From Fugitive to Freedom: The Story of the Underground Railroad
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Steven Otfinoski
Steven Otfinoski has written more than two hundred books for young readers. He is also a playwright and has his own theater company that brings one-person plays about American history to schools. He lives in Connecticut with his family.
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From Fugitive to Freedom - Steven Otfinoski
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Foreword
1: SLAVES AND MASTERS
2: THE COST OF FREEDOM
3: A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM
4: ESCAPE PLANS
5: THE JOURNEY BEGINS
6: ON THE RUN
7: THE PRICE OF FREEDOM
8: THE BRIDGE
9: A BLOCK IN THE ROAD
10: A NEW PLAN
11: DANGEROUS CROSSING
12: THE FINAL PUSH
13: FREE AT LAST
Epilogue
Timeline
Glossary
Critical Thinking Using the Common Core
Internet Sites
Further Reading
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Copyright
Back Cover
FOREWORD
Enslaved black people in the Americas had been risking their lives trying to escape their bonds almost since the first African slaves arrived in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619. And for many years there were people opposed to slavery who were willing to help these people in their journey to freedom. By the 1840s, a system of safe houses had developed in the United States where fugitive slaves from the South could be hidden and protected on their journey north to free states. This secret network came to be called the Underground Railroad. Although it was neither underground nor a railroad, its members borrowed the language of train travel. Those working on the railroad were agents.
Some agents were conductors,
who guided their cargo
of fugitive slaves, from station
to station.
The safe houses were owned or operated by other agents, who were called stationmasters.
The final destination of most fugitives was the relative safety of northern states, where slavery had been banned. Some would travel farther north to the greater safety of Canada.
Enslaved people escaped by foot or any other type of transportation available.
Among the many fugitive slaves who reached freedom in this period was a determined young woman named Harriet Tubman. In September 1849, she left her husband and family in Dorchester County, Maryland, and fled north, probably with the assistance of agents on the Underground Railroad.
Work on the Underground Railroad grew more dangerous in 1850 when Congress passed a new Fugitive Slave Act. The Slave Act said that runaway slaves found in the North had to be returned to their owners. It also created new punishments for those who assisted fugitives.
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 became a major point of controversy after its passage by Congress.
But Harriet Tubman continued her work despite the increased danger. Beginning in 1851, she made several trips back to Maryland and Virginia to guide other fugitive slaves, including members of her family, north. In 1856, Tubman made three excursions south. The last, in October of that year, found Tubman finishing one rescue mission and about to return to dangerous territory to begin another rescue mission as a guide on the Underground Railroad.
1
SLAVES AND MASTERS
Slave owners forced enslaved people to do many types of work, including harsh physical labor, such as picking cotton.
Joe Bailey
Talbot County, Maryland, September 20, 1856
Joe Bailey watched the two slaves haul timber into the shipyard and nodded his approval. Joe was a slave too, one of the 40 working in the shipyard and on the farm owned by their master, William Hughlett. But Joe was no ordinary slave. He was the foreman of the shipyard, a manager of other slaves. When