Lewis Davis, Otterbein, and the Underground Railroad How did a poor, uneducated southerner become a major abolitionist in Westerville, Ohio? Come learn more about one of Otterbein’s founding fathers, and how he helped to make Otterbein University a stop on the Underground Railroad.https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/libraryprograms/1003/thumbnail.jp
The movement to end slavery is commonly known as the abolitionist movement. As a city located next t...
In the three decades leading up to the American Civil War, there existed a loose network of people w...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
When the crisis in Kansas over allowing—or banning—slavery in the territory erupted in 1854, it beca...
Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800s. Born a slave, Douglas...
Abolitionism came relatively late to Lewis Tappan. Devotional, benevolent and hardworking are all wo...
This article describes the life and struggles of Jermain W. Loguen (originally named Jarm Logue), bo...
Caption reads "Number 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. A slave station of the Underground R...
In this interview, Wilbur H. Siebert recorded the recollections of Elias Tetirick (1819-1901). Tetir...
Elihu Embree--industrialist, publisher, scholar, and idealist--lived in Tennessee at the turn of the...
Wallace Turnage is not a famous person, but historians are fascinated with the discovery of the form...
Based on the debate in the research literature since Herbert Gutman first reintroduced Richard L. Da...
Caption reads "Opening in back porch of house, located at 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, w...
By 1854, when the Kansas-Nebraska Territories were opened for settlement, underground railroads had ...
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
The movement to end slavery is commonly known as the abolitionist movement. As a city located next t...
In the three decades leading up to the American Civil War, there existed a loose network of people w...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
When the crisis in Kansas over allowing—or banning—slavery in the territory erupted in 1854, it beca...
Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800s. Born a slave, Douglas...
Abolitionism came relatively late to Lewis Tappan. Devotional, benevolent and hardworking are all wo...
This article describes the life and struggles of Jermain W. Loguen (originally named Jarm Logue), bo...
Caption reads "Number 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. A slave station of the Underground R...
In this interview, Wilbur H. Siebert recorded the recollections of Elias Tetirick (1819-1901). Tetir...
Elihu Embree--industrialist, publisher, scholar, and idealist--lived in Tennessee at the turn of the...
Wallace Turnage is not a famous person, but historians are fascinated with the discovery of the form...
Based on the debate in the research literature since Herbert Gutman first reintroduced Richard L. Da...
Caption reads "Opening in back porch of house, located at 408 East Sixth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, w...
By 1854, when the Kansas-Nebraska Territories were opened for settlement, underground railroads had ...
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
The movement to end slavery is commonly known as the abolitionist movement. As a city located next t...
In the three decades leading up to the American Civil War, there existed a loose network of people w...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...