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AMERICAN
HISTORY
On
the Underground Railroad |
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By
Levi
Coffin in 1850 |
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In the winter of 1826-27, fugitives began
to come to our house, and as it became more widely known on different
routes that the slaves fleeing from bondage would find a welcome and
shelter at our house, and be forwarded safely on their journey, the
number increased. Friends in the neighborhood, who had formerly stood
aloof from the work, fearful of the penalty of the law, were
encouraged to engage in it when they saw the fearless manner in which
I acted, and the success that attended my efforts. They would
contribute to clothe the fugitives, and would aid in forwarding them
on their way, but were timid about sheltering them under their roof;
so that part of the work devolved on us. Some seemed really glad to
see the work go on, if somebody else would do it. Others doubted the
propriety of it, and tried to discourage me, and dissuade me from
running such risks.
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The Underground Railroad by Charles T.
Webber, 1893.
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They manifested great concern for my
safety and pecuniary interests, telling me that such a course of
action would injure my business and perhaps ruin me; that I ought to
consider the welfare of my family; and warning me that my life was in
danger, as there were many threats made against me by the
slave-hunters and those who sympathized with them.
After listening quietly to these
counselors, I told them that I felt no condemnation for anything that
I had ever done for the fugitive slaves. If by doing my duty and
endeavoring to fulfill the injunctions of the Bible, I injured my
business, then let my business go. As to my safety, my life was in the
hands of my Divine Master, and I felt that I had
his approval. I had no fear of the danger that seemed to threaten my
life or my business. If I was faithful to duty, and honest and
industrious, I felt that I would be preserved, and that I could make
enough to support my family. At one time there came to see me a good
old Friend, who was apparently very deeply concerned for my welfare.
He said he was as much opposed to slavery as I was, but thought it
very wrong to harbor fugitive slaves. No one there knew of what crimes
they were guilty; they might have killed their masters, or committed
some other atrocious deed, then those who sheltered them, and aided
them in their escape from justice would indirectly be accomplices. He
mentioned other objections which he wished me to consider, and then
talked for some time, trying to convince me of the errors of my ways.
I heard him patiently until he had relieved his mind of the burden
upon it, and then asked if he thought the Good Samaritan stopped to
inquire whether the man who fell among thieves was guilty of any crime
before he attempted to help him? I asked him if he were to see a
stranger who had fallen into the ditch would he not help him out until
satisfied that he had committed no atrocious deed? These, and many
other questions which I put to him, he did not seem able to answer
satisfactorily. He was so perplexed and confused that I really pitied
the good old man, and advised him to go home and read his Bible
thoroughly, and pray over it, and I thought his concern about my
aiding fugitive slaves would be removed from his mind, and that he
would feel like helping me in the work. We parted in good feeling, and
he always manifested warm friendship toward me until the end of his
days.
Many of my pro-slavery customers left me
for a time, my sales were diminished, and for a while my business
prospects were discouraging, yet my faith was not shaken, nor my
efforts for the slaves lessened. New customers soon came in to fill
the places of those who had left me. New settlements were rapidly
forming to the north of us, and our own was filling up with emigrants
from North Carolina, and other States. My trade increased, and I
enlarged my business. I was blessed in all my efforts and succeeded
beyond my expectations.
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The
Underground Railroad business increased as time advanced, and it was
attended with heavy expenses, which I could not have borne had not my
affairs been prosperous. I found it necessary to keep a team and a wagon
always at command, to convey the fugitive slaves on their journey.
Sometimes, when we had large companies, one or two other teams and wagons
were required. These journeys had to be made at night, often through deep
mud and bad roads, and along by-ways that were seldom traveled. Every
precaution to evade pursuit had to be used, as the hunters were often on
the track, and sometimes ahead of the slaves. We had different routes for
sending the fugitives to depots, ten, fifteen, or twenty miles distant,
and when we heard of slave-hunters having passed on one road, we forwarded
our passengers by another.
In some
instances where we learned that the pursuers were ahead of them, we sent a
messenger and had the fugitives brought back to my house to remain in
concealment until the bloodhounds in human shape had lost the trail and
given up the pursuit.
I soon
became extensively known to the friends of the slaves, at different points
on the Ohio River, where fugitives generally crossed, and to those
northward of us on the various routes leading to Canada. Depots were
established on the different lines of the Underground Railroad, south and
north of Newport, and a perfect understanding was maintained between those
who kept them. Three principal lines from the South converged at my house;
one from Cincinnati, one from Madison, and one from Jeffersonville,
Indiana. The roads were always in running order, the connections were
good, the conductors active and zealous, and there was no lack of
passengers. Seldom a week passed without our receiving passengers by this
mysterious road. We found it necessary to be always prepared to receive
such company and properly care for them. We knew not what night or what
hour of the night we would be roused from slumber by a gentle rap at the
door. That was the signal announcing the arrival of a train of the
Underground Railroad, for the locomotive did not whistle, nor make any
unnecessary noise. I have often been awakened by this signal, and sprang
out of bed in the dark and opened the door. Outside in the cold or rain,
there would be a two-horse wagon loaded with fugitives, perhaps the
greater part of them women and children. I would invite them, in a low
tone, to come in, and they would follow me into the darkened house without
a word, for we knew not who might be watching and listening. When they
were all safely inside and the door fastened, I would cover the windows,
strike a light and build a good fire. By this time my wife would be up and
preparing victuals for them, and in a short time the cold and hungry
fugitive's would be made comfortable. I would accompany the conductor of
the train to the stable, and care for the horses, that had, perhaps, been
driven twenty-five or thirty miles that night, through the cold and rain,
The fugitives would rest on pallets before the fire the rest of the night.
Frequently, wagon-loads of passengers from the different lines have met at
our house, having no previous knowledge of each other. The companies
varied in number, from two or three fugitives to seventeen.
The care of
so many necessitated much work and anxiety on our part, but we assumed the
burden of our own will and bore it cheerfully. It was never too cold or
stormy, or the hour of night too late for my wife to rise from sleep, and
provide food and comfortable lodging for the fugitives. Her sympathy for
those in distress never tired, and her efforts in their behalf never
abated. This work was kept up during the time we lived at Newport, a
period of more than twenty years. The number of fugitives varied
considerably in different years, but the annual average was more than one
hundred. They generally came to us destitute of clothing, and were often
barefooted. Clothing must be collected and kept on hand, if possible, and
money must be raised to buy shoes, and purchase goods to make garments for
women and children. The young ladies in the neighborhood organized a
sewing society, and met at our house frequently, to make clothes for the
fugitives.
Continued Next Page
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