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The Underground Railroad from Slavery to Freedom

Wilbur H. Siebert

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242] Daniel Gibbons, of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, was engaged in helping fugitive slaves during a period of fifty-six years. "He did not keep a record of the number he passed until 1824.[88] But prior to that time, it was supposed to have been over 200, and up to the time of his death (in 1853) he had aided about 1,000."[243] It has been estimated that Dr. Nathan M. Thomas, of Schoolcraft, Michigan, forwarded between 1,000 and 1,500 fugitives.[244] John Fairfield, the abductor, "piloted not only hundreds, but thousands."[245] The Rev. Charles T. Torrey went to Maryland and "from there sent—as he wrote previous to 1844—some 400 slaves over different routes to Canada."[246] Philo Carpenter, of Chicago, is reported to have escorted 200 fugitives to vessels bound for Canada.[247] In a letter to William Still, in November, 1857, Elijah F. Pennypacker, of Chester County, Pennsylvania, writes, "we have within the past two. . . Read More

Community Reviews

This book was written in 1898 and the copy I read is well used and falling apart. I hope that it is being preserved!

Siebert states in the preface, "In weighing the testimony amassed, the author has had the advantage of personal acquaintance with many of those furnishing information; and the internal