Sketches in the History of the Underground Railroad
SKETCHES
IN THE HISTORY
OF THE
Underground Railroad
COMPRISING MANY
THRILLING INCIDENTS OF THE ESCAPE
OF FUGITIVES FROM SLAVERY, AND THE PERILS
OF THOSE WHO AIDED THEM.
BY
EBER M. PETTIT,
FOR MANY YEARS A CONDUCTOR ON THE
U. G. R. R. LINE FROM SLAVERY TO FREEDOM.
WITH INTRODUCTION BY W. McKINSTRY.
Fredonia, N.Y.:
W. McKINSTRY & SON.
1879.
TO
FREDERICK DOUGLASS,
AN EXEMPLAR OF THE CAPABILITIES OF
HIS RACE,
AS AN
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF HIS GREAT SERVICE
IN BEHALF OF AN
Afflicted and Despised People,
AND AS A SINCERE FRIEND OF
THE MARTYRED PRESIDENT,
THIS VOLUME IS
Respectfully Dedicated.
Eber M. Pettit.
Fredonia, N. Y.
CONTENTS.
9 |
18 |
The Slave Coffle at Wheeling, Va.—The Kind Hearted Landlord—The Good Samaritan—The Hunters Misled—The Escape |
17 |
Dan’s Trip from Dunkirk—Sees his Master in the Car—R. R. Conductor’s Advice—Friends in Need—Safe arrival in Canada |
24 |
Tom Stowe—His Value to his Master—His Boy Sold and his Wife Dies—He Finds his Boy—His Escape to Pittsburg, and thence to Canada. |
27 |
Origin of the U. G. R. R.—Jo Norton |
34 |
Jo Norton, continued—Making their way from Washington to Albany—Jo goes to School—Lectures to buy his Wife and Child—Succeeds—The Happy Meeting |
41 |
Jo Norton, continued—His Quickness at Repartee—Lectures in Vilienova—Settles in Syracuse—Enforcing the Fugitive Slave Law—The
“Shadrack” Case in Boston—Effect on Syracuse and the Empire State. |
46 |
The “Jerry Rescue”—Jo Norton Heads the Party that Rescues Jerry—Exciting Times in Syracuse—The Fugitive Slave Law in Contempt—Jo goes to Canada |
50 |
George and Clara—They reach Oberlin—Hotly Pursued—Take Passage with Capt. Titus—Recognized by their Owner—Capt. Titus’ Experience—An Incident of the Burning of the Erie—Escape of the Fugitives |
56 |
An Old-fashioned Democrat—The U. G. R. R. Business a means of Political Conversion. |
63 |
Two Democratic neighbors vote for James K. Polk and have a visit the evening after election—They become U. G. R. R. agents—The
escape of Robert. |
69 |
True Democrats versus Copperheads—The escape of Statie and Lila—From Washington, D.C., to Warsaw, N.Y., in a box—Pursuers foiled |
74 |
The Escape of Jim and his Companions—Night Meetings among the Slaves—An Angry Southerner in Fredonia. |
89 |
Joe and Rosa—Sold—The Escape—They reach the Southern Terminus of the U. G. R. R.—Danger Signals—The Quaker Friend—The Master on the track—Outwitted by the Quaker—Safe in Wilberforce Colony. |
105 |
William and Margaret—Seventy Years Old and Determined to be Free—Half Brother to a U. S. Senator—Argument in a R. R. car. |
130 |
An old time Missionary at the South—Speaks his Mind but Loses his Shirts—The Slaveholder’s Penitent Letter. |
137 |
Rev. J. W. Loguen—His Trial and Release—Lectures in Chautauqua County—Unexpected Corroboration. |
143 |
The Southern U. G. R. R.—It’s use during the war—A Union Prisoner’s Experience Escaping from Andersonville. |
147 |
Frightened Moses—Expecting to be Killed and Eaten by Abolitionists. |
154 |
Oneda Lackow’s Flight from Alabama—Capture and Escape—The
Faithful Dog—The Kind-hearted Jailer’s Wife—Graduates from a Seminary and goes to England. |
157 |
166 |
This work was published before January 1, 1930, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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