Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

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Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November

Transcript of Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Page 1: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Michigan and Local Underground

Railroad

University Sojourner TruthE-Mentoring Program

November

Page 2: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

National Underground Railroad Routes

Slaves escaped out West, into Mexico, into the Caribbean Islands, and into Canada.

There were various routes into Canada and many of them went through Michigan.

Page 3: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Michigan Underground Railroad Routes

As this map shows, there were seven MAIN routes through Michigan and into Canada.

Some of the routes followed old Indian trails and others followed supply roads that connected Michigan cities.

Page 4: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Elizabeth Chandler Chandler founded the

Logan Female Antislavery Society which was one of the first anti-slavery societies in the Northwest Territory.

She was a poet and writer who died when she was only 27 years old but spoke out against slavery all of her adult life.

Page 5: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Blissfield Presbyterian Church

Several members of the Blissfield Presbyterian Church were members of the Michigan Anti-Slavery Society founded in 1836.

They also established a Committee of Vigilance to help fugitive slaves as they passed through the area.

Page 6: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Laura Haviland Laura Haviland and

her husband, Charles, were interested in education and founded the Raisin Institute in 1839 as well as a training school for both men and women regardless of race.

Page 7: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Raisin Institute

The Raisin Institute was the first integrated, coeducational school in Michigan.

The school was one of the first of its kind in the nation.

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Woodstock Another revolutionary

school was started near Addison in the northwestern corner of Lenawee County.

Called the Woodstock Manual Labor Institute, the school was primarily for blacks but both African and Caucasian students attended.

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Adrian College Adrian College was

built on the belief that all persons regardless of their gender, race, or background would be accepted as students and educated.

Downs Hall is the only original building still standing on the college campus.

Page 10: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Asa Mahan Asa Mahan was

president of Adrian College for more than 12 years.

Before he came to Adrian, he was president of Oberlin College in Ohio, which was known as an anti-slavery school.

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Friends Church

This Quaker meeting house in Adrian was built in 1834 and is Michigan’s oldest surviving Quaker meeting house.

Page 12: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Erastus Hussey Erastus Hussey was a

Quaker who ran an Underground Railroad station in Battle Creek.

He was also a leader in the Michigan Anti-Slavery Society and the Republican Party.

Page 13: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Under the Oaks Following the passage of

the Kansas-Nebraska Act citizens from across the Midwest came together "under the oaks" in Jackson, Michigan to officially establish a new party which had been commonly conceived throughout the U.S.  

On JULY 6th, 1854 - The REPUBLICAN PARTY WAS BORN!

Page 14: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Sojourner Truth Sojourner Truth—born

Isabella Hardenberg in Ulster County, New York—was born into slavery.

Finally escaping to freedom, she would eventually change her name and become a nationally known abolitionist.

Page 15: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Liberty Press

Hussey also published the Michigan Liberty Press, the newspaper of the Michigan Anti-Slavery Society in 1848 and 1849.

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Perry Sanford Perry Sanford was a

fugitive slave from Kentucky.

He escaped on the Underground Railroad and came to Ramptown, a settlement in Cass County, Michigan.

Page 17: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Samuel Brown’s House

Samuel Brown and his wife, Rhoda, ran an 80 acre farm here and used their house as a safe house on the Underground Railroad.

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Davis Family Home Interior Kimberly Davis shows

Georgianna Bartlow, a descendant of Samuel Brown, the opening in the floor which led to a secret hiding place for escaping slaves.

Fugitives could hide in a small crawl space under the floor if slave raiders came looking for them.

Page 19: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Davis Family Home Diagram

This diagram shows how slaves hid in the Samuel Brown house.

There were several different hiding places in this house.

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Ann Arbor, Michigan The founding

meeting of the Michigan Antislavery Society was held in the First Presbyterian Church.

Delegates from six counties elected officers and adopted fourteen resolutions denouncing slavery.

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Ypsilanti, Michigan

The house was built in 1841 by Mark and Justin Norris, both conductors on the Underground Railroad.

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Detroit, Michigan Just miles away from

the freedom that the Canadian border offered to escaped slaves, the church soon became a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Douglass discussed abolition with Second Baptist leaders before addressing citizens at the church 1859.

Page 23: Michigan and Local Underground Railroad University Sojourner Truth E-Mentoring Program November.

Detroit Monument Many fugitive

slaves fled to Canada where United States’ laws could not reach them.

Last year two monuments were dedicated to these fugitives — one in Detroit and one in Windsor, Canada, just across the river.