When you hear the term underground railroad, what comes to your mind? Do you think of people sneaking away in the middle of the night after the North Star? Well that wasn’t always the case. Sometimes they would sneak away in daylight. Some researchers think that some of these slaves had people on the outside leading them to their freedom. The Underground Railroads had gotten its name when it first appeared in print in an abolitionist newspaper in 1839, at the end of the decade when railways had come…
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Slaves ran away by using secret codes and passages because of the cruelty going on towards them. Slaves would run away from the Southern United States to the Northern United States or Canada to be free but there was certain laws to stop them from achieving their freedom. One of the most famous passages known for slaves reaching their freedom was the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad was a secret system organized by conductors or engineers who helped women, children and men escape…
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The Underground Railroad helped the slaves in the south escape to the north and Canada. It was not really a railroad. The Underground Railroad was made up of a group of people, homes and hideouts. The people in the Underground Railroad used terms like the real railroads. The conductors were the people that took the slaves along the designated escape route. The stations also called depots were homes and places where the slaves hid on their journey. Stockholders were people that contributed money…
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Jerry, a fugitive slave, originally from Missouri who escaped to Syracuse, New York in search for freedom. The north and south acquired different opinions regarding slavery over time. The north abolished slavery, but the south made slavery an integral part of their culture and economy. This lead to sectional tension. Although slavery was abolished Syracuse, racism and prejudice was not. For example, black men were more like to be arrested for petty crimes than their white counterparts. Jerry adamantly…
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The Underground Railroad 1820-1861 African American Research Paper Jasmine Grayson University of Louisiana at Monroe March 18, 2017 The Underground Railroad The Underground Railroad was established in to help slaves migrate to the North to be freed from slavery. The slaves were unsatisfied with the treatment they received from their owners. Therefore, they wound run away from the harsh treatment. There were people called abolitionist wanted to help the slaves from their misery…
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farms and slave owners. Even though that the slave trade was abolished slavery did not cease. Slavery was one of the biggest dilemma during this time, because it was the growth of marketing. Wealthy people needed clothing that was made from cotton. However the production would go slow if it was a single man working on a field on his own. Therefore, slaves was the idea that help spark this issue. Western expansion was the contribution of the compromise of 1850, free soil party, and Underground Railroad…
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03/15/15 Causes of The Civil War 5 Compromise of 1820 • United States Free/Slave Soil Map - 1820 The Missouri Compromise 03/15/15 Causes of The Civil War 6 …Compromise of 1820 • Congress admitted Missouri as slave state • U.S. compensated Texas for their loses • California made a new state • Order attempted in Washington D.C. by removing slavery • Fugitive slave law: Slaves fleeing to North must be returned to owners in South 03/15/15 Causes of The Civil War 7 Sectionalism…
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the publishing of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, the underground rail road, the Dred Scott Case and the election of 1860. Each event played a key role during the 1800’s leading to this brutal unforgiving war. The Abolitionist movement which was known also known as the antislavery movement was created during the early 1800’s in extreme attempts to end slavery. The goals of this Abolitionist movement were to free slaves and end racial segregation and discrimination throughout the country…
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the war, but so did many 1850’s national events. Some of these events were the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Fugitive Slave act, and the 1850’s compromise. January 1, 1831, The Liberator was issued by Garrison. In this Garrison presented the Declaration of Indepence and strongly argued that slavery needed to be abolished. Garrison, as a nonviolent militant abolitionist stated that blacks were entitled to more than what they were offered, they were supposed…
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people that aided slaves to freedom, known as Harriet Tubman, Gerrit Smith, Rev. Samuel J. May, and Rev. Jermain W. Loguen lived in the area and were remembered for helping these slaves on their journeys from the US to Canada. They helped these runaway slaves along secret routes and in hiding along the Underground Railroad. Eventually, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Law in 1850, making matters regarding slavery even worse. The Fugitive Slave Law was part of the Compromise of 1850 between Northern…
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