From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Underground Railroad routes
The list of
Underground Railroad sites includes
abolitionist locations of sanctuary, support, and transport for former slaves in 19th century
North America before and during the
American Civil War . It also includes sites closely associated with people who worked to achieve personal freedom for all Americans in the movement to end
slavery in the United States .
The list of validated or authenticated
Underground Railroad and
Network to Freedom sites is sorted within state or province, by location.
Canada
"Keeping the Flames of Freedom Alive", Underground Railroad Monument in
Windsor, Ontario , Canada.
Detroit ,
Michigan is in the background.
The
Act Against Slavery of 1793 stated that any enslaved person would become free on arrival in
Upper Canada . A network of routes led from the United States to Upper and
Lower Canada .
[1]
Ontario
Amherstburg Freedom Museum – Amherstburg.
[2] The museum uses historical artifacts, Black heritage exhibits, and video presentations to share the story of how Africans were forced into slavery and the made their way to Canada.
[3]
Fort Malden – Amherstburg
[4] One of the routes to Ontario was to cross
Lake Erie from
Sandusky, Ohio to Fort Malden. Another route to Fort Malden was traveling across the
Detroit River into Canada and then across to Amherstburg. A number of fugitive slaves lived in the area and
Isaac J. Rice established himself as a missionary, operating a school for black children.
[5]
Buxton National Historic Site and
Elgin settlement – Chatham, Ontario
[1]
[6] The Elgin settlement was established by a Presbyterian minister,
Reverend William King , with fifteen former slaved on November 28, 1849. King came from Ohio, where he inherited fourteen enslaved people from his father-in-law and acquired another and set them free. King intended the Elgin settlement to a refuge for runaway enslaved people. The Buxton Mission was established at the settlement.
[7]
Uncle Tom's Cabin Historic Site and Dawn Settlement – Dresden.
[1]
[2] Rev.
Josiah Henson , a former enslaved man who fled slavery via the Underground Railroad with his wife Nancy and their children, was a cofounder of the Dawn Settlement in 1841. Dawn Settlement was designed to be a community for black refugees, where children and adults could receive an education and develop skills so that they could prosper. They exported tobacco, grain, and black walnut lumber to the United States and Britain.
[8]
John R. Park Homestead Conservation Area – Essex. The Park Homestead was a station on the Underground Railroad.
[9]
[10]
John Freeman Walls Historic Site – Lakeshore.
[1]
[2] John Freeman Walls, left his enslavers in North Carolina and settled in Canada. The
Refugee Home Society supplied the money to buy land and he built a cabin. Church services were held there before the Puce Baptist Church was built. It was also a terminal stop on the Underground Railroad. Walls and his family stayed in Canada after the
American Civil War .
[11]
Queen's Bush – Mapleton.
[1] Beginning in 1820, African American pioneers settled in the open lands of Queen's Bush. More than 1,500 blacks set up farms and created a community with churches and Mount Pleasant and Mount Hope schools, which were taught by American missionaries.
[12]
St. Catharines –
Harriet Tubman lived in St. Catharines and attended the
Salem Chapel for ten years. After she freed herself from slavery, she helped other enslaved people reach freedom in Canada. The town was a final stop on the Underground Railroad for many people.
[13]
Sandwich First Baptist Church – Windsor.
[1] The church was built just over the border from the United States in Windsor, Ontario by blacks who came to Canada to live free. For its role in the lives of its congregants and as a sanctuary for fugitive slaves, it was designated a
National Historic Site in 1999.
[14]
Nova Scotia
African-American people settled in
Nova Scotia since 1749.
[15]
Birchtown National Historic Site – Birchtown.
[1] It was a settlement of black people from
Colonial America , who served the British during the
American Revolutionary War in exchange for their freedom. Birchtown was the largest community of free black people in
British North America during the late 18th century.
[1]
[16]
Africville – Halifax.
[1] Black people settled in Africville beginning in 1848. Black residents did not have the same services as white people, like clean water and sewers, and lived on land that was not arable. Some were able to make a living for themselves and build a community with a Baptist church, a school, stores, and a post office. A plan was initiated to relocate families and raze the site of the town.
[15]
United States
Colorado
Barney L. Ford Building — Denver, associated with escaped slave Barney Ford, who became a quite successful businessman and led political action towards Black voting rights in Colorado.
[17] He used the Underground Railroad (UGRR) to flee slavery and supported UGRR activities.
[18]
Connecticut
Austin F. Williams Carriagehouse and House , Farmington
Francis Gillette House — Bloomfield
[19]
Austin F. Williams Carriagehouse and House — Farmington.
[17] Built in the mid-19th century, the property was designated a
National Historic Landmark for the role it played in the celebrated case of the
Amistad Africans, and as a "station" on the
Underground Railroad .
[20]
First Church of Christ, Congregational — Farmington
[21] The church was a hub of the
Underground Railroad , and became involved in the celebrated case of the African slaves who revolted on the Spanish vessel
La Amistad . When the Africans who had participated in the revolt were released in 1841, they came to Farmington.
[20]
Polly and William Wakeman House — Wilton. The Wakemans were among a group of abolitionists in Wilton who helped runaway slaves. Underneath their house was a tunnel that was accessed by a trap door. They took people on late-night trips to neighboring towns on the
Underground Railroad .
[22]
[23]
Delaware
Camden Friends Meetinghouse — Camden
[24] Quaker meeting house (built in 1806) of Camden Monthly Meeting, several of whose members were active in the Underground Railroad, including
John Hunn , who is buried in its cemetery.
John Dickinson Plantation — Dover
[24]
New Castle Court House — New Castle
[17]
Appoquinimink Friends Meetinghouse — Odessa
[17]
Corbit–Sharp House — Odessa
[24]
The
Tilly Escape site, Gateway to Freedom: Harriet Tubman's Daring Route through Seaford — Seaford
[24]
[25]
Friends Meeting House — Wilmington
[17]
Thomas Garrett House — Wilmington
[24]
District of Columbia
Blanche K. Bruce House
[24]
Camp Greene and Contraband Camp
[24]
Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
[17]
Howard University , Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
[24]
Leonard Grimes Property Site
[24]
Mary Ann Shadd Cary House
[17]
Pearl incident at 7th Street Dock
[24]
[26]
Florida
Negro Fort , also known as British Fort and Fort Gadsden — near Sumatra, Franklin County
[17]
[27]
Fort Mosé — St. John's County
[17]
Georgia
First African Baptist Church — Savannah
[27]
Dr. Robert Collins House - William and Ellen Craft Escape Site (
NRHP site) — Macon
[24]
Illinois
Dr. Hiram Rutherford House
Old Rock House — Alton
[29]
[30]
New Philadelphia Town Site — Barry
[24]
Quinn Chapel AME Church — Brooklyn
[24]
Lucius Read House — Byron
[24]
Galesburg Colony UGRR Freedom Station at Knox College — Galesburg
[24]
Beecher Hall ,
Illinois College — Jacksonville
[17]
Graue Mill — Oak Brook
[27]
[31]
Dr. Hiram Rutherford House and Office — Oakland
[17]
Owen Lovejoy House — Princeton
[17]
John Hossack House — Ottawa
[17]
Dr. Richard Eells House — Quincy
[17]
[32]
Maple Lane (Reverend
Asa Turner House) – Quincy
[33]
Mission Institute Number One – Quincy
[34]
[33]
Mission Institute Number Two – Quincy
[34]
[33]
Oakland (Dr.
David Nelson House) – Quincy
[34]
[33]
Blanchard Hall,
Wheaton College — Wheaton
[24]
Indiana
Eleutherian College , Lancaster, Indiana built in 1856
Levi Coffin House — Fountain City
[17]
Bethel AME Church — Indianapolis
[17]
Eleutherian College Classroom and Chapel Building — Lancaster
[17]
Lyman and Asenath Hoyt House — Madison
[17]
Madison Historic District — Madison
[17]
Town Clock Church (now Second Baptist Church) — New Albany
[35]
Quinn House, within
Old Richmond Historic District — Richmond
[27]
Phanuel Lutheran Church — Southeastern Fountain County
[36]
Iowa
First Congregational Church — Burlington
[37]
Horace Anthony House — Camanche
[38]
Reverend George B. Hitchcock House — Lewis vicinity
[17]
Henderson Lewelling House — Salem
[17]
Todd House — Tabor
[17]
Jordan House — West Des Moines
[17]
Kansas
Fort Scott National Historic Site — Bourbon County
[17]
John Brown Cabin — Osawatomie
[17]
Maine
Harriet Beecher Stowe House — Brunswick
[17]
Abyssinian Meeting House — Portland
[17]
Maple Grove Friends Church — Fort Fairfield
Private Home - 55 High St Brownsville, ME
Maryland
Harriet Tubman , c. 1868–1869, who was a significant figure in the history of the Underground Railroad. The
Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park in Cambridge recognizes her efforts to free enslaved people
President Street Station — Baltimore
[27]
Harriet Tubman's birthplace — Dorchester County
[39]
[40]
Riley-Bolten House — North Bethesda
[17]
John Brown's Headquarters — Sample's Manor
[17]
Massachusetts
African American National Historic Site — Boston
[17]
William Lloyd Garrison House — Boston
[17]
Black Heritage Trail , including the
Lewis and Harriet Hayden House — Boston
[27]
[24]
[41]
William Ingersoll Bowditch House — Brookline
[17]
Mount Auburn Cemetery — Cambridge
[17]
The Wayside — Concord
[17]
George Luther Stearns Estate — Medford
[42]
Nathan and Mary Johnson House — New Bedford
[17]
Jackson Homestead — Newton
[17]
Ross Farm — Northampton
[17]
Dorsey–Jones House — Northampton
[17]
Liberty Farm — Worcester
[17]
Michigan
Guy Beckley — Ann Arbor. Underground Railroad promoter and station master and anti-slavery lecturer. The Guy Beckley House is on the
Underground Railroad Network to Freedom .
Erastus and Sarah Hussey — Battle Creek
[44]
Second Baptist Church — Detroit
[17]
Dr. Nathan M. Thomas House — Schoolcraft
[17]
Wright Modlin — Williamsville, Cass County. His house was a railroad station, but he often traveled south to the
Ohio River (a border between the free and slave states) or into
Kentucky where he found people escaping slavery and brought them up to Cass County. He was so successful that it angered Kentuckian slaveholders, who instigated the
Kentucky raid on Cass County in 1847. He was also a central figure in
The South Bend Fugitive Slave case.
Nebraska
Mayhew Cabin — Nebraska City
[17]
New Jersey
Grimes Homestead , Mountain Lakes, New Jersey
Holden Hilton House — Jersey City
[46]
Thomas Vreeland Jackson and John Vreeland Jackson house — Jersey City
[46]
Mott House — Lawnside Borough
[17]
[47]
Red Maple Farm — Monmouth Junction
[48]
Grimes Homestead — Mountain Lakes
[17]
[47]
Rhoads Chapel — Saddlertown, Haddon Township
[49]
Bethel AME Church — Springtown
[17]
[47]
Mortonson-Van Leer Log Cabin — Swedesboro
[50]
Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church — Woolwich Township
[17]
[47]
New York
A few UGRR Sites in New York
Edwin Weyburn Goodwin — Albany
Stephen and Harriet Myers House — Albany
[24]
[52]
Allegany County network:
Baylies Bassett — Alfred and
others (including Henry Crandall Home — Almond; William Sortore Farm — Belmont); Marcus Lucas Home — Corning; Thatcher Brothers — Hornell,
McBurney House — Canisteo (now in town of Hornellsville);
William Knight — Scio
[53]
[54]
Harriet Tubman House and Thompson AME Zion Church — Auburn
[17]
[55]
North Star Underground Railroad Museum — Ausable Chasm
[17]
[53]
Michigan Street Baptist Church — Buffalo
[27]
Cadiz, Franklinville area network:
Merlin Mead House and
others , including John Burlingame, Alfred Rice, Isaac Searle, and the owner of the Stagecoach Inn
[56]
McClew Farm at Murphy Orchards — Burt
[24]
[57]
St. James AME Zion Church — Ithaca
[17]
[52]
John Brown Farm State Historic Site — Lake Placid
[17]
Starr Clock Tinshop — Mexico
[17]
Abolitionist Place — New York City: Brooklyn. Abolitionist Place is a section of Duffield Street in downtown Brooklyn that used to be a center of anti-slavery and Underground Railroad activity. New York City was one of the busiest ports in the world in the 19th century. Some
freedom seekers traveled aboard ships amongst cargo, like tobacco or cotton from the
Southern United States and arrived in Brooklyn a few blocks away from Abolitionist Place. Underground Railroad conductors helped these freedom seekers, as well as people who traveled north on the Underground Railroad. They were provided needed shelter, like at the
Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims ; clothing; and food.
[58]
Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims — New York City: Brooklyn
[17]
[52]
Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center — Niagara Falls
[55]
Chappaqua Friends Meeting House -
Chappaqua, New York
[59]
Buckout-Jones Building — Oswego
[24]
Edwin W. and Charlotte Clarke House — Oswego
[17]
[24]
Hamilton and Rhoda Littlefield House — Oswego
[24]
John B. and Lydia Edwards House — Oswego
[17]
[24]
John Jay Homestead - Bedford/Katonah
[59]
Orson Ames House — Mexico, Oswego County
[17]
Oswego Market House — Oswego
[24]
Oswego School District Public Library (presumably the
Oswego City Library ) — Oswego
[24]
Richardson-Bates House Museum — Oswego
[24]
Tudor E. Grant — Oswego
[24]
Gerrit Smith Estate and Land Office — Peterboro
[17]
Smithfield Community Center — Peterboro, formerly a church; first meeting of New York Anti-Slavery Society held there; houses
National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum .
[60]
Samuel and Elizabeth Cuyler House Site — Pultneyville
[24]
Foster Memorial AME Zion Church — Tarrytown
[17]
[52]
Eber Pettit Home - Versailles
[56]
North Carolina
Guilford College Woods meeting place,
Guilford College — Greensboro
[61]
Freedmen's Colony of Roanoke Island Network to Freedom site — Manteo, Outer Banks
[24]
[62]
Ohio
Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati, Ohio
Col. William Hubbard House — Ashtabula
[17]
Captain Jonathan Stone House — Belpre
[63]
Harriet Beecher Stowe House — Cincinnati
[17]
House of
Peter and Sarah M. Fossett — Cincinnati / Cumminsville
[64]
[65]
Samuel and Sally Wilson House — Cincinnati
[17]
James and Sophia Clemens Farmstead — Greenville
[17]
Sawyer–Curtis House — Little Hocking
[66]
Mount Pleasant Historic District — Mt. Pleasant
[17]
Reuben Benedict House — Marengo
[17]
Spring Hill — Massillon
[17]
Wilson Bruce Evans House — Oberlin
[17]
John P. Parker House — Ripley
[17]
John Rankin House — Ripley
[17]
Daniel Howell Hise House — Salem
[17]
Rush R. Sloane House — Sandusky
[17]
George W. Adams House /
Prospect Place — Trinway
[67]
Iberia — Washington Township, Morrow County
[68]
Putnam Historic District — Zanesville
[17]
Pennsylvania
John Brown House in
Chambersburg
People's Hall in
Ercildoun
Kaufman's Station — Boiling Springs
[24]
Oakdale — Chadds Ford
[17]
John Brown House — Chambersburg
[17]
Dobbin House — Gettysburg
[27]
Thaddeus Stevens Home and Law Office – Lancaster
[24]
Johnson House — Philadelphia
[17]
Hosanna Meeting House — Chester County
[69]
Liberty Bell ,
Independence National Historical Park — Philadelphia
[27]
White Horse Farm — Phoenixville
[17]
Hovenden House, Barn and Abolition Hall — Plymouth Meeting
[70]
Bethel AME Zion Church — Reading
[17]
F. Julius LeMoyne House — Washington
[17]
William Goodrich House — York
[24]
[27]
Eusebius Barnard House — Pocopson
[71]
Van Leer Cabin — Tredyffrin
Rhode Island
Isaac Rice Homestead — Newport
[27]
Tennessee
Burkle Estate (Slavehaven) in Memphis, Tennessee.
Burkle Estate was possibly a station and is now Slave Haven Underground Railroad Museum — Memphis
[27]
[72]
Hunt-Phelan House — Memphis
[27]
[73]
Texas
Matilda and Nathaniel Jackson
Silvia and John Webber
Vermont
Rowland E. Robinson House,
Rokeby — Ferrisburgh
[17]
Virgin Islands
Annaberg Sugar Plantation and School — St. John
[27]
Virginia
Bruin's Slave Jail — Alexandria
[17]
Rochelle–Prince House /
Nat Turner Historic District — Courtland
[27]
Moncure Conway House — Falmouth
[17]
Theodore Roosevelt Island — Rosslyn
[17]
Fort Monroe — Hampton
[17]
West Virginia
Z. D. Ramsdell House — Ceredo
[74]
Jefferson County Courthouse — Charles Town
[17]
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park — Harpers Ferry
[17]
Wheeling Hotel — Wheeling
[27]
Wisconsin
Milton House — Milton
[17]
Joshua Glover — Milwaukee
[24]
Lyman Goodnow — Waukesha. Conductor, led 16-year-old
Caroline Quarlls , the first known freedom seeker along Wisconsin's Underground Railroad, from Wisconsin to Canada.
Other articles and references
See also
References
^
a
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^
"Amherstburg Freedom Museum" . Ontario Heritage Trust . 2017-02-22.
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^ Tom Calarco, Places of the Underground Railroad: A Geographical Guide (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2011), 16.
^
"Levi Coffin, 1798-1877. Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the Reputed President of the Underground Railroad; Being a Brief History of the Labors of a Lifetime in Behalf of the Slave, with the Stories of Numerous Fugitives, Who Gained Their Freedom Through His Instrumentality, and Many Other Incidents" . docsouth.unc.edu . p. 143, 249.
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Bibliography
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