Scholarship
Samuel Rhoads (Still, 1872)
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 719.
Was born in Philadelphia, in 1806, and was through life a consistent member of the Society of Friends. His parents were persons of great respectability and integrity. The son early showed an ardent desire for improvement, and was distinguished among his young companions for warm affections, amiable disposition, and genial manners, rare purity and refinement of feeling, and a taste for literary pursuits.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (Still, 1872)
Reference
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 757-758.
About the year 1853, Maryland, her native State, had enacted a law forbidding free people of color from the North from coming into the State on pain of being imprisoned and sold into slavery. A free man, who had unwittingly violated this infamous statute, had recently been sold to Georgia, and had escaped thence by secreting himself behind the wheel-house of a boat bound northward; but before he reached the desired haven, he was discovered and remanded to slavery. It was reported that he died soon after from the effects of exposure and suffering.
Goodwin, Abigail
Full name
Abigail Goodwin
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Abigail Goodwin (Still, 1872)
Reference
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 617.
Contemporary with Esther Moore, and likewise an intimate personal friend of hers, Abigail Goodwin, of Salem, N. J., was one of the rare, true friends to the Underground Rail Road, whose labors entitle her name to be mentioned in terms of very high praise.
A..W. M. a most worthy lady, in a letter to a friend, refers to her in the following language:
A..W. M. a most worthy lady, in a letter to a friend, refers to her in the following language:
William Whipper (Still, 1872)
Scholarship
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 735.
The locality of Columbia, [Pennsylvania,] where Mr. Whipper resided for many years, was, as is well-known, a place of much note as a station on the Underground Rail Road. The firm of Smith and Whipper (lumber merchants), was likewise well-known throughout a wide range of country. Who, indeed, amongst those familiar with the history of public matters connected with the colored people of this country, has not heard of William Whipper? For the last thirty years, as an able business man, it has been very generally admitted, that he hardly had a superior.
Samuel Burris (Still, 1872)
Scholarship
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 746.
Referred to by John Hunn, [Samuel Burris] was also a brave conductor on the Underground Rail Road leading down into Maryland (via Hunn's place). Mr. Burris was a native of Delaware, but being a free man and possessing more than usual intelligence, and withal an ardent love of liberty, he left "slavedom" and moved with his family to Philadelphia. Here his abhorrence of Slavery was greatly increased, especially after becoming acquainted with the Anti-slavery Office and the Abolition doctrine.
John Henry Hill (Still, 1872)
Scholarship
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 190.
JOHN HENRY never forgot those with whom he had been a fellow-sufferer in Slavery; he was always fully awake to their wrongs, and longed to be doing something to aid and encourage such as were striving to get their Freedom.
John Henry Hill, Correspondence in Still’s Underground Rail Road (Still, 1872)
Scholarship
William Still, The Underground Rail Road (Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1872), 190-191.
In these letters, may be seen, how much liberty was valued, how the taste of Freedom moved the pen of the slave; how the thought of fellow-bondmen, under the heel of the slave-holder, aroused the spirit of indignation and wrath; how importunately appeals were made for help from man and from God; how much joy was felt at the arrival of a fugitive, and the intense sadness experienced over the news of a failure or capture of a slave.
Hill, John Henry
Full name
John Henry Hill
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Morristown, NJ
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Place Unit Type
City or Town
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Location
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