Ferrying across the river Forgotten conductors rediscovered For generations, white Quaker activists have remained at the center of the story of the Underground Railroad. Whether operating the routes to freedom along the eastern seaboard, or through the Ohio River Valley, Quakers...
The Long Trail to Freedom Over 500,000 Americans went west on the Oregon, California, and Mormon Tra...
Examining Flashpoints on the Road to Civil War A novelist could scarcely have contrived a more h...
Caption reads "Number 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. A slave station of the Underground R...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
The Role of Fugitive Slaves in the Workings of the Underground Railroad Based on a series of lecture...
The Underground Railroad, Black Agency, and the Coming of the Civil War The momentum toward uncoveri...
Editor Timothy Walker and the chapters’ authors challenge the “20th century fakelore featuring the u...
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
A Slave Rescue In the Shadow of the Civil War is a narrative of a slave escape in antebellum Philad...
“Harbour provides us with a finely tuned multilayered exploration of black women’s activism in the a...
"On the Edge of Freedom" is an interdisciplinary study of five free black communities that functione...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
The Long Trail to Freedom Over 500,000 Americans went west on the Oregon, California, and Mormon Tra...
Examining Flashpoints on the Road to Civil War A novelist could scarcely have contrived a more h...
Caption reads "Number 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. A slave station of the Underground R...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
The Role of Fugitive Slaves in the Workings of the Underground Railroad Based on a series of lecture...
The Underground Railroad, Black Agency, and the Coming of the Civil War The momentum toward uncoveri...
Editor Timothy Walker and the chapters’ authors challenge the “20th century fakelore featuring the u...
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
A Slave Rescue In the Shadow of the Civil War is a narrative of a slave escape in antebellum Philad...
“Harbour provides us with a finely tuned multilayered exploration of black women’s activism in the a...
"On the Edge of Freedom" is an interdisciplinary study of five free black communities that functione...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
The Long Trail to Freedom Over 500,000 Americans went west on the Oregon, California, and Mormon Tra...
Examining Flashpoints on the Road to Civil War A novelist could scarcely have contrived a more h...
Caption reads "Number 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. A slave station of the Underground R...