont, 130, 131; James
    Freeman Clarke on protection given, in
    Boston, 132 n.; routes of, through New
    Hampshire and Maine, 133, 134, Ohio,
    134–137, 140, Western states, 134–141;
    Ontario the goal of the great majority
    of, 140, 147; escapes of, by sea, 144, 145;
    journey of John Brown and party of,
    through Iowa, 164; use of, in Brown's
    plan of liberation, 167; delight of, on
    reaching Canada, 178, 196, 197; escape
    of, from Canada to United States, 190;
    rumors of Canada among, 192; numbers
    of, early forwarded to Canada,
    192; resolution in Congress regarding
    friends of, 193; number of, arriving
    daily in Canada, 194; character of Canadian
    refugees, states whence they came,
    195; general condition of, in Canada,
    198; treatment of, in Canada, 199–201;
    attitude of Canadian government toward,

    453

    Page 453
    201–203; befriended by Indians
    in Canada, 203; colonies of, in Canada,
    205; Dawn Settlement of, 205–207;
    Elgin Settlement of, 207, 209; occupation
    of, in the colonies, 207, 223, 224,
    226; progress of, in Canada, 208, 209,
    224–228; Refugees' Home Settlement
    of, 209, 210; purpose of the colonies,
    210, 211; Howe's criticism of the colonies,
    211, 212; defence of the colonies,
    212–217; fugitive settlers in the towns
    of Canada, 217, 218, 225, 226; spread
    of, in Ontario, 218, 219; in the Eastern
    provinces, 219; number of abiding
    places for, in Canada, 219, 220; population
    of, in Canada, 220–222; destitute
    condition of, on arrival, 222, 223;
    domestic relations of, 227, 228; schools
    for, in Canada, 228–230; associations
    for self-improvement among, 230, 231;
    taxable property of, 232; political
    rights of, in Canada, 233; their value
    as citizens, 233, 234; numbers of, and
    risks of, settling in Northern states,
    236–238; pursuit of, 240, 241, 317;
    seizure of, under law of 1850, 241, 242;
    increased difficulty of reclamation of,
    in Northern states, 242, 243; mass-meetings
    in favor of, 244; enactment
    of personal liberty laws in defence of,
    245, 246; consternation among, in the
    North, due to law of 1850, 246–248,
    316; Boston a favorite resort for, 246;
    exodus of, from the States, 249, 250;
    continued residence of, in the States
    after passage of law of 1850, 250, 251;
    underground men among, 251–253;
    question of state's power to legislate
    concerning, 260, 261; first congressional
    enactment concerning, questioned,
    263, 264; effect of Prigg decision
    in Northern states, 265; penalties
    under law of 1850 for aiding, 271;
    fervor in aiding, after 1850, 273, 357;
    penalties for aiding, 273–281; counsel
    for, 281–285, 308, 309; arrest of friends
    of, 283–285; army officers forbidden
    to restore, 287; colonial laws against,
    290–293; question of extradition of, in
    1787, 293; Kentucky's protest against
    admission of, to Canada, 299; significance
    of diplomatic negotiations regarding,
    300; effect of appeal of, 301;
    from the border and cotton states,
    312; non-delivery of, as a Southern
    grievance, 314; as missionaries in the
    cause of freedom, 323, 348, 357; Garrison
    on, as public speakers, 325 n.;
    Sumner on the import of the appeal
    of, to Northern communities, 325; increasing
    number after 1850, 338; computation
    of number aided in Ohio and
    Philadelphia, 346; letter regarding aid
    given to, at Lawrence, Kan., 347–350;
    significance of controversy in regard
    to, 356.
  • Fugitive slave cases, 102, 103, 254, 273–
    281, 283–285, 317; during period 1840–
    1860, 337.
  • Fugitive Slave Law of 1793, substance
    of, 21, 22; inefficiency of, 22, 31, 47;
    support of state laws given to, 22, 237,
    238; origin of demand for, 254; analysis
    and characterization of, 254, 255;
    appeal to Ordinance of 1787 for overthrow
    of, 262; court decisions on irreconcilability
    between Ordinance of
    1787 and, 263; constitutionality of,
    264, 265; prosecutions and penalties
    under, 272–281; Josiah Quincy counsel
    in one of the earliest cases under,
    283; early resistance to, 294, 295;
    attempts at amendment of, 295–298;
    effect of Prigg decision on effective
    ness of, 309.
  • Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, reason for
    enactment of, 2; destruction of records
    of fugitives aided, due to, 7, 10,
    11; Parker's memoranda of resistance
    to, in Boston, 8; causes which led to
    enactment of, 22, 44, 173, 174, 265,
    290, 309–311, 357; substance of, 23;
    effect of, 24, 25, 40, 44, 48, 71–76, 187,
    193, 194, 213, 214, 240, 241, 249, 250,
    316, 317, 321, 323, 337, 338; insistance
    of lower Southern states on
    enactment of, 30; penalties provided
    by, 48, 102; vigilance committees a
    product of, 71–76; denunciation of,
    by Theodore Parker, 90; appeal to
    churches evoked by, 98, 99; Defensive
    League of Freedom for persons violating,
    103, 104; Congressman J. R.
    Giddings defies, 105; members of
    Congress violating, 106–108; other
    notable persons among violators of,
    109–112; abductions following the passage
    of, 153–155, 159–166, 175, 181–183,
    187–189; the U. G. R. R. and the, 193,
    290; Dr. Howe on effect of, 194 n.;

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    effect of, on the arrival of slaves in
    Canada, 194, 213, 214; Benj. Drew on
    effect of, 213; Josiah Henson on effect
    of, 214; homage paid to, 238, 239;
    resistance to, condemned by newspapers,
    239; slave-hunting after enactment
    of, 240, 241; active resistance to,
    in the North, 243–246; object of, 243;
    consternation among fugitives in the
    North over, 246–248, exodus of fugitives
    from, and continued residence
    in Northern states after passage of,
    249–251; grounds of attack upon legality
    of, 255; Prof. Eugene Wambaugh
    on the dilemma involved in, 256 n.;
    question of trial by jury under, 256,
    257; Prigg decision leads to, 265; supplementary
    to law of 1793, 265; objec
    tionable features of, 266–273; old and
    new arguments brought against, 268;
    remuneration of commissioners under,
    271; prosecutions and penalties under,
    272–281; public denunciation of, 272,
    318, 327–329, 333, 336; failure of penalties
    under, to deter resistance to,
    272, 273; arguments against, by Chase
    and Seward, 282; last case under,
    285; amendment proposed in 1860
    recognizing validity of, 286; after
    1861, 287; repeal of, 288; efforts which
    led up to, 297, 298, 301; Webster's,
    Clay's, and Calhoun's support of, 314;
    enactment of, 314; by whom passed,
    315; enforcement of, 316–318; open
    resistance to, 318–320; the law of
    1850 and Uncle Tom's Cabin, 321;
    Sumner's efforts in Senate to secure
    repeal of, 324–326; open defiance of,
    during decade 1850–1860, 326 et seq.;
    penetrating criticism of, by able counsel,
    327; pronounced unconstitutional
    by Wisconsin convention, 329; hostility
    to, in Illinois, 333; open violation
    of, in Oberlin-Wellington rescue case,
    335; repeal of, demanded by Republican
    party, 337; Claiborne on the failure
    of, to make compensation to the
    South for abducted slaves, 341; violation
    of, charged against the North by
    Southern congressmen during sessions
    of 1860–1861, 351, 352; Buchanan on
    enforcement of, during his administration,
    353; purpose of Lincoln to
    execute, 355; question of obligation
    to restore fugitives, 356.
  • Fuller, James C., 206.
  • Fullerton, Rev. Hugh S., 32.
  • Furber, James, operator, 133.
  • Fyffe, W. B., reminiscences of, entitled
    "History of Anti-Slavery Days," 6;
    map of route in Illinois, by, 139.
  • Galesburg, Ill., old First Church of,
    as U. G. R. R. station, 64; anti-slavery
    Presbyterians in, 96; importance of,
    as a centre, 97.
  • Gallatin, on negotiations with England
    regarding extradition of fugitives,
    299, 300.
  • Gannett, Dr. E. S., loyalty of, to Slave
    Law, 238.
  • Gardner, Ozem, 89.
  • Garland, B. W., claimant of Joshua
    Glover, 327.
  • Garner, Margaret, case of, 302; effect
    upon public opinion of case of, 302,
    303.
  • Garretson, Joseph, 57.
  • Garrett, Thomas, reward for abduction
    of, 53; disguises provided by, 64;
    ships fugitives by boat, 82; a devotee
    of U. G. R. R., 110, 111; on Harriet
    Tubman, 188; aid given to Harriet
    Tubman by, 189; Mrs. H. B. Stowe
    on, 322.
  • Garrison, William Lloyd, abstinence
    from voting of, 100, 101; predecessors
    of, in advocacy of immediate abolition,
    303–308; acquaintance of, with
    Rankin's Letters on Slavery, 308; address
    to Southern bondmen by, 310;
    on fugitives as public speakers, 325 n.;
    preparation of the way for, 357.
  • Garrisonian abolitionists, principles of,
    100, 101.
  • Gay, Sydney Howard, an efficient agent,
    108.
  • Geneva College, influence of, 115.
  • Geography of U. G. R. R., feasibility of
    representing the, 113; extent of, 113,
    114; number and distribution of stations,
    114, 115; Southern routes, 116–
    118; main channels of flight of slaves,
    118, 119; lines of Pennsylvania, New
    Jersey, and New York, 119, 120;
    routes of eastern Pennsylvania, 120–
    122; routes of western Pennsylvania,
    122, 123; outlets through New Jersey,
    123–125; routes of New York, 125–128;
    routes of New England states, 128,

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    Page 455
    129; lines of Massachusetts, 129, 130,
    132; routes of Vermont, 130, 131;
    branches of Rhode Island and Connecticut,
    131; routes of New Hampshire,
    132, 133; routes of Maine, 133, 134;
    secret paths in the Western states,
    134; lines in Ohio, 135; routes of
    Illinois, Michigan, and Iowa, 135, 136;
    examination of map of Morgan
    County, O., 136, 137; study of Falley's
    map of Indiana and Michigan
    routes, 137–139; map of simple route
    in Illinois, noteworthy features of
    general map, 139; trend of lines, 139–
    141; multiple and intricate trails, 141;
    broken lines and isolated place names,
    141, 142; river routes, 142; routes by
    rail, 142–144; routes by sea, 144, 145;
    terminal stations, 145–147; lines of
    lake travel, 147, 148; Canadian ports,
    148, 149.
  • Georgia, route from northern, 119; in
    Brown's plan of liberation, 167: Canadian
    refugees from, 195; William
    and Ellen Craft from, 317; convention
    on execution of Fugitive Slave Law
    of 1850, 318, 319; charges of bad faith
    preferred against the North by Jones
    of, 351.
  • Germans, attitude of, toward fugitive
    slaves, 92, 93, 355, 356.
  • Gibbons, Daniel, number of fugitives
    aided by, 10, 87, 88.
  • Gibbs, Mr., agent, 126.
  • Gibbs, Jacob, assistant of Rev. Charles
    T. Torrey, 169.
  • Giddings, Joshua R., friend of bondmen,
    7; source of abolition ideas of, 31;
    hiding-place in house of, 63; on attitude
    of North toward enforcement of
    law of 1850, 105, 106, 315, 316; champion
    of anti-slavery party in Congress,
    173.
  • Gilliland, Rev. James, 32, 41, 95.
  • Giltner vs. Gorham, case of, 275.
  • Glover, Joshua, arrest of, as fugitive,
    327; rescue of, 328, 329.
  • Glover, J. O., counsel for runaways, 284.
  • Goens, Reuben, visit to Canada by, 199.
  • Goodnow, Lyman, 92.
  • Gorham, Giltner vs., case of, 275.
  • Gorsuch, in Christiana case, 280, 319.
  • Grand Trunk Railroad, 80, 81, 133.
  • Grant, of firm of Baxter and, owners of
    Lewis Hayden, 158.
  • " Grape-vine telegraph," used by aboli
    tionists, 56.
  • Gray, Jim, fugitive from Missouri, 283.
  • Gray, Jonathan H., 88.
  • Gray, O. C., counsel for runaways, 284.
  • Gray, Thomas L., reminiscences of, 6;
    number of slaves aided by, 89; on abductor
    Rial Cheadle, 178, 179.
  • Grier, Justice, charge of, to jury in the
    Mitchell case, 279; charge of, to jury
    in the Christiana case, 281.
  • Griffith, Commonwealth vs., case of,
    258.
  • Grimes, Rev. Leonard B., organizer of
    Church of the Fugitive Slaves, 246,
    250, 251.
  • Grinnell, Hon. J. B., receiver of fugitives,
    58; "liberty room" in house
    of, 108; host of John Brown, 164.
  • Guilford College, N.C., organization of
    U. G. R. R. near, 40, 117.
  • Gunn, Erastus F., on route in Massachusetts.
  • Hale, John P., a champion of antislavery
    party in Congress, 173.
  • Halliday, Simeon, counterpart of, in real
    life known by Mrs. Stowe, 322.
  • Hamilton, Ray vs. Donnell and, case
    of, 278.
  • Hamlet, James, case of, first under
    Slave Law of 1850, 269.
  • Hanway, Castner, part of, in Christiana
    case, 280, 281.
  • Harper, Jean, one of party abducted by
    John Brown, 163.
  • Harper's Ferry, prelude to, 162; plan
    of attack upon, reported by Hinton,
    167; effect of attack upon, on value
    of slave property, 339.
  • Harrod, Leonard, on slave's desire for
    freedom, 195.
  • Harvard University, scholarship in,
    founded by escaped slave, Harriet
    Hayden, 158; action of overseers of,
    against Loring, 333.
  • Harwood, Edward, 64.
  • Haviland, Mrs. Laura S., on labors of
    abductor Fairfield, 153, 154; attempted
    abduction by, 171, 172; work of, in
    Refugees' Home, 210; Sunday-school
    of, for fugitives, 230; intercession of,
    for the runaway Anderson, 353.
  • Hayden, Harriet, bequest of, to Harvard
    University, 158.

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    Page 456
  • Hayden, Lewis, abduction of, 158; operator,
    251, 252.
  • Hayes family, 15.
  • Hayes, Rutherford B., counsel in fugitive
    slave cases, 282; on effect of
    Margaret Garner case, 303.
  • Haywood, William, on underground
    route in Indiana, 16.
  • Henson, Josiah, knowledge of Canada
    carried among slaves by, 28; as abductor,
    176–178; on condition of Canadian
    refugees, 198; founder of school
    in Canada, 205; on work of British
    and American Institute, 214; on morality
    of Dawn Settlement, 216; on
    refugee population, 220, 221; lumber
    industry established by, 223; lectures
    on farming by, 224; list of towns
    where refugees settled according to,
    225; on number of fugitive settlers in
    Northern states, 237; on effects of
    Slave Law of 1850, 249; a notable passenger
    of U. G. R. R., 340.
  • Hiding-places, for fugitive slaves, 12,
    13, 14, 25, 40, 62–65, 131, 248, 251, 252,
    276, 280, 302.
  • Higginson, Col. T. W., indictment of,
    103; connection with U. G. R. R.,
    105, 132; on continued residence of
    fugitives in Massachusetts after passage
    of law of 1850, 250; part of,
    in attempted rescue of Burns, 331,
    332.
  • Hill vs. Low, case of, 273.
  • Hill, Leverett B., 88.
  • Hill, Milton, 88.
  • Hinton, Richard J., on escapes through
    Kansas, 114; on John Brown's plan
    of liberation, 166, 167; on Dr. A. M.
    Ross, 183 n.; on refugee population in
    Canada West, 221, 222.
  • History of Anti-Slavevry Days, reminiscences
    by W. B. Fyffe entitled, 6.
  • History of Springfield, Mass., account of
    Connecticut River route in, 127.
  • Hodge, D. B., on abduction by Canadian
    refugee, 152.
  • Holmes, of Massachusetts, objections
    of, to bill of 1817 as basis of new
    Slave Law, 297.
  • Holt, Horace, special conveyance of,
    for fugitives, 60.
  • Hood family, 15.
  • Hood, John, 14.
  • Hooper, John H., agent, 253.
  • Hope, A. R., author of Heroes in Homespun,
    2, 5.
  • Hopkins family, 87.
  • Hopkins, Capt. Amos, stowaway on
    brig of, 81.
  • Hopper, Isaac T., methods of secret
    emancipation early practised by, 34,
    35, 346, 347; fugitives sent by sea by,
    145.
  • Hoppess, State vs., case of, 256, 257,
    259, 262, 263.
  • Hossack, John, indicted for helping
    fugitives, 284.
  • Howard, Col. D. W. H., 37.
  • Howard, Edward, early operator, 37.
  • Howard, Senator Jacob M., 106.
  • Howe, Senator, of Wisconsin, bill for
    repeal of Fugitive Slave Law introduced
    by, 286.
  • Howe, Dr. S. G., on escape of slaves, 43,
    44; on abductions by Canadian refugees,
    152; on origin of U. G. R. R.,
    192; on effect of Slave Law of 1850,
    194; on reception of fugitives in Canada,
    201; on Elgin Settlement, 208,
    209; criticism of refugee colonies by,
    212–214; on organizations for relief of
    fugitives, 217; on number of colonies
    in Canada, 219; on refugee population
    of Canada, 220–222; on condition
    of farmers among Canadian refugees,
    224, 225; on their thrift, 226 n., 227;
    on their morality, 228; on their ability
    to read and write, 230; on their
    taxable property, 232; on their value
    as citizens, 234.
  • Hubbard, of Connecticut, on enlistment
    of colored soldiers, 288.
  • Hubbard and Company, fugitives shipped
    from warehouse of, 148.
  • Hudson, David, early operator, 37.
  • Hughes, Thomas, 49.
  • Hunn, Ezekiel, operator in Delaware,
    117.
  • Hunn, John, operator in Delaware, 117.
  • Hunt, N. A., on abducting methods of
    Mission Institute, 155, 156.
  • Hurlburt, Chauncey, 16.
  • Hyde, Udney, agent of U. G. R. R., 69;
    defender of fugitive Addison White,
    334.
  • Illinois, U. G. R. R. in southern, 14, 15;
    prospect of organization of, as a slaveholding
    state, 18; anti-slavery sentiment

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    in, 31; anti-slavery Southerners
    in, 32, 41, 91; rise of U. G. R. R. in,
    41, 42; secret operations at Dwight,
    61; reputed president of U. G. R. R.
    in, 69; underground helpers in, 70,
    88, 92; transportation for fugitives by
    rail in, 79; emancipated slaves in, 93;
    Owen Lovejoy of, declares in Congress
    his right to aid slaves, 107; Rev. Asa
    Turner on hidden thoroughfares in,
    114; population of various parts of,
    115; favorable situation of, 134; distribution
    of lines in, 135; chart of
    route in, 139; trend of lines in, broken
    lines and isolated place-names in, 141;
    deportation of fugitives from Chicago,
    147; abductors at southern extremity
    of, 151; abducting enterprises at
    Quincy, 155; vigorous work by abolitionists
    of, 194, 195; failure of, to pass
    full personal liberty law, 246; arrest
    of Owen Lovejoy and others, for aiding
    fugitives, 283; spirit of nullification
    in, 333.
  • Illinois Central Railroad, 79, 144.
  • Illinois River, a thoroughfare for fugitives,
    82.
  • Immediate abolition, early advocates of,
    303–306; Garrisonian movement, 307;
    early formulation of principle of, in
    underground neighborhoods, 357.
  • Independent, the, on escape of slaves
    from Missouri after 1850, 194; on
    "Ohio Underground Line," 195.
  • Indiana, Levi Coffin in, 4, 40, 41; newspaper
    contributions on routes of
    southern, 7; Grant County route in,
    15, 16; prospect of organization of, as
    a slaveholding state, 18; anti-slavery
    Quakers in, 31; beginnings of the
    U. G. R. R. in, 40, 41, 117; Clay on
    enforcement of law of 1850 in, 48;
    slave-hunters in, 53, 54, 65; aid rendered
    by Female Anti-Slavery Association
    in, 77; transportation by rail
    in, 79, 144; emancipated slaves in,
    important underground centres in, 93;
    secret work of Quakers in eastern, 94.;
    favorable situation of, 134; distribution
    of routes in, 135; Falley's map of
    lines in, 137–139; direction of routes
    in, 140; Fountain City route in, broken
    lines and isolated place-names in, 141;
    abductors along southern boundary
    of, 151; capture of abductor Concklin
    in, 161, 162; personal liberty law of,
    245, 246; rescue in, 275, 276; principles
    of Rev. James Duncan, of southeastern,
    304–306; vote of United States
    senators from, on law of 1850, 314.
  • Indians, effect of removal from Gulf
    states, 26, 308; aid given fugitives by,
    37, 38, 91, 92; hospitality of, in Canada,
    203; Dawn Institute attended by, 207.
  • Indian Territory, fugitives from, 284.
  • Insurrection of slaves, Brown's plan to
    arouse, 166–168; danger of, lessened
    by theU.G.R. R., 340.
  • Intelligencer, the, on "evil" of running
    off slaves, 194.
  • Iowa, reminiscences of the "Early Settlement
    and Growth of Western," 7;
    John Brown's journey through, 8, 9,
    164; organized as free state, 18; antislavery
    Quakers in, 31, 33; rise of
    U. G. R. R. in, 42, 43; escape of
    Nuckolls' slaves through, 52; transportation
    by rail in, 79; Methodist
    operators in, 95; underground lines
    in, 98, 114, 135, 136; direction of routes
    in, broken lines and isolated place-names
    in, 141; abductors along frontier
    of, 151; underground activity of
    abolitionists of, 194, 195; failure of, to
    pass full personal liberty law, 246;
    capture of operators in, 284.
  • Irdell, on fugitive slave clause in Constitution,
    294.
  • Irish settlers, underground work among,
    92.
  • Jack vs. Martin, case of, 256, 257, 260.
  • Jackson, Andrew, supported by Illinois
    on nullification question, 333.
  • Jackson, Francis, letter of, regarding
    church contributions for fugitives, 99.
  • Jackson, William, 132; on settlement
    of Queen's Bush, Canada, 204, 205.
  • Jacksonville, escape from, 81, 145.
  • Jacob, Gov. Richard T., pardons abductor
    Fairbank, 159, 160.
  • Jefferson, Thomas, "abolition tract"
    by, 31.
  • Jerry rescue. See Rescue of Jerry
    McHenry.
  • Johnson, attorney-general of Pennsylvania,
    on unconstitutionality of Fugitive
    Slave Law, 264.
  • Johnson family, fugitive settlers near
    Detroit, 236.

  • 458

    Page 458
  • Johnson, Gabe N., operator, 64.
  • Johnson, H. U., author of From Dixie
    to Canada
    , 2; characterization of his
    book, 4.
  • Johnson vs. Tompkins, case of, 273, 274.
  • Johnson, William, incident given by,
    showing misinformation about Canada
    among slaves, 197.
  • Johnston, Rev. N. R., letter of, on capture
    of abductor Concklin, 161.
  • Johnston, William, cause of flight of,
    27.
  • Johnston, William A., on beginnings of
    U. G. R. R. in Ohio, 39.
  • Jolliffe, Amos A., on routes in western
    Pennsylvania, 123.
  • Jolliffe, John, counsel for fugitives, 282.
  • Jones, John W., colored agent, 128, 143,
    252, 253.
  • Jones, of Georgia, brings charges against
    the North on account of U. G. R. R., 351.
  • Jones, of Indiana, vote of, on the Fugitive
    Slave Law, 314.
  • Jones, Thomas, on dissatisfaction in
    Refugees' Home Settlement, 216.
  • Jones vs. Van Zandt, case of, 262, 274,
    275.
  • Jones, William Box P., transportation
    of, as freight, 60.
  • Jury trial, denial of, to fugitives, 256,
    257.
  • Kagi and Stephens, responsible for
    shooting of David Cruse on Brown's
    raid, 163; arranges for eastern trip
    of Brown, 164, 165; Brown's plan of
    liberation related by, 166, 167.
  • Kanawha River, a thoroughfare for fugitives,
    82.
  • Kansas, Brown's journey through, 8, 9,
    136, 162–164; R. J. Hinton on escape
    of slaves through, 114, 119; personal
    liberty law of, 246; Bowles' letter on
    work of underground station of Lawrence,
    347–350.
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act, appeal to the
    churches evoked by, 99; mass-meetings
    in opposition to, 328; relation of
    Glover and Burns cases to, 331.
  • Kauffman, Daniel, prosecution of, 102.
  • Kelly, Abby, disowned by Uxbridge
    monthly meeting, 49.
  • Kelsey, Capt., master of an "abolitionist"
    boat, 82.
  • Kenderdine, John, 274.
  • Kentucky, news of Canada early brought
    into, 27; abducting trip of Dr. A. M.
    Ross into, 28; knowledge of Canada
    among slaves in, 28, 29, 37; negotiations
    of, with adjoining free states for
    extradition of fugitives, 47; slave-hunters
    from, 53, 54; abduction of
    slaves from Covington, 61; fugitives
    from, 85, 109; Rev. John Rankin in,
    109, 306; underground routes from,
    119; incident of rescue from plantation
    of, 153; abduction of the Hayden
    family from Lexington, 158; visit of
    Mrs. Haviland to, for purpose of abducting
    slaves, 171, 172; Henson's abduction
    of slaves from, 177, 178; Elijah
    Anderson, abductor, imprisoned in,
    183; abductions from, by John Mason,
    184; Canadian refugees from, 195;
    effect of slave-breeding in, 228; John
    Van Zandt, anti-slavery man from,
    274, 275; rescue of fugitives escaped
    from, 275, 276; Mallory of, on repeal
    of law of 1850, 288; resolution of,
    against admission of slaves to Canada,
    desirous of extradition of fugitives
    from, 299; Margaret Garner, a fugitive
    from, 302; petitions Congress for
    protection for slave-holder, 311; complaint
    of, against the free states, 312;
    residence of Harriet Beecher Stowe on
    borders of, 321; Senator Atchison of,
    on loss sustained by slave-owners of
    border states, 341; fugitives from, recorded
    by Osborn, 344, 345; Senator
    Polk on losses of, through underground
    channels, 352: reasons of, for
    remaining in the Union, 354, 356; insistence
    of, on retention of Fugitive
    Slave Law by the government, 356.
  • Kidnapping, of free persons in the
    North between 1850 and 1856, 240;
    along southern border of free states,
    295; petition of Baltimore Quakers
    for protection of free negroes against,
    296, 318; case of, 318.
  • Kightlinger, Jacob, informer, 50, 51.
  • Kilbourne, Col. James, aids in rescue of
    a fugitive, 38, 84.
  • King, on the proposition to prohibit
    slavery in the Northwest Territory,
    293.
  • King, Rev. William, 207–209, 212; projector
    of Elgin Settlement, 202, 207;
    testimony of, concerning the settlement,

    459

    Page 459
    208, 209; on morality of Elgin
    Settlement, 216; on the civil offices
    held by Canadian refugee settlers,
    233.
  • Kinjeino, Chief, friend of fugitives, 37,
    38, 92.
  • Kirkpatrick family, operators, 87.
    Kirtland, Dr. Jared P., station-keeper
    104.
  • Knox College. See Galesburg, Ill.
  • Knox, Hon. Joseph, counsel in fugitive
    slave case, 284.
  • Knoxville, Ill., multiple routes of, 141.
  • Lake Shore Home Magazine, chapters
    of "Romances and Realities of the
    Underground Railroad" in, 4.
  • Lane Seminary, secession of students
    from, 97.
  • Langdon, Jervis, agent, 128, 252; forwards
    fugitives by rail, 143.
  • Langston, fined for aiding fugitives, 279.
  • Larnard, Hon. E. C., counsel in fugitive
    slave case, 284.
  • Latimer case, 337.
  • Lawrence, James, 162.
  • Lee, Judge Thomas, letter of, concerning
    family of fugitives, 58, 59.
  • Leeper, H. B., on beginnings of U. G.
    R. R. in Illinois, 41, 42; on number of
    negroes aided, 88.
  • Leeper, John, early operator, 41.
  • Leland, Judge E. S., counsel in fugitive
    slave cases, 283, 284.
  • Leonard, Mr., slave aided by, 154.
  • Letters of underground men, 10, 11.
    See Correspondence.
  • Letters on Slavery, by Rev. John Rankin,
    308.
  • Lewis, Elijah, part in Christiana case,
    280, 281.
  • Liberator, the, hiding-place over office
    of, 63; on flight of slaves after enactment
    of law of 1850, 249, 250.
  • Liberty party, in national politics, 100;
    Gen. Samuel Fessenden, nominee of,
    for governorship of Maine and for
    Congress, 106; part of Gerrit Smith
    in organization of, in New York, 107;
    motives of abolitionists for joining,
    306; disavowal of fugitive recovery
    clause in Constitution by, 310; convention
    of, in Syracuse during Jerry rescue,
    318, 320; abolitionists' share in
    organization of, 326.
  • Lightfoot, James, befriended by Josiah
    Henson, 177, 178.
  • Lincoln, Abraham, intervention of, in
    behalf of the abductor C. Fairbank,
    159, 160; Proclamation of Emancipation
    by, 287; signs bill repealing Fugitive
    Slave Law, 288; mentioned, 330;
    election of, signal for secession, 352;
    efforts of, to preserve the Union, 355.
  • Linton, Seth, on an abduction by Canadian
    refugee, 152.
  • Livingston and La Salle counties, Ill.,
    chart of simple line through, 139.
  • Lockhart, Rev. Jesse, 32.
  • Loguen, Rev. J. W., agent, 126, 251; first
    experience in Canada, 198; passenger
    on U. G. R. R., 340.
  • Loring, Edward G., on the power of a
    commissioner, 271; Burns remanded
    to slavery by, 332; removed from the
    office of judge of probate, 333.
  • Loring, Ellis Gray, 133; counsel for
    fugitive slaves, 283.
  • Louis, escape of, from court-room in
    Cincinnati, 85.
  • Louisiana, effect of purchase of, 26;
    abducting trip of A. M. Ross into, 28;
    fugitives from, 109; escape, of abductor
    John Mason from New Orleans,
    185; Canadian refugees from, 195;
    Elgin Settlement projected by Wm.
    King, former slaveholder of, 202, 207.
  • Louisville, Ky., agent in, 151.
  • Louisville, New Albany and Chicago
    Railroad, 79, 144.
  • Lovejoy, Elijah P., 107, 171.
  • Lovejoy, Hon. Owen, defies Fugitive
    Slave Law in Congress, 107; arrested
    for aiding fugitives, 283.
  • Low, case of Hill vs., 273.
  • Lowell, poem of, read at the funeral of
    Charles T. Torrey, 170.
  • Lower Canada, underground route via
    Portland, Me., to, 133.
  • Lucas, Geo. W. S., colored agent of
    U. G. R. R., 70.
  • Lundy, Benjamin, 308.
  • McClurkin, Jas. B. and Thomas, 14, 15.
  • MeCoy, William, reward for abduction
    of, 53.
  • McCrory, Robert, 38.
  • McHenry, Jerry, rescue of, 72, 86, 239,
    318, 320, 320; place of embarkation of,
    for Canada, 127.

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    Page 460
  • McIntire, Gen., a Virginian operator, 88.
  • McKierunu, on fate of abductor Miller,
    161, 162.
  • McKim, J. Miller, on organization of
    Philadelphia Vigilance Committee, 75.
  • McLean, Judge, on the power of a commissioner,
    270–272.
  • McQuerry, case of Miller vs., 269, 271.
  • McQuerry, George Washington, seizure
    of, 241.
  • Madison, on the fugitive slave clause in
    the Constitution, 294.
  • Mad River Railroad, 78, 143.
  • Magazine of Western History, on U. G.
    R. R., 5.
  • Magill, Dr. Edward H., on lines of
    travel in eastern Pennsylvania, 122.
  • Mahan, Rev. John B., reward for abduction
    of, 53; on abduction of slaves
    from the South, 150.
  • Maine, rise of U. G. R. R, in, 37; steam
    railroad transportation for fugitives
    in, 80, 81; stowaways on vessels from
    Southern ports arrive in, 81; Gen.
    Samuel Fessenden, an operator in,
    106; routes of, 133, 134; personal liberty
    law of, 246.
  • Mallory, of Kentucky, on repeal of
    Fugitive Slave Law, 288.
  • Mann, Mrs. Horace, friend of Harriet
    Tubman, 186.
  • Maps of U. G. R. R., method of preparation
    of, 113; general map, facing
    113; map of lines of Chester and neighboring
    counties of Pennsylvania, facing
    113; lines in Morgan County, O.,
    136; map of lines of Indiana and
    Michigan in 1818, 138; map of simple
    route through Livingston and La Salle
    counties, 111., 139; map of network of
    routes through Greene, Warren and
    Clinton counties, O., 140.
  • Marsh, Gravner and Hannah, subjected
    to espionage, 50; conveyance of fugitives
    iu market wagon by the latter,
    60, 61.
  • Martin, case of Jack vs., 256, 257, 260.
    Martin, Lewis, case of, 256, 257, 259,
    260, 263.
  • Maryland, abducting trip of A. M. Ross
    into, 28; knowledge of Canada among
    slaves in, 28, 29; fugitive shipped in
    a box from Baltimore, 60; number of
    slaves abducted from, by Charles T.
    Torrey, 88; reward offered to Indians
    for apprehending fugitives by,
    91, 92; underground routes in, 117;
    steady loss from counties of, 119;
    movement of fugitives to Wilmington,
    121; agents of U. G. R. R. in Baltimore,
    151; escape of, and abductions
    by Harriet Tubman from, 186–189;
    Canadian refugees from, 195; fugitives
    from, in western Pennsylvania,
    276; law against hospitality to fugitive
    slaves in, 291; resolution of legislature
    of, against harboring fugitives,
    298; Rev. Geo. Bourne, a resident of,
    303; Pratt of, on loss sustained by
    slave-owners of his state, 341.
  • Mason, John, abductor, 178, 183–185.
  • Mason, Lewis, counsel in fugitive slave
    case, 284.
  • Mason, of Massachusetts, on trial by
    jury for fugitives, 297.
  • Mason, of Virginia, on difficulty of
    recapturing fugitives, 243; on the
    Fugitive Slave Law, 311, 312; on loss
    sustained by slave-owners of his state,
    341.
  • Massachusetts, extinction of slavery in,
    17; anti-slavery Quakers in, 31; rise
    of U. G. R. R. in, 36, 37; steam railroad
    transportation for fugitives in,
    80; refusal of German companies
    from, to aid in restoration of runaways,
    92; underground centres in,
    94; Constitution burned at Framingham,
    101; Defensive League of Freedom
    proposed in, 103, 104; Theodore
    Parker, spiritual counsellor for fugitives
    in, 110; routes through, 128–130,
    132; escape of slaves from Virginia
    to, 144; estimates of fugitive settlers
    in Boston and New Bedford, 235; indignation
    meetings in, against Slave
    Law of 1850, 244; personal liberty law
    of, 245, 246, 309; consternation among
    fugitive settlers in Boston caused by
    law of 1850, 246–248; continued residence
    of fugitives in, after enactment
    of law of 1850, 250; removal of fugitives
    from Pennsylvania to, after
    passage of law of 1850, 250; underground
    men among fugitives in, 251,
    252; case of Commonwealth vs. Griffith
    tried in, 258, 259; emancipation
    by, 293; Holmes of, on House Fugitive
    Slave Bill of 1817, 297; Mason of,
    on House bill, 297; early pursuit in

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    Boston and New Bedford, 302; antislavery
    societies of, 327; spirit of
    resistance to law of 1850 in, 327; public
    opinion in, after rendition of
    Burns, 333; amendment of personal
    liberty law of, 354.
  • Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society,
    report of, on evasion of slaves, 193.
  • Massachusetts Bay, law of, against aiding
    fugitives, 292.
  • Matchett, Dr., 16.
  • May, Rev. S. J., connection with U. G.
    R. R., 105, 109, 131, 132; on Southern
    helpers of U. G. R. R., 116; friend of
    Harriet Tubman, 186; visits of, to Canadian
    refugees, 199; on number of
    fugitive settlers in Northern states,
    237; on instances of regard paid to
    Fugitive Slave Law, 238; on Rev. J.
    W. Loguen, 251; one of leaders in the
    Jerry rescue case, 326.
  • Mechanicsburg, O., importance of stations
    at, 69, 70; attempted seizure of
    Addison White in, 241.
  • Merritt, Wm. H., colored operator, 92.
  • Messages, underground, 56–58.
  • Methodist Church, schism in, 40, 49;
    action against slavery taken by, 94;
    secession of the Church South, 95.
  • Methodists, Wesleyan, friends of fugitives,
    32, 235; separation of, from
    M. E. Church, 50.
  • Methods, employed by some abductors,
    151, 171, 179, 181, 182, 187.
  • Mexico, a refuge for fugitive slaves, 25;
    fugitive clause in treaty with United
    States of, 299.
  • Michigan, station in, 16; organized as
    free state, 18; anti-slavery Quakers
    in, 31; steam railroad transportation
    in, 79; number of fugitives forwarded
    through Schoolcraft, 88; Senator J.
    M. Howard an operator at Detroit,
    106; stations in, 116; number of
    routes in, 135; Falley's map of lines
    in Indiana and, 137, 138, 139; direction
    of routes in, 141; steam railway
    branches of U. G. R. R. in, 144; supplies
    for fugitives sent to Detroit,
    203; settlement of fugitives at Detroit,
    236; personal liberty law of,
    246; flight of slaves from Detroit,
    after enactment of law of 1850, 250.
  • Michigan Central Railroad, 79, 144.
  • Midland Monthly, the, on U. G. R. R., 5.
  • Miller, 318.
  • Miller, a depot agent for "fugitive
    goods," near Detroit, 203.
  • Miller, alias Seth Concklin, 161.
  • Miller, Col. Jonathan P., operator,
    107.
  • Miller, Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, on use of
    a station on the St. Lawrence, 127 n.
  • Milligan, Rev. J. S. T., letter of, 13, 14.
  • Milligans, the, in southern Illinois, 15.
  • Miller vs. McQuerry, case of, 269.
  • Minnesota, failure to pass full liberty
    law in, 246.
  • Minnis, Wm., 65.
  • Mission for refugees in Canada, 194.
  • Mission Institute at Quincy, Ill., 155;
    anti-slavery spirit of, 155, 156.
  • Mississippi, abducting trip of A. M.
    Ross into, 29, 30; escape of slaves by
    boat from, 82; involved in Brown's
    scheme of liberation, 167; Jefferson
    Davis of, on escape of fugitives from
    cotton states, 312, 313; fugitive from
    Vicksburg, recorded by Osborn, 344.
  • Mississippi River, a thoroughfare for
    fugitives, 82, 312, 313; routes traced
    from, 134; terminals along, 136.
  • Missouri, Brown's raid into, 8, 108, 162–
    166; knowledge of Canada among
    slaves in, 29; Galesburg, Ill., a refuge
    for runaways from, 97; Grinnell, Ia.,
    a refuge for runaways from, 98;
    egress of slaves from, 136; Chicago,
    the deportation point for fugitives
    from, 147; abductions from, 152; abduction
    from, by Burr, Work and
    Thompson, 156; effects of John
    Brown's raid in, 165; number of
    slaves escaping from, 194; escape of
    Wm. Wells Brown from, 252; grievance
    of, on account of loss of slaves,
    312; Lawrence, Kan., as known in,
    347; Senator Polk of, on the U. G. R.
    R., 351, 352.
  • Missouri Compromise (1820), 100; fugitive
    slave clause in, 298; set aside by
    Kansas-Nebraska Act, 331; together
    with law of 1850 produces crop of personal
    liberty bills, 245, 246, 338.
  • Mitchell, fined for aiding fugitives, 279.
  • Mitchell, Daniel, operator, 131.
  • Mitchell, Gethro and Anne, operators,
    131.
  • Mitchell, Hon. Thomas, message sent
    by, 58.

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    Page 462
  • Mitchell, Rev. W. M., author of The
    Underground Railroad
    , 2, 3; account
    of naming of the U. G. R. R. given by,
    45, 46; on abductor John Mason, 183,
    184; on number of Canadian refugees,
    222; opinion of Canadian government
    on fugitives as settlers reported by,
    233; on slave-hunting in Northern
    states, 239.
  • Monroe, Prof. James, on effect on public sentiment of Margaret Garner
    case, 303.
  • Montreal, objective point of fugitives,
    140.
  • Moore, Dr. J. Wilson, on progress made
    by refugee settlers in Canada, 226,
    227; on civil offices held by refugees,
    233.
  • Moore, Eliakim H., on early assistance
    of fugitives, 38.
  • Moore, of Virginia, on loss sustained by
    slave-owners of his district, 341.
  • Moores, the, station-keepers, 15.
  • Morgan County, lines through portion
    of, 136, 137.
  • "Moses,"name given to Harriet Tubman, 186.
  • Mott, Richard, M.C., operator, 92, 106.
  • Mullin, Job, on early operations, 38.
  • Multiple and intricate trails, 61, 62, 70,
    121, 130, 141–146.
  • Myers, Stephen, colored agent of U. G.
    R. R., 70, 126.
  • Nalle, Charles, forcible rescue of,
    85.
  • Nashville Daily Gazette, on trial of
    Richard Dillingham, 174, 175.
  • Nationality of underground helpers, 91,
    92.
  • Neall, Daniel, 68.
  • Nebraska, escape of Nuckolls' slaves
    from, 52; egress of slaves from, 136.
  • Negroes, proposition to enslave free, 26;
    settlements of, resorted to by fugitives,
    32; settlements of, in southern
    Ohio, 115; in New Jersey, 125; relative
    progress of colored people of
    Canada and free, of United States,
    227; affiliations of voters among Canadian,
    233: rights of, violated by
    Fugitive Slave Law, 261; participation
    of, in rescue of fugitives, 276,
    332; petition against kidnapping of,
    296; increase in number of fleeing,
    after passage of law of 1850, 316; arrest
    of free, 317, 318.
  • Nelson, Dr. David, 96; abducting enterprises
    of, 155.
  • Nelson, Judge, in decision in case of
    Jack vs. Martin, 257; on the Fugitive
    Slave Law, 272.
  • New Bedford, Mass., estimate of fugitive
    settlers in, 235, 236; Frederick
    Douglass in, 251.
  • Newberne, N.C., agent in, 68, 81, 117;
    escape of slaves from, 144.
  • New Brunswick, Canada, routes to, 133,
    219.
  • New England, information secured concerning
    underground lines in, 11;
    slavery extinguished in, 17; antislavery
    settlement in, 31, 93, 171; rise
    of U.G. R. R. in, 36, 37; fugitives
    from the South landed on coast of, 81,
    144; extent of underground system
    in, 113; settlers in Ohio from, 115;
    fugitives sent to, 121, 125; routes of,
    128–134, 219; direction of routes in,
    140, 195, 219; terminal stations in,
    145; career of Lewis Hayden in, 158;
    stipulation for return of fugitives in
    agreement of Confederation of 1643,
    292; memorial asking repeal of Fugitive
    Slave Law, from Quakers in, 324;
    sentiment in, adverse to the South's
    treatment of the compromises, 331.
  • New England Anti-Slavery Society,
    annual meeting of, at time of attempted
    rescue of Burns, 382.
  • New England Magazine, on Underground
    Railroad, 5, 6.
  • New Garden, Ind. See Fountain City,
    Ind.
  • New Hampshire, rise of Underground
    Railroad in, 36, 37; routes of, 132, 133;
    failure to pass full personal liberty
    law in, 246; early opposition to Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1793, 295.
  • New Haven, agreement of colony of,
    with New Netherlands for surrender
    of fugitives, 19.
  • New Jersey, slavery extinguished in,
    17; anti-slavery Quakers in, 31; rise
    of Underground Railroad in, 34;
    routes of, 120, 121, 123–125; abductors
    along southern boundaries of, 151;
    settlement of fugitive slaves among
    Quakers at Greenwich, 236; sanction
    to Fugitive Slave Law, 246; slave-owner

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    from, prosecuted, 274; penalties
    in, for transporting fugitives, 291, 292.
  • New Netherlands, agreement of colony
    of, with New Haven for surrender of
    fugitives, 19; aid prohibited to fugitives
    in, 290, 291.
  • New Orleans, escape of abductor John
    Mason from, to Canada, 185.
  • Newspapers, accounts of Underground
    Railroad in, 6, 7; anti-slavery, 168.
  • Newton, case of Norris vs., 275, 276.
  • New York, E. M. Pettit, conductor in
    southwestern, 4; slavery extinguished
    in, 31; rise of U. G. R. R. in, 34, 35;
    special agent in Albany, 70; effect of
    rescue of Jerry McHenry in central,
    72; supplies for fugitives provided by
    Women's Anti-Slavery Society of Ellington,
    77; steam railroad transportation
    in, 80; anti-slavery sentiment
    among Friends in, 93; favorable conditions
    for U. G. R. R. in western,
    115; character of population in, 115;
    routes of, 120–128; direction of lines
    in, 140; broken lines and isolated
    place-names in, 141; terminal stations
    in, 145, 146: in the Patriot War, 193;
    settlement of fugitives in, 236; condemnation
    of Jerry rescue by many
    newspapers, 239; seizure of alleged
    fugitive in Poughkeepsie, 241; indignation
    meetings at Syracuse against
    law of 1850, 244, 320; personal liberty
    law of, 245, 246; flight of slaves from,
    250; agents in, 251–253; abduction of
    free negroes from, 269; colonial law
    of, to prevent escape of fugitives to
    Canada, 292; address to slaves by
    Liberty party convention in, 310;
    address of Seward of, in behalf of
    fugitives, 313; Jerry rescue in Syracuse,
    318; convention at Syracuse,
    sends congratulatory message to Wisconsin,
    328, 329.
  • New York City, U. G. R. R. in, 35;
    Vigilance Committee of, 71; indignation
    meeting at Syracuse against Fugitive
    Slave Law. 244.
  • Now York Central Railroad. 80.
  • New York Tribune, letter from John
    Brown to, 8, 9, 165, l66.
  • Niagara River, important crossing-places
    to Canada along, 146.
  • Nicholson, Valentine, method of disguise
    of fugitive employed by, 64, 65.
  • Nomenclature of stations in New
    Jersey, 124.
  • Norfolk, Va., escape by boat from, 81,
    144, 145; natural route for escape of
    slave from, 118.
  • Norris vs. Newton, case of, 275, 276.
  • North American Review, on reclamation
    of fugitives in the North, 243.
  • North Carolina, Levi Coffin in, 4, 111;
    reminiscences relating to, 11; organization
    of U. G. R. R. in, (1819,) by
    Vestal and Levi Coffin, 40; escape of
    slaves from, 81, 144, 145; anti-slavery
    sentiment among Quakers in, 93; involved
    in Brown's plan of liberation,
    167; Canadian refugees from, 195;
    law against aiding fugitives in colonial
    times, 292; Iredell on slave clause in
    Constitution before state convention
    of, 294; Clingman of, on value of fugitive
    settlers in Northern states, 341.
  • Northern Central Railroad, 80, 122, 128,
    143, 252, 253.
  • Northern states, lack of formal organization
    in underground centres of, 69;
    steam railroad transportation for fugitive
    slaves in, 78–81; denunciation of
    law of 1850 in, 90, 243, 244, 318; list
    of, through which the underground
    system extended, 113, 114; most used
    underground routes in, 119; congested
    district in, 120, 121; favorable situation
    of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois for
    underground work, 134; sea routes
    to, 144; reception of abductor Capt.
    Walker in, 170, 171; effect of recital
    of Capt. Walker's experience upon,
    171; appeal of fugitives to anti-slavery
    people in, 191; formation of lines of
    Underground Road in, during decade
    1828–1838, 193; Canadian refugees
    visited by abolitionists from, 199–201;
    effect of apprenticeship of colored
    refugees in, 204, 212, 213; settlement
    of fugitives in, 235; number of and
    risks of fugitive settlers in, 237–240;
    slave-hunting in, 240, 241; effect of
    Fugitive Slave Law on fugitive slaves
    in, 241, 242, 246–248; increased difficulty
    of reclamation in, 242, 243; personal
    liberty laws enacted by, 245,
    246; exodus of fugitives from, 249,
    250; continued residence of fugitive
    slaves in, after law of 1850, 250, 251;
    underground men among fugitives in,

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    251–253; first Fugitive Slave Law
    stirs popular sense of justice in, 255;
    antagonism between state and federal
    Fugitive Slave laws, 259–260; non-interference
    of law of 1793 with laws of,
    263; laws of, dealing with subject of
    fugitive slaves, 264; disinclination
    of, to restore fugitives after Prigg
    decision, 265; possibility of abduction
    of free negroes from, under law of
    1850, 268, 269; counsel for fugitives
    in, 281–285; attitude of people toward
    proposed Fugitive Slave Bill of 1860,
    286; object lessons in horrors of slavery
    in, 290; abduction of free negroes
    from, under law of 1793, 295; vote of
    members of Congress of, on proposed
    amendment to slave law of 1793, 296;
    proof of early anti-slavery sentiment
    in, 300; effect of fugitive slaves' appeal
    in, 300–303; effect of Garrisonian
    movement on resistance to Fugitive
    Slave Law in, 308, 309; attitude of
    population toward fugitives, 313; significance
    of vote on law of 1850, 314;
    era of slave-bunting in, 316; Webster's
    advocacy of obedience to law of 1850
    throughout, 320; brought face to face
    with slavery by law of 1850, 321; effect
    of Uncle Tom's Cabin on people of, 323,
    324; Mrs. H. B. Stowe, champion of
    victims of slavery in, 323; acceptance
    of Compromise of 1850 as a substantial
    political settlement in, 324; Sumner
    on import of the appeal of fugitive
    slaves to communities in, 325; open
    defiance to Fugitive Slave Law in,
    (1850–1860,) 326 et seq.; confederacy
    among cities of, proposed to defend
    fugitives from rendition, 328, 329;
    effect of Kansas-Nebraska Act on
    public feeling in, 331; double effect
    of law of 1850 in, 337, 338; charge of
    bad faith on part of, unsustained by
    statistics on fugitive slaves, 342, 343;
    underground operations the basis of
    important charges against, in crisis
    of 1850, 351, 352; efforts of Congress
    to appease spirit of secession, 354;
    protest against employment of troops
    from, as slave catchers, 355; effect of
    Underground Road in creating antislavery
    sentiment in, 357.
  • Northwest Ordinance, slavery excluded
    by, 17, 18; organization of states
    under, 18; fugitive slave clause in,
    quoted, 20, 293; alleged repugnancy
    of law of 1793 to, 255, 262, 263; alleged
    hostility between law of 1850 and, 268;
    protection afforded slave-owners by,
    298.
  • Northwest Territory, slavery excluded
    from, 17; study of map of underground
    lines in, 120; multitude of lines within,
    134, 135; appeal to Ordinance of, in
    effort to overthrow law of 1793, 262,
    263; obligations of a state carved
    from, 263.
  • Norton, Mr., 258.
  • Notable persons among underground
    helpers, 104–112, 163–189.
  • Nova Scotia, disappearance of slavery
    from, 191; sea routes to, 219; fugitives
    sent from Boston to Halifax
    in, 248.
  • Nuckolls, escape of slaves of, 52.
  • Nullification, spirit of, in the North,
    326–338.
  • Number, of underground helpers discovered,
    87; of fugitives befriended
    by various operators, 87–89, 111; of
    fugitives using the valley of the Alleghanies,
    118 n.; of fugitives sent over
    lines of southeastern Pennsylvania,
    121; of fugitives aided by E. F. Pennypacker
    in two months, 143 n.; of
    terminal stations along northeastern
    boundary of Northern states, 145;
    impossibility of estimating, of fugitives
    emigrating from any one port,
    146; of fugitives crossing Detroit
    River, 147; of fugitives helped by
    one man to Canada-bound vessels,
    147; of deportation places along
    southwestern shore of Lake Michigan,
    147; of resorts for refugees in
    Canada, 148, 149; of refugee abductors
    visiting the South annually, 152;
    abducted by Fairfield on one trip, 154;
    of slaves abducted by Fairbank, 160;
    of slaves abducted by Charles T. Torrey,
    169; abducted by Drayton on the
    Pearl expedition, 172; of a party rescued
    by Josiah Henson, 177; total,
    abducted by Josiah Henson, 178; freed
    by Elijah Anderson, 183; freed by
    John Mason, 184; freed by Harriet
    Tubman, 186; forwarded by abolitionists
    in southern Ohio before the
    year 1817, 192; of slaves arriving

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    daily at Amherstburg, Ontario, both
    before and after enactment of Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1850, 194; flocking
    into Canada, 200; of negro communities
    in Canada, 219, 220; of refugee
    population in Canada, 220–222, 313;
    estimated, of refugee settlers in Boston
    and New Bedford, 235, 236; of
    fugitive settlers in Northern states,
    235–237; of arrests of fugitives between
    1850 and 1856 recorded, 240,
    241; of fugitives taking flight from
    Northern states after law of 1850, 249,
    250; in companies transported by boat
    across Lake Erie by W. W. Brown,
    252; increase in, of fugitives after
    passage of the law of 1850, 316; of
    slaves lost by the South through flight
    and abduction estimated, 341, 342; of
    fugitives given in census reports for
    1850 and 1860, 342; aided by Osborn,
    as seen in record kept during five
    months, 344–346; of fugitives aided
    in Lawrence, Kan., during 1855–1859,
    348; of negroes transported by American
    Colonization Society, 350; of underground
    operators in Ohio and other
    states, 351.
  • Oberlin, a station, 89, 97, 98, 150; multiple
    routes of, 141; sentiment against
    abductions in, 150.
  • Oberlin College, 5; anti-slavery influence
    of, 33, 115; denomination and
    work of, 97, 98; C. Fairbank, abductor,
    student of, 157; interest of, in
    Oberlin-Wellington rescue, 336, 337;
    celebration at, over victory of abolitionists
    in Oberlin-Wellington case,
    337.
  • Oberlin-Wellington rescue case, before
    United States District Court, 279; penalties
    levied in, 279; eminent attorneys
    in, 282; account of, 335–337.
  • Officers of the U. G. R. R., 67; title of
    "President" borne by Peter Stewart,
    69; title of "President" bestowed upon
    Levi Coffin, 111, 112; Jacob Bigelow
    called "general manager" of a route,
    117; a "general superintendent" mentioned,
    125; Elijah Anderson designated
    "general superintendent" of
    U. G. R. R. in northwestern Ohio, 183.
  • Ohio, computation of number of slaves
    escaping into, 10, 346; special agents
    or conductors in, 13, 69, 70, 88, 89;
    organized as free state, 18; Fugitive
    Slave Law of, 22, 47, 48, 237, 238;
    underground stations on Western
    Reserve in, 1815, 28; anti-slavery sentiment
    in, 31, 32, 95, 96; rise of the
    U. G. R. R. in, 37–40; Clay declares
    law of 1850 is enforced in, 48; night
    service at stations in, 55, 56; steam
    railroad transportation in, 78, 79; underground
    operations in southern, 87,
    184, 301; underground helpers of
    Scotch and Scotch-Irish descent in,
    92; underground centres in, 93; denominational
    relations of operators
    in, 93, 95–98; Van Zandt case in, 102;
    prosecution of Rush R. Sloane of Sandusky,
    102; notable operators in, 104–
    112; U. G. R. R. routes through, 113,
    119; distribution of stations in, 114,
    115; favorable situation of, 134; number
    of underground paths in, 135;
    lines through Morgan County, 136, 137;
    direction of routes in, 140, 141; terminal
    stations in, 146, 252; Detroit a
    receiving station for western routes
    of, 147; abductors along the southern
    boundaries of, 151; Independent, the,
    on increase in number of passengers
    of, 195; seizure of McQuerry in, 241;
    danger of slave-hunting in, 242; Slave
    Law denounced by meeting of Ashtabula
    County, 244; personal liberty law
    of, 246; dismissal of fugitives from custody
    at Sandusky, 276; Blake of, introduces
    bill praying for repeal of law
    of 1850, 286; Seward's address in,
    advising hospitality to fugitives, 313;
    Giddings on impossibility of enforcement
    of law of 1850 in, 315; contests
    between state and federal authorities
    in, 334; illustrated in Ad. White rescue
    case, 334, 335, and in Oberlin-Wellington
    case, 335–337; Oberlin-Wellington
    rescue commended by
    mass-meetings in eastern, 336; number
    of underground operators in, 351;
    states urged to repeal personal liberty
    laws by, 354.
  • Ohio River, a thoroughfare for fugitives,
    82; routes traced northward from, 134;
    crossing-place on, 137; initial stations
    along the, 139; escape of Eliza across,
    at Ripley, 322.
  • Oliver, Eev. Thos. Clement, on routes of

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    Page 466
    New Jersey, 123–125; on fugitive settlers
    in New Jersey, 236.
  • Oliver vs. Weakley, case of, 276.
  • Ontario, surviving fugitives in, 11; testimony
    of fugitives in, 27, 29, 76;
    fugitives conveyed by boat to Collingwood,
    83; fugitives received by people
    of Chief Brant in, 92; goal of the great
    majority of runaways, 140; Clay on
    the admission of the refugee class by,
    201; unsettled condition of, at time of
    beginning of immigration of fugitives
    into, 203; separate schools for negroes
    in, 229; action of Parliament of, in
    encouragement of fugitives, 233.
  • Ordinance of 1787. See Northwest
    Ordinance.
  • Organization, of the U. G. R. R., 67–70;
    U. G. R. R. work by an alleged regular,
    279; league for self-protection
    among negroes in southeastern Pennsylvania,
    280; formal organization of
    U. G. R. R. in Philadelphia, 309.
  • Orton, Prof. Edward, 35.
  • Osborn, Daniel, record kept by, as
    operator at Alum Creek Settlement,
    O., 345, 346.
  • Ottawa, Ill., multiple routes of, 141.
  • Paine, Byron, political reward of, for
    defence of Booth, 330.
  • Parish, F. D., fined for assisting runaways,
    277, 278.
  • Parker, Asbury, fugitive, 76.
  • Parker, Chief Justice, on searching a
    citizen's house without warrant for a
    slave, 258.
  • Parker, Prof. L. F., on underground
    work in Iowa, 33, 42, 43, 98.
  • Parker, Theodore, scrap-book of, relating
    to renditions of Burns and Sims, 8;
    explanation of origin of vigilance committees
    given by, 71; public denunciation
    of Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 by,
    90; indictment of, for attempted rescue
    of Burns, 103; journal and letter
    of, quoted, 109, 110; supporter of Dr.
    A. M. Ross, 180; on number of fugitives
    in Boston, 235; aid given by, to
    William and Ellen Craft, 317; part in
    the Burns rendition case, Boston, 331,
    332.
  • Parker, William, leader in Christiana
    rescue case, 10; leader in league among
    fugitives for self-protection, 280.
  • Parliament, action by Ontario, in encouragement
    of fugitives, 233.
  • Patriot, the, Charles T. Torrey, editor
    of, 169.
  • Patriot War, part taken by fugitive
    slaves in, 193.
  • Patterson, Isaac, operator, 13.
  • Payne, George J., operator, 89.
  • Pearl, the schooner, capture of, 172, 173.
  • Peirce, I. Newton, message sent by, 57;
    connection with the U. G. R.. R., 105,
    143.
  • Penalties, levied for breaking the Fugitive
    Slave laws, 102, 103, 110; suffered
    by Burr, Work and Thompson, 156;
    paid by Calvin Fairbank and Miss
    Delia Webster for abducting Hayden.
    family, 158, 159; suffered by Charles
    T. Torrey for abducting slaves, 169;
    suffered by Capt. Jonathan Walker
    for abduction of slaves, 170; fine and
    imprisonment of Capt. Drayton, 173;
    suffered by Richard Dillingham, 174,
    175; imposed upon W. L. Chaplin for
    abduction of slaves, 176; suffered by
    Elijah Anderson, 183; created by
    Slave Law of 1850, 265, 266; failure of,
    under law of 1850 to deter resistance
    to the law, 272, 273; double penalty
    under law of 1793, 274, 275; for hindering
    arrest of fugitive slaves, 279;
    imposed on Booth for aiding in the
    Glover rescue, 329, 330.
  • Pennsylvania, slavery extinguished in,
    17; anti-slavery sentiment in, 31, 33;
    rise of U. G. R. R. in, 37; steam railroad
    transportation in, 79, 80; operations
    in Lancaster County, 87; in
    Chester County, 88; protest of German
    Friends in, against slave-dealing, 93;
    numerous underground centres among
    Quakers of southeastern, 94; Presbytery
    of Mahoning, helps form a new
    church, 96; Presbyterian operators in
    western, 97; Unitarian centre at Meadville,
    98; prosecution of Daniel Kauffman
    of Cumberland County, 102;
    Thomas Garrett, native of, 110; extent
    of U. G. R. R. system through, 113;
    favorable condition for U. G. R. R.
    in western, 115; study of map of
    U. G. R. R. lines in New Jersey, New
    York and, 120; routes of eastern, 121,
    122; routes of western, 123; direction
    of lines in, 140; multiple and intricate

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    Page 467
    routes in southeastern, 141; broken
    lines and isolated place-names in, 141;
    terminal stations in, 144, 145; abductors
    along southern boundaries of, 151;
    fugitive settlers in northwestern, 236;
    Fugitive Slave Law of, 237, 238, 260;
    seizure of family of negroes at Uniontown
    in, 241; liberty law of, 246,
    309; exodus of fugitives from, after
    enactment of law of 1850, 250; Prigg
    case in, 260, 261; law of, against aiding
    fugitives in colonial times, 292;
    emancipation by, 293; petition of Abolition
    Society of, for milder slave law,
    296; Sergeant of, on House Fugitive
    Slave Bill of 1817, 297; complaints
    against people of, for harboring fugitives,
    298; early pursuit in eastern,
    302; Christiana case in, 317–319; kidnapping
    of free negro in, 318.
  • Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society,
    Wm. Still, clerk of, 3, 75; Harriet
    Tubman, a visitor at office of, 187.
  • Pennsylvania Railroad, 30.
  • Pennypacker, Elijah F., letter of, relating
    to fugitives, 79 n., 143 n.; station-keeper,
    121.
  • Personal liberty laws, object of, 245, 357;
    Buchanan's recommendations regarding,
    286, 353, 354; of Massachusetts
    and other states, 309; enacted by Wisconsin,
    330; slave-catchers indicted
    under, 336; characteristic of period
    1840–1860, 337; induced by Missouri
    Compromise and law of 1850, 338;
    referred to as a grievance by Jones
    of Georgia, 351.
  • Peterboro, N.Y., station of Gerrit Smith
    in, 127, 128; visited by abductor A. M.
    Ross, 180: address to slaves issued
    from, 310.
  • Petersburg, Va., agent in, 118.
  • Pettijohn, Amos, reward for abduction
    of, 53.
  • Pettit, Eber M., author of Sketches in
    the History of the Underground Railroad
    ,
    2; characterization of his book,
    4; on number of main routes in New
    York, 125.
  • Philadelphia, Vigilance Committee of,
    3, 71, 75, 76, 80–82, 121, 145, 232; fugitives
    aided in, 10; continuous record
    of, as an underground centre, 34; antislavery
    sentiment among Friends in,
    93; outlet from, 122; receives absconding
    chattels from Newberne,
    144, from Baltimore, 151; trial of
    Christiana case in, 281, 319; counsel
    for fugitives in, 317; computation, of
    fugitives aided in, 346, 347.
  • Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, 79,
    143.
  • Phillips, Wendell, indictment of, 103;
    address in Faneuil Hall on the occasion
    of the Burns case, 332.
  • Piatt, slaves lost by family of, 283.
  • Pickard, S. T., on U. G. R.R. work in
    Portland, Me., 133.
  • Pickrell, Mahlon, on period of opera
    tions in Ohio, 39.
  • Pierce, Franklin, meaning of election
    of, 321.
  • Pierce, William S., counsel for fugitive
    slaves, 284.
  • Pinckuey, on fugitive slave clause in
    the Constitution, 21, 294.
  • Pindall, of Virginia, on a bill for increased
    security of slave property, 296.
    Pinkerton, Alien, friend of John Brown,
    165.
  • Place, Maurice, 15, 16.
  • Platt, Jirch, diary of, 9; hiding-place
    on farm of, 63.
  • Poindexter, James, 253.
  • Poindexter, a colored abductor of Jackson,
    O., 151.
  • Poland, Hon. Joseph, operator, 107, 130.
  • Politics, of underground workers, 99–
    101; Canadian refugees in, 232, 233.
  • Polk, of Missouri, accusations against
    the North on account of U. G. R. R.,
    351, 352.
  • Porter, Rev. J., hiding-place in church
    of, 63.
  • Portsmouth, Va., escape of slaves from,
    81, 144; agent in, 118.
  • Pratt, of Maryland, on Seward's speech
    advising hospitality to fugitives, 313;
    on loss sustained by slave-owners of
    his state, 341.
  • Prentiss, Henry J., 103.
  • Presbyterian Church, anti-slavery sentiment
    in, 31, 32, 95–97; J. J. Rice,
    missionary among Canadian refugees,
    minister of, 200; Rev. William King,
    minister of, 207; support of Elgin
    Settlement in Canada by, 208; Rev.
    John Rankin, pastor of a, 306.
  • Prigg vs. Pennsylvania, case of, 259,
    260, 264–267, 289, 297, 309; new class

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    Page 468
    of personal liberty laws following,
    245, 246; effect of decision of, 309.
  • Prosecutions, for aiding fugitives, 102,
    103, 254; cases of, under laws of 1793
    and 1850, 273–281; for aiding fugitive
    slaves, 283–285; effect of prosecutions,
    317; Prof. Edward Channing on importance
    of, 317 n.; of Booth for aiding
    in Glover rescue, 329, 330.
  • Pro-slavery sentiment in Congress, 173.
  • Providence and Worcester Railroad, 80,
    130, 143.
  • Pursuit of fugitive slaves, 51, 52, 59, 65,
    164, 302; increase in frequency of,
    308; effect of Prigg decision on, 309;
    after passage of law of 1850, 316; instances
    of, 317.
  • Purvis, Robert, record of number of
    fugitives helped by, 10, 346; president
    of organized society of the U. G. R.
    R., 68, 309; account of the organization
    by, 68; chairman of the General
    Vigilance Committee of Philadelphia,
    75; in rescue of Basil Dorsey, 85;
    New Jersey route described by, 125;
    on abduction by son of a planter,
    153.
  • Putnam, David, underground letters of,
    10; record of night service at station
    of, 55, 56; secret signal used by, 56;
    facsimile of message received by, 57.
  • Putnam, George W., on route in New
    Hampshire, 133.
  • Quakers, Levi Coffin one of the, 4;
    underground centres in communities
    of, 6, 90, 115–120, 125; Alum Creek
    Settlement of, 10; agents and operators
    among the, 31, 38, 39, 53, 92, 94,
    98, 124, 131; pro-slavery sentiment
    among, 49; costume of, used as a
    disguise, 67; Washington's comment
    on a society of Philadelphia, 68; as
    conservators of abolition ideas, 93;
    result of appeal to societies of, in
    Massachusetts, 99; political affiliations
    of, 100; devotees of U. G. R, R.
    work among, 110–112; John Brown's
    party entertained by, in Iowa, 164;
    words of the Quaker poet, Whittier,
    quoted, 171; Quaker abductor Richard
    Dillingharn, 174; at Richmond, Ind.,
    befriend Josiah Hetison, 177; at Fountain
    City, Ind., 199; visits of several,
    to Canadian refugees, 199; safety
    sought by fugitive settlers among,
    235, 236; protection afforded fugitives
    by Quakers of New Bedford, Mass.,
    258; defendants in case of rescue, 274;
    in Christiana case, 280, 281; petition
    of Baltimore, against kidnapping, 296;
    memorial of, for repeal of Fugitive
    Slave Law, 324; record of fugitives in
    Alum Creek Settlement of, 344–346.
  • Quebec, early emigration of fugitive
    slaves to, 218.
  • Queen's Bush, early settlement of, by
    refugees, 204, 218.
  • Quincy, Ill., multiple routes of, 141.
  • Quincy, Josiah, his account of first
    known rescue of fugitive under arrest
    quoted, 83, 84; opponent of fugitive
    slave legislation, 283.
  • Quitman, Gen. John A., 341.
  • Quixot, Stephen, fugitive from Virginia,
    51.
  • Racine, Wis., Glover rescue in, 327.
  • Railroads, steam, use of, for transportation
    of fugitives, 35, 59, 78–81, 122–
    124, 128, 130, 132, 133, 142–145, 164,
    165, 183; terminology of U. G. R. R.
    borrowed from vocabulary of, 67.
  • Railroad, Underground. See Underground
    Railroad.
  • Ramsey, Rev. R. G., on route in southern
    Illinois, 14.
  • Randolph, the slave, in case of Commonwealth
    vs. Griffith, 258.
  • Rankin, Rev. John, reward for abduction
    of, 53; secret cellar in barn of,
    63; anti-slavery preaching and practice
    of, 96; station of, at Ripley, O.,
    109; on immediate abolition, 306, 307;
    Letters on Slavery by, 308.
  • Rantoul, Robert, Jr., counsel for fugitive
    slaves, 283
  • Rathbun, Levi, station-keeper, 69, 70.
  • Ratliff, Hon. John, 15, 16.
  • Ray, Rev. Chas. B., on New York
    routes, 126.
  • Ray vs. Donnell and Hamilton, case of,
    278.
  • Reading Railroad, 122.
  • Rebellion, Lincoln's proclamation regarding
    states continuing in, 287.
  • Recollections of an Abolitionist, by Dr.
    A. M. Ross, 179–183.
  • Redpath, James, on effects of John
    Brown's raid, 165.

  • 469

    Page 469
  • Reed, Fitch, on arrival of abductor
    Fairfield and company of slaves in
    Canada, 154 n.
  • Reed, Gen., fugitives carried by boats
    of, 82.
  • Reed, John, on misinformation about
    Canada among slaves, 198.
  • Reform party, political affiliations of
    negro voters in Canada with, 233.
  • Refugees' Home Settlement, of Canadian
    refugees, 205, 209, 210; regulations
    of, 215–217; dissatisfaction in,
    216, 217.
  • Reminiscences, collection of, 11; value
    of, 12–16.
  • Rendition of escaped slaves, early Northern
    sentiment on, Southern sentiment
    regarding, 21; question of, in crisis of
    1851, 285; of Sims in Boston, 317; of
    Burns, 331–333.
  • Republican Leader, the, articles on the
    U. G. R. R. in, 6.
  • Republican party, effect of Uncle Tom's
    Cabin
    on young voters in, 324; forerunner
    of, in Wisconsin, 329; chief
    reliance of freedom declared to be in,
    repeal of Fugitive Slave Law demanded
    by, 337; organized U. G. R. R.
    said to be maintained by, 351; four
    governors belonging to, advise repeal
    of personal liberty bills, 354.
  • Rescue, of fugitives, 38, 39, 83–86, 240,
    275, 276, 284, 336; attempts at, after
    1850, 240, 273; provisions of law of
    1850 to prevent, 266; of slaves, an expensive
    undertaking, 277; increase in
    frequency of, 308; during era of slave-hunting
    in the North, 316; of Shadrach,
    317, 319; of Jerry McHenry,
    318, 320; of Glover, 327–330; of Burns,
    attempted, 331–333.
  • Reynolds, Hon. John, on spirit of nullification
    in Illinois, 333, 334.
  • Rhode Island, anti-slavery Quakers in,
    31; rise of U. G. R. R. in, 36; steam
    railroad transportation for fugitives
    in, 80; underground centres in, 94;
    routes of, 131; station at Valley Falls,
    144; reception to Capt. Walker at
    Providence, 171; personal liberty law
    of, 245, 246, 309; colonial law against
    aiding fugitives in, 292; emancipation
    by, 293; repeal of personal liberty law
    by, 354.
  • Rhodes, James Ford, on the U. G. R. R.,
    1; on remote political effect of Uncle
    Tom's Cabi
    , 324; on spirit of the
    personal liberty laws, 338 n.
  • Rice, Rev. Isaac J., mission in Canada
    kept by, 194, 200; supplies kept for
    refugees by, 214.
  • Richardson, Lewis, cause of flight of, 27.
  • Richmond, Va., fugitive shipped from,
    in a box, 60; fugitives escape by boat
    from, 145.
  • Riddle, Albert G., counsel in Oberlin"Wellington
    case, 282.
  • Ripley, O., John Rankin in, 109, 306;
    abductor at, 153; escape of Eliza
    across Ohio River at, 322.
  • River routes of U. G. R. R,, 81, 82, 118,
    123, 129, 134, 138, 142; crossings on
    Detroit River, 147; Jefferson Davis
    on escape of slaves by Mississippi
    River, 312, 313.
  • Robin case, slavery terminated in Lower
    Canada by decision in, 191.
  • Robinson, case of ex parte, 270, 282.
  • Robinson, Rowland E., on routes in
    Vermont, 130.
  • Ross, Dr. A. M., abductor, 28–30, 178–
    182; as a naturalist, 183.
  • Ruggles, David, agent in New York
    City, 35, 126; Frederick Douglass befriended by, 71 n.
  • Russell, Hon. A. J., operator, 107.
  • Rycraft, colleague of Booth in the
    Glover rescue case, 329.
  • Sabin, Hon. Alvah, operator, 107.
  • Salsburg family, 87.
  • Sanborn, F. B., on Harriet Tubman,
    386; on number of fugitive settlers
    in Northern states, 237; letter to, on
    the U. G. R. R. depot at Lawrence,
    Kan., 347–350.
  • San Domingo, servile insurrection in,
    340.
  • Sandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati Railroad,
    78.
  • Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad,
    78.
  • Sandusky, O., first fugitive at, (1820,)
    39; arrival of company of fugitives
    at, 76; boat service from, 83; prosecution
    of Rush R. Sloane of, 210, 276;
    as a terminal, 183, 185; trial of F. D.
    Parish of, 277.
  • Saxton, Gen. Ruf us, on work of Harriet
    Tubman, 189.

  • 470

    Page 470
  • Sayres indictment of, for attempted
    abduction, 173.
  • Schooley, W. D., operator, 88.
  • Schools, for refugees in Canada, 199,
    200, 205–208, 210, 214, 215, 228, 229;
    Sunday-schools, 330.
  • Scioto Company, organized by antislavery
    men, 38.
  • Scotch-Irish, the, in underground service,
    92.
  • Scotch, the, in underground service, 92.
  • Scott, Gen. Winfield, presidential candidate
    of Whigs, 321.
  • Scott, James, tried for aiding in rescue
    of Shadrach, 269, 270.
  • Scripture, quoted by the abolitionists,
    150, 306, 307.
  • Saa routes of the U. G. R. R., 81, 82,
    118, 129, 133, 144, 145, 148, 219.
  • Seceders, friends of runaways, 13.
  • Secession, begun, 352, 353; efforts of
    the legislatures of the Northern states
    to appease the spirit of, 354; North's
    refusal to surrender fugitives one of
    the chief reasons for, 357.
  • Sentinel, the, articles in, on the Underground
    Railroad, 6.
  • Sentinel, the, chapters of "A History of
    Anti-Slavery Days" in, 6.
  • Sergeant, of Pennsylvania, on new Fugitive
    Slave Bill, 297.
  • Seward, F. W., on places of deportation
    of fugitive slaves, 145 n.
  • Seward, Win. H., gives bail for Gen.
    Chaplin, 176; on Harriet Tubman
    185; aid given to Harriet Tubman by,
    189; in the Van Zandt case, 282;
    speech advising hospitality to fugitive
    slaves, 313; signs the bond of rescuers
    of Jerry McHenry, 320.
  • Sewell, Samuel E., counsel for fugitive
    slaves, 283.
  • Shadrach, route taken by, after his rescue
    in Boston, 132; counsel in case of,
    283; seizure of, 247; rescue of, 317,
    319.
  • Shaw, Chief Justice, on Slave Law of
    1793, 270.
  • Sheldon, Edward, indicted for helping
    fugitives, 284.
  • Shotwell, A. L., claimant of slave
    Tamar, 159.
  • Sider, Joseph, abductor, 60, 157.
  • Sidney, Alien, on misinformation about
    Canada among slaves, 197.
  • Signals, employed in the U. G. R. R
    service, 125, 156.
  • Sims, Theodore Parker's memoranda on
    rendition of, 8; case of, in court, 269–
    271, 283; returned to slavery, 317.
  • Sketches in the History of the Underground
    Railroad
    , by E. M. Pettit,
    2, 4.
  • Skillgess, Joseph, on fugitives passing
    through Ross Comity, O., 39.
  • Slave-hunters, authors of Levi Coffin's
    title "President of the U. G. R. R.,"
    111; at Detroit, 147; difficulties met
    by, 242, 243; imprisonment of, 273.,
    274; number of, increased after passage
    of the Fugitive Slave Law, 316;
    in the Oberlin-Wellington case, 335,
    336; protest against the employment
    of Northern troops as, 355.
  • Slave-hunting, engagement of shiftless
    class in, 239; by Southern planters
    and their aids, 240; uncertainty of, in
    anti-slavery communities, 242, 243;
    Mr. Mason, of Virginia, on, 243; agents
    of slave-owners employed in, 316.
  • Slavery, character of, at beginning of
    nineteenth century, 25; changed character
    of later, 26; John Brown's
    plan of abolition of, 168; in Canada,
    190, 191; attacks on, in Congress, 286;
    abolished in District of Columbia, 287;
    King's proposition to prohibit, in
    Northwest Territory, 293; conviction
    of sin of, in Northern states, 300,
    301; pursuit of fugitives creates opposition
    to, in the North, 302; early
    advocacy of political action against,
    by Bourne and Duncan, Rev. John
    Rankin's hatred of, 306; address of
    Liberty party convention touching on,
    310; effect of prosecution of U. G. R. R.
    workers on question of, 317; nationalized
    by law of 1850, 321; effects of,
    studied by Harriet Beecher Stowe,
    321; renewal of consideration of question
    of, caused by Uncle Tom's Cabin,
    324; U. G. R. R., the safety-valve of,
    340; disappearance of, in District of
    Columbia attributed to the U. G.R. R.
    by Claiborne, 341, 342; extinction of,
    in the United States, 356, 358.
  • Slaves, desire for freedom among, 25,
    195–197; purchase of, by Alabama, 26;
    incentives to flight of, 26, 27, 296;
    knowledge of Canada among, 28–

    471

    Page 471
    30, 197; arrive as stowaways on the
    Maine coast, 133; steady increase in
    the number of, fleeing into Ohio, 135;
    from Virginia, 144; movement of,
    to inter-lake portion of Ontario, 147;
    abduction of, opposed by majority of
    abolitionists, 150; abduction of, by
    negroes, 151; abductions of, by Canadian
    refugees, 152; abductions of, by
    Southern whites, 153; abduction of, by
    Northern whites, 154, 155; abduction
    of, in District of Columbia, 155, abduction
    of, by Burr, Work and Thompson,
    155, 156; abduction of, by Joseph
    Sider and Calvin Fairbank, 157–160;
    abduction of, by Seth Concklin, 160–
    162; abduction of, by John Brown, 162–
    165; effect of John Brown's raid upon
    Missouri, 165; Brown's plan for liberation
    of, 166–168; abductions of, in
    answer to appeal, 168, by Charles T.
    Torrey, 168–170, by Capt. Jonathan
    Walker, 170, 171, by Mrs. Laura S.
    Haviland, 171, 172; capture and incarceration
    of the, escaping on the
    steamer Pearl, 172, 173; abductions
    of, by Capt. Daniel Drayton, 172–174,
    by Richard Dillingham, 174, 175, by
    Wm. L. Chaplin, 175, 176, by Josiah
    Henson, 176–178, by Rial Cheadle,
    178, 179, by Dr. A. M. Boss, 179–183,
    by the fugitive Elijah Anderson,
    183, by the fugitive John Mason,
    183–185, by the fugitive Harriet Tubman,
    185–189; importation of, into
    Canada, 190, 191; Elgin Settlement
    in Canada started by a band of manumitted,
    202, 207; Wilberforce Colony
    originally settled by group of emancipated,
    218; domestic relations of, in
    Southern states, 227, 228; agents of
    U. G. R. R. appealed to for abduction
    of, 231, 232; Northern states an unsafe
    refuge for, 238, 239; purchase of,
    from their claimants, 241, 242; causes
    of flight of, 308; conditions favorable
    to escape of, 1840–1850, 309; effect of
    flight of, on Northern sentiment, 310;
    addresses to Southern, 310; address
    of Cazenovia convention to, 313; information
    about abolitionists among,
    316; danger of uprising of, lessened
    by the U. G. R. R., 340; prospect of
    stampede of, from the border slave
    states, in case of secession, 355;
    chances for escape of, multiplied during
    War, 355.
  • Slave trade, effect of prohibition of,
    (1807,) 301.
  • Sloane, Hon. Rush R., on the U. G.
    R. R. in northwestern Ohio, 39; account
    given by, of the naming of the
    Road, 45; prosecution of, 102; incident
    of embarkation of company of refugees
    given by, 148 n.; on Elijah Anderson,
    abductor, 183; fined for assisting
    runaways, 276, 277.
  • Sloane, John, early operator, 37.
  • Sloane, J. R. W., 13.
  • Sloane, Prof. Wm. M., 13 n.
  • Sloane, Rev. William, 14, 15.
  • Smedley, R. C., author of The Underground
    Railroad in Chester and
    Neighboring Counties of Pennsylvania
    ,
    2, 4; account of naming of
    the U. G. R. R. by, 44, 45; on loss
    of bondmen by Maryland counties,
    119; on numbers of fugitives sent to
    New England, 128, 129; on transportation
    of fugitives by rail, 143.
  • Smith, Gerrit, operator, 22, 27, 107;
    generosity of, 176; on Harriet Tubman,
    185; defiant speech of, after
    Jerry rescue, 320; one of the leaders in
    the Jerry rescue, 326; counsel for the
    fugitive Wm. Anderson in Canada, 353.
  • Smith, James, 154.
  • Smith, William R., work of, in behalf
    of Gen. Chaplin, 176.
  • Snediger family, operators, 87.
  • Society of Friends. See Quakers.
  • Sorrick, Rev. R. S. W., on the condition
    of refugees in Oro, Ontario, 218; on
    the teachableness of the Canadian
    refugees, 224.
  • South Carolina, abducting trip of A. M.
    Ross into, 29; agent of U. G. R. R. in
    Newberne, 68; involved in Brown's
    plan of liberation, 167; Canadian refugees
    from, 195; Pinckney on slave
    clause in United States Constitution
    before state convention of, 294; doctrine
    of state sovereignty of, resisted
    by Wisconsin, 330; servile insurrections
    in, 340; Butler of, on loss sustained
    by slave-owners of Southern
    section, 341; withdrawal from the
    Union, 352.
  • Southern branches of the U. G. R. R.,
    116–119.

  • 472

    Page 472
  • Southern states, satisfaction with the
    fugitive slave clause in the Constitution
    in the, 21; complaints of, on
    account of losses of slave property,
    2; refuges of runaways in the, 25;
    spread of the U. G. R. R. in, 28; knowledge
    about Canada among slaves in,
    28, 29, 180–182, 192; self-interest of,
    manifest in the Fugitive Slave Law of
    1850, 33; escapes by vessel from, 81,
    133, 144; anti-slavery sentiment among
    white emigrants from, 90, 91; emigration
    of Quakers from, on account of
    slavery, 93; anti-slavery advocates
    among Presbyterian clergy in, 95; settlement
    of anti-slavery people from,
    in Ohio, 115; friends of fugitives in,
    116; main channels of escape from,
    119; abductions by whites from, 153,
    154; Northern men in, encourage
    flight of slaves, 154, 155; expected
    effect of news of Brown's Missouri
    raid in, 165; Brown's plan for organizing
    insurrection in, 167, 168; Calhoun
    on expedition of the Pearl speaks
    for, 173, 174; expeditions for abduction
    of slaves to, 177, 178; operations of the
    abductor A. M. Ross in, 180–183; early
    emigration of negroes from, to Quebec,
    219; domestic relations of slaves in,
    227, 228; abductions of friends from,
    planned by the Canadian exiles, 231,
    232; abducting trips of Canadian refugees
    to, 232; rights of recovery in the
    North claimed by people of, 237; slave-hunting
    by people from, before and
    after law of 1850, 240, 241; effect of
    law of 1850 upon, 243; Lincoln's
    proclamation of warning to, 287; the
    Underground Railroad as a grievance
    of, 290; sentiment in, concerning
    slave clause in Constitution, 294;
    complaints of members of Congress
    from, on score of treatment accorded
    runaways in the North, 295, 296;
    negotiations for return of fugitives
    to, 302; people of, aroused by addresses
    to slaves, 310; Galhoun on
    discontent in, 313; Webster on complaint
    of, in regard to non-rendition
    of fugitives, 314; Pres. Fillmore gives
    assurances to, regarding Fugitive
    Slave Law, 318; doctrine of state sovereignty
    of, resisted by Wisconsin,
    330; work of the U. G. R. R, a real
    relief to, 340; estimates of loss sustained
    by slave-owners in various,
    341, 342; decline of slave population
    in border states, shown in United
    States census reports, 343; comparison
    of numbers of negroes transported
    from, by U. G. R. R. and
    American Colonization Society, 350,
    351; members of Congress from,
    on work of U. G. R. R., 351, 352; attempted
    conciliation of, 354; chances
    for escape of slaves multiplied
    throughout, 355; agitation by people
    of, for vigorous Fugitive Slave Law,
    357.
  • Sowles, Hon. William, operator, 107.
  • Spaldiug, Rufus P., counsel in the
    Oberlin-Wellington case, 282.
  • Speed, John, 65.
  • Speed, Sidney, incident of unsuccessful
    pursuit narrated by, 65, 66.
  • Spradley, Wash, a colored abductor of
    Louisville, Ky., 151.
    Sprague, Judge, on legal force of a
    commissioner's certificate, 270.
    Springfield, Mass., "League of Gileadites"
    in, 71–75.
  • Stanton, Henry B., 169, 170.
  • State sovereignty, doctrine of, in the
    Northern states, 326–330.
  • Stations, in New Hampshire, 132; in
    Maine, 134; initial, in Ohio, 135; initial,
    in Iowa, 136; number and distribution
    of, in portion of Morgan County,
    O., 137; stations in Michigan, 138; corresponding
    stations in Falley's and
    the author's maps, 138, 139; initial,
    along the Ohio River, 139, 346; limited
    activity of, in eastern and western
    extremities of the free region, 141;
    isolated, in New York, Pennsylvania,
    Indiana and Illinois, 142; terminal,
    145–148; cause of formation of initial,
    295; Harriet B. Stowe's house one of
    the, 321.
  • Station-keepers of the U. G. R. R., significance
    of the name, 67; character
    of work of, 69; explanation of division
    of labor between special agents and,
    70, 71; expense to, 76–78. See also
    Agents and Conductors.
  • Steele, Capt., master of a lake boat carrying
    fugitives, 82.
  • Steele, William, letter of, on escape of
    slave family, 51, 52.

  • 473

    Page 473
  • Stephens, Alexander H., abduction of
    slave of, 176.
  • Stephens, Charles, in Brown's raid, 163–
    165; arranges for trip east of Brown
    and party, 164, 165.
  • Stevens, Thaddeus, operator, 106; in
    the Christiana case, 282.
  • Stevenson, Henry, on slaves' desire for
    freedom, 196.
  • Stewart, family of, fugitive settlers near
    Detroit, 236.
  • Stewart, John H., colored operator, 89.
  • Stewart, Peter, reputed President of the
    U. G. R. R., 69.
  • Still, Peter, a fugitive from Alabama,
    160.
  • Still, William, author of Underground
    Railroad Records, 2
    , 3, 5, 8, 75; chairman
    of Vigilance Committee of Philadelphia,
    8, 232; on instances of
    fugitives shipped as freight, 60; on
    stowaways from the South, 145; on
    value of Canadian refugees as citizens,
    234 n.; coöperation of, with station
    at Elmira, 253.
  • Stone, Col. John, secret signal used by,
    56; facsimile of message sent by, 57.
  • Story, Justice, on the Fugitive Slave
    Law, 245; on power of Congress to
    legislate on subject of fugitive slaves,
    261.
  • Stout, Dr. Joseph, indicted for helping
    fugitive. 284.
  • Stow, L. S., on transportation of fugitives
    across Lake Erie, 146.
  • Stowe, Harriet Beecher, correctness of
    her representation in Uncle Tom's
    Cabin
    , 25, 322; material for Uncle
    Tom's Cabin
    gathered by, while living
    at Cincinnati, O., 105, 321; connection
    of, with the U. G. R. R., 105; influence of the slave controversy upon,
    290; champion of fugitive slaves, 323.
    Stowe, Prof. Calvin, model for a character
    in Uncle Tom's Cabin, 322.
  • Stowell, Martin, one of leaders in attempted
    rescue of Burns, 332.
  • Sturgeon, of Pennsylvania, supports the
    Fugitive Slave Law, 314.
  • Subterranean Pass Way of John Brown,
    339, 357.
  • Sumner, Charles, efforts of, in behalf of
    Capt. Drayton, 173; on number of
    fugitives fleeing from Northern states
    after enactment of law of 1850, 249;
    efforts of, in Senate to secure repeal
    of Fugitive Slave Law, 324; champion
    in Senate of the fugitive slave and
    his friends, 325; reads a letter in the
    Senate on employment of Northern
    troops as slave-catchers, 355.
  • Supplies, for U. G. R. R. passengers,
    76–78; furnished by Fred. Douglass, 78
    n.; for Canadian refugees, 202, 214;
    gathered for fugitives in Lawrence,
    Kan., 348, 349.
  • Syracuse, Vigilance Committee of, 71,
    72; rescue of Jerry McHenry in, 72,
    86, 318, 326; passes distributed to runaways
    in, 80; underground work of
    Rev. S. J. May in, 109; fugitives sent
    by train to, 124; indignation meeting
    at, held after passage of law of 1850,
    244; public action against Fugitive
    Slave Law in, 320; congratulatory
    message on Glover rescue from convention in, 328, 329.
  • Tabor, College, U. G. R. R. work of,
    98.
  • Tamar, slave recovered by Fairbank,
    159.
  • Taney, Judge, prosecution of Thomas
    Garrett before, 110.
  • Tappan, Lewis, supporter of Dr. A. M.
    Ross, 180.
  • Tennessee, abducting trip of Dr. A. M.
    Ross into, 28; John Rankin, a native
    of, 109; fugitives from, 109; underground
    route through easteru, 119;
    involved in Brown's plan of liberation,
    167; Dillingham's attempted abduction
    of slaves from, 174, 175;
    Canadian refugees from, 195; fables
    about Canada circulated in, 198.
  • Terminal stations of U. G. R. R., 70, 76,
    82, 83, 123, 126–128, 131, 133, 136, 138,
    139, 145–149; in Canada, 148, 149.
  • Terminology of U. G. R. R., 67, 124.
  • Territories, slavery prohibited in the,
    287.
  • Texas, question of annexation before
    Congress, 310; escape of slaves from
    western, 348.
  • Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution,
    356.
  • Thomas, Dr. Nathan M., operator, 88.
  • Thompson, George, a party in the case
    of Burr, Work and, 155, 156.
  • Thurston, Brown, operator, 37, 133.

  • 474

    Page 474
  • Ticknor, George, on political effect of
    Uncle Tom's Cabin, 323.
  • Todd, Rev. John, author of reminiscences
    of "The Early Settlement and
    Growth of Western Iowa," 7; quoted,
    43.
  • Todds, the, station-keepers, 15.
  • Toledo, O., boat service for runaways
    from, 83; U. G. R. R. helpers in, 92.
  • Tompkins, case of Johnson vs., 259, 273,
    274.
  • Toombs, Robert, 173; abduction of
    slaves of, 176.
  • Toronto, Canada, mission work of Rev.
    W. M. Mitchell in, 3; goods received
    for Canadian refugees at, 202, 203;
    number of refugee settlers in, 220,
    221; condition of fugitive settlers in,
    226; Drew on condition of colored
    people in, 227; equal school privileges
    for whites and blacks in, 229;
    evening school for adult negroes in,
    230.
  • Torrence, James W., method of, in conveying
    fugitives, 61.
  • Torrey, Rev. Charles T., abductor, 28,
    168, 169; number of slaves abducted
    from Maryland by, 88; succeeded by
    Mr. Chaplin as editor of the Albany
    Patriot, 175.
  • Townsend, Martin I., on routes in New
    York, 126.
  • Townshend, Prof. Norton S., operator
    in Cincinnati, 104.
  • Treason, charged in Christiana case,
    319; charged by Webster against
    transgressors of the law of 1850, 320.
  • Treatise on Slavery, in which is shown
    forth the evil of Slaveholding, both
    from the Light of Nature and Divine
    Revelation
    , immediate abolition advocated
    in, (1824,) 304–306.
  • Tribune, of New Lexington, O., on U. G.
    R. R., 6.
  • Troy, N.Y., rescue of fugitive Chas.
    Nalle in, 85.
  • "True Bands," societies for self-improvement among Canadian refugees,
    230, 231.
  • Trueblood, E. Hicks, author of articles
    on U. G. R. R. in Republican Leader,
    6.
  • Tnbman, Harriet, mentioned, 6, 28, 178,
    183; line of travel of, in Delaware,
    118; character of, 185; work as an
    abductor, 186, 187; faith of, 188; most
    venturesome journey of, 188, 189; service
    of, as scout in the Civil War, 189;
    passenger on U. G. R. R., 340.
  • Turner, Rev. Asa, on U. G. R. R. lines
    in Iowa and Illinois, 114.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin, correctness of representations
    in, 25, 322; sources of
    the knowledge of underground methods
    displayed in, 105, 321; political
    significance of, 321–324; Sumner on
    reception given to, 325; object of, 357.
  • Underground Railroad, as a subject
    for research, 1, 2; works on, 2, 3;
    articles on, 5–7; lack of contemporaneous
    documents relating to, 7;
    conditions of development of, 17, 18;
    numerous lines of, in Northern states,
    22; early stations of, on Western Reserve,
    extended into Southern states,
    28; effect of local conditions on
    growth of, 30; church connections
    of operators of, 32, 93–99; origin of,
    33, 34, 191, 192; development of, 35–
    43, in New Jersey, 34, in New York,
    34, 35, in New England, 36, in Ohio,
    37–40, in North Carolina, 40, in Indiana,
    40, 41, in Illinois, 41, 42, in
    Iowa, 42, 98, in Kansas, 43; activity
    of (1830–1840), 44, 308; activity of
    (1850–1860), 44, 71, 316, 317, 357;
    naming of, 44–46; midnight service
    on, 54–56; communications in work
    of, 56–59; methods of conveyance on,
    59–61; nature of routes of, 61, 62, 70,
    130, 141–146; variety of stations on,
    62–04; use of disguises in work of,
    64–67; lack of formal organization in,
    terminology of, 67; spontaneous character
    of, 69; places of deportation, 70,
    145–147; terminal stations of, 70, 145–
    148; routes by rail, 78–81, 142–145;
    connection of Fred. Douglass with, 80,
    91, 118, 251, 340; river routes, 81, 82,
    142; traffic by water, 81–83, 142, 144–
    148, 219; routes by sea, 81, 129, 144,
    145, 219; church connections of operators
    of, 94–97; notable operators of,
    104–112, 155–189, 251–253; rise of, in
    Connecticut, 109; study of general
    map of, 113 et seq.; extent of system,
    114; broken lines and isolated place-names,
    115, 116, 123, 141, 142; lines of
    New York and New England states, of

    475

    Page 475
    Wisconsin and Michigan, 116; organized
    in North Carolina, 117; Southern
    branches, 117–119; signals used on
    Delaware River, 125; relative number
    of routes in Western states, 134;
    local map of Morgan Co., O., 136, 137;
    map of Indiana and Michigan routes
    of, 137–139; map of line of, in Livingston
    and La Salle counties, 111., 139;
    trend of routes of, 139–141; lines of
    lake travel, 147, 148; Canadian termini
    of, 148, 149, 200, 219, 220, 225;
    operations of, through Clinton, O., in
    year 1842, 153; route followed by
    Brown from Missouri to Canada, 163–
    166; Brown's proposed use of, 166;
    route through Morgan Co., O., 178, 179;
    through Pennsylvania to Erie, 181;
    made use of by abductor A. M. Ross,
    181; "general superintendent" of, in
    northwestern Ohio, 183; Canada, the
    refuge of passengers of, 190; Dr. S.
    G. Howe, on the origin of, 192; development
    of, during decade 1828–
    1838, 193; increased efficiency of,
    due to law of 1850, 193, 338; ease of
    escape over, in later years of, 213;
    lines through New England to Quebec,
    219; capacity of, for transportation
    of fugitives, 222; agents of,
    appealed to, for abduction of friends,
    231; agents of, among fugitive settlers
    in Northern states, 251–253; explanation
    of secrecy of, 255; escapes
    from Indian Territory over, 284; political
    aspect of, 290; explanation of
    development of initial stations of,
    295; early branches in Pennsylvania,
    298; influence in spreading antislavery
    sentiment, 302; organization
    of, in Philadelphia, 309; grievance of
    border states due to, 312, 341, 342;
    most flourishing period of, 316; Harriet
    Beecher Stowe's house a station
    on, 321; rapid expansion of, during
    period 1840–1860, 337; the work of, a
    real relief to masters, 340; Osborn's
    record of fugitives aided during five
    months, 344, 345; computation of
    fugitives aided in Ohio and Philadelphia
    during 1830–1860, 346, 347;
    work of Lawrence station, in Kansas,
    described, 347–350; work of, compared
    with that of Colonization Society,
    350, 351; organized societies of,
    said to be maintained by the Republican
    party, 351; relation of, to the
    Civil War, 357, 358.
  • Underground Railroad, the Rev. W. M.
    Mitchell, author of, 2, 3.
  • Underground Railroad in Chester and
    the Neighboring Counties of Pennsylvania
    ,
    the, R. C. Smedley, author of,
    2, 4.
  • Underground Railroad Records, by Wm.
    Still, 2, 3, 4; work of the Philadelphia
    Vigilance Committee revealed in, 75,
    76; story of the abducting trip of
    Seth Concklin as given by, 160–162.
  • Unitarian Church, Rev. Theodore
    Parker a minister of, 8; underground
    work of Meadville Seminary of, 98;
    Rev. Samuel J. May, a clergyman of,
    109.
  • United States, census reports of, on
    fugitive slaves, 26, 342; escape of
    fugitives from Canada to, 190; schoolteachers
    for Canadian refugees supported
    by religious societies of, 215;
    relative progress of Canadian negroes
    and free negroes in, 227; ministers of
    Canadian refugees canvass for money
    in, 231; fugitive slave cases before
    courts of, 257, 259–264, 269, 270, 272–
    282, 286; necessity of a uniform
    system of regulation regarding fugitive
    slaves throughout, 261; treason
    against, charged in Christiana case,
    280; participation by President of, in
    Christiana case, 280, 281; fugitive
    slave clause embodied in Constitution
    of, 293; negotiations of, with England
    for extradition of fugitives, 299, 300;
    Senator Yulee on danger to the perpetuity
    of, 314; effect of Gerrit
    Smith's speech in the Anderson case
    in, 353; extinction of slavery in,
    356.
  • United States Freedman's Inquiry Commission,
    Dr. S. G. Howe's report for,
    on Canadian refugees, 211.
  • Universalist Church, result of appeal to
    societies of, in Massachusetts, 99.
  • Van Dorn, Mr., operator, 88.
  • Van Zandt, case of Jones vs., 262, 278,
    282; S. P. Chase and W. H. Seward in
    case of, 282; original of Van Tromp in
    Uncle Tom's Cabin, 322.
  • Vaughan vs. Williams, case of, 262.

  • 476

    Page 476
  • Vermont, emancipation in, 17; rise of
    U. G. R. R. in, 36; steam railroad
    transportation for fugitives through,
    81; public men, operators in, 106, 107;
    routes of, 126, 130; terminal stations
    in, 145; personal liberty law of, 245,
    246, 309; emancipation by, 293; amendment
    of personal liberty law by, 354.
  • Vermont Central Railroad, 80, 130, 143,
    145.
  • Vigilance Committee, of Philadelphia,
    3, 4, 8; of Boston, 8; explanation of the
    origin of such bodies given by Theodore
    Parker, 71; organization and
    work of Syracuse, 71, 72; account of
    Boston, 72, 73; account of the formation
    and rules of the Springfield
    (Mass.) "League of Gileadites," 73–
    75; of Philadelphia, 75, 76; Female
    Anti-Slavery Association organizes a,
    77; fugitives forwarded to New York
    City, by Philadelphia, 80; agents of,
    in Baltimore, 91, 117; appeal to
    churches of Massachusetts, by Boston,
    98, 99; Theodore Parker appointed
    counsellor of fugitives in Massachusetts
    by, 110; fugitives sent by sea to
    Philadelphia, 145; of Cincinnati, consulted
    by Mrs. Haviland, 171; entreaties
    for aid to chairman of Philadelphia,
    232; Philadelphia committee in Christiana
    case, 280; rescue of Jerry McHenry
    by Syracuse, 320; work of, in
    Milwaukee in Glover case, 328; work
    of Boston, in Burns case, 331; Purvis'
    record of fugitives aided by Philadelphia,
    346, 347.
  • Vincent, James, counsel in fugitive slave
    case, 284.
  • Virginia, proposition to enslave free
    negroes in, 26; knowledge of Canada
    among slaves in, 26, 28, 29, 37; abducting
    trip of Dr. A. M. Ross into, 28;
    fugitives shipped in a box from, 61;
    fugitives escaping by vessel from, 81;
    runaways from, 85, 109, 252, 253, 258;
    reward offered to Indians in, for apprehending
    fugitives, 92; anti-slavery
    sentiment in Quaker meetings of, 93;
    agent in Petersburg, 118; natural route
    from Norfolk, 118; slaves escaping
    from, 144, 145; visitation of, by abductor,
    151; abductor John Fairfield,
    of, 153; involved in Brown's plan of
    liberation, 167; Torrey's abduction of
    slaves from, 169; abductions by Rial
    Cheadle from, 179; knowledge of Canada
    spread by slaves from, 182; Rev.
    George Bourne, a resident of, 203;
    effect of slave-breeding in, 228; Mason
    of, on difficulty of recapturing fugitives,
    243; prohibition of aid to fugitives
    in colonial, 291; Madison, on
    slave clause in the Constitution before
    state convention of, 294; desirous for
    extradition of fugitives from Canada,
    299; Mason of, author of Slave Law of
    1850, 311; Burns carried back to, 333;
    Richmond Enquirer on rendition of
    Burns, 333; Brown's method to weaken
    slavery in, 339; servile insurrection in,
    340; Moore on loss borne by slave-owners
    of his district in, 341; Mason
    on "loss sustained by slave-owners of,
    341; decline in slave population of panhandle
    counties of, 343: fugitives from,
    recorded by Osborn, 345; reasons for
    loyalty of western, 354, 355.
  • Virginia and Kentucky resolutions,
    quoted by Wisconsin convention, 328,
    329; quoted by mass convention at
    Cleveland, O., 336.
  • Von Holst, on the U. G. R. R., 1.
  • Wabash and Erie Canal, thoroughfare
    for fugitives, 142.
  • Walker, Capt. Jonathan, work of, as an
    abductor, 168, 170, 171.
  • Walker, Edward, on the slave's desire
    for freedom, 196.
  • Walker, James, rescue of Piatt slaves
    by, 282, 283.
  • Walker,  Joseph G., disguise provided
    for fugitive by, 67.
  • Wambaugh , Prof. Eugene, on the dilemma
    involved in the Fugitive Slave
    laws, 256 n.
  • War of 1812, knowledge of Canada
    spread by, 27, 28, 301.
  • War of Rebellion, Still's U. G. R. R.
    records concealed during, 8; underground
    work terminated by, 11; services
    of Harriet Tubman during, 186,
    189; assaults on slavery justified by
    exigencies of, 286, 287; underground
    operations as a cause of, 290, 351, 352,
    358; chances for escape of slaves multiplied
    during, 355; resort of slaves to
    Union forces at the outbreak of 357.
  • Ware, J. R., station-keeper, 69, 70.

  • 477

    Page 477
  • Washington, D.C., route from, 117, 125;
    abduction of slaves from, by Capt.
    Dray ton, 172, 173; abduction of slaves
    from, by Wm. L. Chaplin, 175, 176
    occurrence of last fugitive slave case
    under law of 1850 in, 285.
  • Washington, George, letters of, (1786,)
    relating to fugitives, 33, 68; Fugitive
    Slave Law of 1793 signed by, 254;
    escaped slave of, 295, 324, 325.
  • Washington, Horace, 27.
  • Washington, Judge, in the case of Hill
    vs. Low, 273.
  • Washington, Lewis, agent, 253.
  • Weakley, case of Oliver vs., 276.
  • Webster, Daniel, supports Fugitive
    Slave Bill, 314, 315; on the necessity
    of the enforcement of Fugitive Slave
    Law of 1850, 320.
  • Webster, Miss Delia A., assistant of
    Fairbank in abduction of Hayden
    and family, 158, 159.
  • Weed, Thuriow, underground work of,
    108.
  • Weeks, Dr. Stephen B., on underground
    work of the Coffins in North Carolina,
    117.
  • Weiblen, John G., conveys fugitives by
    boat to Canada, 83.
  • Weimer, L. F,, suit of, against Sloane,
    276, 277.
  • Weldon, John, method of, in transporting
    fugitives, 61.
  • Wesley, John and Charles, views of, on
    slavery question, 94.
  • Wesleyan Methodists, friends of fugitives,
    32; secession of, from M. E.
    Church, 94; operators among, 95, 168.
  • West, David, on the slave's desire for
    freedom, 196.
  • West, Hon. John, operator, 107.
  • West, Wm. H., counsel for Piatt slaves,
    282, 283.
  • Western Reserve, early escapes across,
    28, 301; anti-slavery sentiment in, 31,
    fugitive passengers from, 35; routes
    across, 123.
  • Western Reserve College, anti-slavery
    influence of, 115.
  • Western Reserve Historical Society publishes
    pamphlet on "U. G. R. R.," by
    Prof. J.H. Fairchild, 5.
  • Western states, routes of, 134–144.
  • West Indian Emancipation, celebration
    of, by Canadian refugees, 226, 227.
  • Weston, G. W., message of, 58.
  • Westwater, James M., hiding-place provided
    by, 63.
  • Wheaton, Clias. A., a leader in the Jerry
    rescue, 326.
  • Whig party, character of, 100; vote of,
    on the Fugitive Slave Law, 315; considers
    Compromise of 1850 a finality,
    320; disinclination to vote for Gen.
    Winfield Scott, 321.
  • Whipper, Alfred, school-teacher among
    the refugees, 215.
  • Whipple. See Chas. Stephens.
  • White, Addison, attempted seizure of,
    241; escape of, to Canada, 234.
  • White, Hon. Andrew D., letter of, on
    underground work of his father, 80.
  • White, Horace, railroad parses supplied
    to fugitives by, 80.
  • White, Isaac, 29.
  • White, John, slave befriended by Mrs.
    Haviland, 171, 172.
  • White, Joseph, operator, 97.
  • Whitfield, views on the slavery question,
    94.
  • Whitman, of Massachusetts, on the bill
    securing to claimant of runaway right
    to prove title in courts of his own
    state, etc., 297.
  • Whitneys, of Concord, Mass., friends of
    Harriet Tubman, 186.
  • Whittier, John G., supporter of Liberty
    party, 100; on work of Rev. Charles
    T. Torrey, 170; stanza of "The
    Branded Hand," by, quoted, 171.
  • Wilberforce Colony in Canada, visited
    by Levi Coffin, 200, 220; origin of,
    218; Dr. J, W. Moore on progress of
    fugitives in, 226, 227.
  • Willes, Rev. Dr., on refugee population
    in Canada, 222.
  • Willey, Rev. Austin, on escape of fugitives
    to New Brunswick, 219.
  • Williams, George W., the negro historian
    on U. G. R. R. 340.
  • Williams, case of Vaughan vs., 262.
  • Williams, John F., agent, 41.
  • Williams, Thomas, map of lines in Morgan
    County, O., by, 136.
  • Williams, W. B., on route from Washington,
    D.C., 117.
  • Wilmington, Del., underground work of
    Thomas Garrett in, 110, 111; station
    for Harriet Tubman, 118; movement
    of fugitives to, 121.

  • 478

    Page 478
  • Wilmington, N.C., escape of slaves
    from, 81, 144, 145.
  • Wilson, Henry, on U. G. R. R., 1, 37,
    114; on abductions by Rev. Charles
    T. Torrey, 169; on number of fugitive
    settlers in Northern states, 237.
  • Wilson, John W., counsel in fugitive
    slave cases, 283.
  • Wilson, Rev. Hiram, receiving agent in
    Canada, 126; mission kept by, 194;
    schools supervised by, 199, 200; arranges
    with Canadian government for
    admission of supplies, 202; founder of
    school for refugees, 205; service of, in
    British and American Institute for
    refugees, 206, 207, 220; on number of
    Canadian refugees, 221.
  • Windsor, Ontario, visited by Fairfield,
    the abductor, 153, 154; arrival of
    Brown and his abducted slaves in,
    165; private schools for negroes in,
    229.
  • Winslow, Nathan, operator, 133.
    Wisconsin, organized as free state, 17,
    18; places of deportation in, 82, 116,
    147; personal liberty law of, 246;
    Howe of, on law of 1850, 286; Glover
    rescue in, 327–330; determination of
    people of, shown in Booth case, 330.
  • Women's Anti-Slavery societies, supplies
    for passengers provided by, 77.
  • Woodford, Newton, indicted for helping
    fugitives, 284.
  • Woolman, John, precepts of, 49.
  • Work, Alanson, a party in the case of
    Burr, Work and Thompson, 155, 156.
  • Worthington, O., early rescue of a fugitive
    in, 38, 84.
  • Wright vs. Deacon, case of, 256, 257.
  • Wright, Judge Jabez, early operator, 39.
  • Wright, Peter, on the work of Canadian
    refugees, 205.
  • Wright, William and Phœbe, station-keepers,
    118 n.
  • Yokum, William, watchwords used
    by, 57.
  • Young, Rev. Joshua, operator, 130.
  • Yulee, of Florida, informs Senate of
    convention of runaway slaves in New
    York, 313.
  • Zigzag routes, 62, 131, 141.