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Underground Railroad

Alternate meaning: Metro
Map of the Underground Railroad
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Map of the Underground Railroad

The Underground Railroad was not an actual railroad but rather a network of clandestine routes, often informal and impromptu, by which black slaves were able to escape the southern United States and reach freedom either in states that protected fugitive slaves, or in Canada. The Underground Railroad consisted of secret safe houses and other facilities owned by anti-slavery sympathizers, and operated much like any other large-scale widespread resistance movement, with independent cells that only knew of a few of their neighbours. Escaped black slaves would pass from one way station to another, making their way north step by step. The main operators of the Railroad were free blacks, Quakers, and Wesleyans, who had a strong religious objection to slavery.

The Underground railroad was a major cause of friction between the North and South in the United States. Many northerners sympathized with those who helped bring black slaves to safety. Southerners for many years pushed for strong laws that would force the recapture of escaped black slaves, and in 1850 Congress passed a law mandating the capture of fugitive slaves. This prevented black slaves from settling in free states and forced them to escape to Canada.

The main destination of the escapees was southern Ontario around the Niagara peninsula and Windsor, Ontario. About 30,000 individuals successfully escaped to Canada. This was an important population increase to the still underpopulated Canadian colonies and these settlers formed the basis of the black population throughout Ontario.

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Last updated: 10-24-2004 05:10:45