University of Virginia Library


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CONTENTS

CHAPTER I

Sources Of the History Of the Underground Railroad

                 
PAGE 
The Underground Road as a subject for research 
Obscurity of the subject 
Books dealing with the subject 
Magazine articles on the Underground Railroad 
Newspaper articles on the subject 
Scarcity of contemporaneous documents 
Reminiscences the chief source  11 
The value of reminiscences illustrated  12 

CHAPTER II

Origin and Growth of the Underground Road

                           
Conditions under which the Underground Road originated  17 
The disappearance of slavery from the Northern states  17 
Early provisions for the return of fugitive slaves  19 
The fugitive slave clause in the Ordinance of 1787  20 
The fugitive slave clause in the United States Constitution  20 
The Fugitive Slave Law of 1793  21 
The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850  22 
Desire for freedom among the slaves  25 
Knowledge of Canada among the slaves  27 
Some local factors in the origin of the underground movement  30 
The development of the movement in eastern Pennsylvania, in New
Jersey, and in New York 
33 
The development of the movement in the New England states  36 
The development of the movement in the West  37 
The naming of the Road  44 

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CHAPTER III

The Methods of the Underground Railroad

                                     
PAGE 
Penalties for aiding fugitive slaves  47 
Social contempt suffered by abolitionists  48 
Espionage practised upon abolitionists  50 
Rewards for the capture of fugitives and the kidnapping of abolitionists  52 
Devices to secure secrecy  54 
Service at night  54 
Methods of communication  56 
Methods of conveyance  59 
Zigzag and variable routes  61 
Places of concealment  62 
Disguises  64 
Informality of management  67 
Colored a nd white agents  69 
City vigilance committees  70 
Supplies for fugitives  76 
Transportation of fugitives by rail  78 
Transportation of fugitives by water  81 
Rescue of fugitives under arrest  83 

CHAPTER IV

Underground Agents, Station-Keepers, or Conductors

                   
Underground agents, station-keepers, or conductors  87 
Their hospitality  87 
Their principles  89 
Their nationality  90 
Their church connections  93 
Their party affinities  99 
Their local standing  101 
Prosecutions of underground operators  101 
Defensive League of Freedom proposed  103 
Persons of prominence among underground helpers  104 

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CHAPTER V

Study of the Map of the Underground Railroad System

                               
PAGE 
Geographical extent of underground lines  113 
Location and distribution of stations  114 
Southern routes  116 
Lines of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York  120 
Routes of the New England states  128 
Lines within the old Northwest Territory  134 
Noteworthy features of the general map  139 
Complex routes  141 
Broken lines and isolated place names  141 
River routes  142 
Routes by rail  142 
Routes by sea  144 
Terminal stations  145 
Lines of lake travel  147 
Canadian ports  148 

CHAPTER VI

Abduction of Slaves from the South

                 
Aversion among underground helpers to abduction of slaves  150 
Abductions by negroes living along the northern border of the slave
states 
151 
Abductions by Canadian refugees  152 
Abductions by white persons in the South  153 
Abductions by white persons of the North  154 
The Missouri raid of John Brown  162 
John Brown's great plan  166 
Abductions attempted in response to appeals  168 
Devotees of abduction  178 

CHAPTER VII

Life of the Colored Refugees in Canada

     

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Slavery question in Canada  190 
Flight of slaves to Canada  192 
Refugees representative of the slave class  195 
Misinformation about Canada among slaves  197 
Hardships borne by Canadian refugees  198 
Efforts toward immediate relief for fugitives  199 
Attitude of the Canadian government  201 
Conditions favorable to their settlement in Canada  203 
Sparseness of population  203 
Uncleared lands  204 
Encouragement of agricultural colonies among refugees  205 
Dawn Settlement  205 
Elgin Settlement  207 
Refugees' Home Settlement  209 
Alleged disadvantages of the colonies  211 
Their advantages  212 
Refugee settlers in Canadian towns  217 
Census of Canadian refugees  220 
Occupations of Canadian refugees  223 
Progress made by Canadian refugees  224 
Domestic life of the refugees  227 
School privileges  228 
Organizations for self-improvement  230 
Churches  231 
Rescue of friends from slavery  231 
Ownership of property  232 
Rights of citizenship  233 
Character as citizens  233 

CHAPTER VIII

Fugitive Settlers in the Northern States

             
Number of fugitive settlers in the North  235 
The Northern states an unsafe refuge for runaway slaves  237 
Reclamation of fugitives in the free states  239 
Protection of fugitives in the free states  242 
Object of the personal liberty laws  245 
Effect of the law of 1850 on fugitive settlers  246 
Underground operators among fugitives of the free states  251 

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CHAPTER IX

Prosecutions of Underground Railroad Men

                                         
PAGE 
Enactment of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1793  254 
Grounds on which the constitutionality of the measure was questioned  254 
Denial of trial by jury to the fugitive slave  255 
Summary mode of arrest  257 
The question of concurrent jurisdiction between the federal and
state governments in fugitive slave cases 
259 
The law of 1793 versus the Ordinance of 1787  261 
Power of Congress to legislate concerning the extradition of fugitive
slaves denied 
263 
State officers relieved of the execution of the law by the Prigg decision,
1842 
264 
Amendment of the law of 1793 by the law of 1850  265 
Constitutionality of the law of 1850 questioned  267 
First case under the law of 1850  268 
Authority of a United States commissioner  269 
Penalties imposed for aiding and abetting the escape of fugitives  273 
Trial on the charge of treason in the Christiana case, 1854  279 
Counsel for fugitive slaves  281 
Last case under the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850  285 
Attempted revision, of the law  285 
Destructive attacks upon the measure in Congress  286 
Lincoln's Proclamation of Emancipation  287 
Repeal of the Fugitive Slave Acts  288 

CHAPTER X

The Underground Railroad in Politics

             

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Valuation of the Underground Railroad in its political aspect  290 
The question of the extradition of fugitive slaves in colonial times  290 
Importance of the question in the constitutional conventions  293 
Failure of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1793  294 
Agitation for a more efficient measure  295 
Diplomatic negotiations for the extradition of colored refugees from
Canada, 1826–1828 
299 
The fugitive slave a missionary in the cause of freedom  300 
Slave-hunting in the free states  302 
Preparation for the abolition movement of 1830  303 
The Underground Railroad and the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850  308 
The law in Congress  310 
The enforcement of the law of 1850  316 
The Underground Road and Uncle Tom's Cabin  321 
Political importance of the novel  323 
Sumner on the influence of escaped slaves in the North  324 
The spirit of nullification in the North  327 
The Glover rescue, Wisconsin, 1854  327 
The rendition of Burns, Boston, 1854  331 
The rescue of Addison White, Mechanicsburg, Ohio, 1857  334 
The Oberlin-Wellington rescue, 1858  335 
Obstruction of the Fugitive Slave Law by means of the personal
liberty acts 
337 
John Brown's attempt to free the slaves  338 

CHAPTER XI

Effect of the Underground Railroad

                       
The Underground Road the means of relieving the South of many
despairing slaves 
340 
Loss sustained by slave-owners through underground channels  340 
The United States census reports on fugitive slaves  342 
Estimate of the number of slaves escaping into Ohio, 1830–1860  346 
Similar estimate for Philadelphia, 1830–1860  346 
Drain on the resources of the depot at Lawrence, Kansas, described
in a letter of Col. J. Bowles, April 4, 1859 
347 
Work of the Underground Railroad as compared with that of the
American Colonization Society 
350 
The violation of the Fugitive Slave Law a chief complaint of
Southern states at the beginning of the Civil War 
351 
Refusal of the Canadian government to yield up the fugitive Anderson,
1860 
352 
Secession of the Southern states begun  353 
Conclusion of the fugitive slave controversy  355 
General effect and significance of the controversy  356