![]() Map of Underground Railroad routes into the northern United States and to modern-day Canada | |
Founding location | United States |
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Territory | United States, and routes to British North America, Mexico, Spanish Florida, and the Caribbean |
Ethnicity | African Americans and other compatriots |
Activities |
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Allies | |
Rivals | Slave catchers, Reverse Underground Railroad |
Part of a series on |
Forced labour and slavery |
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The Underground Railroad was an organized network of secret routes and safe houses used by freedom seekers to escape to the abolitionist Northern United States.[1] Enslaved Africans and African Americans escaped from slavery as early as the 16th century, and many of their escapes were unaided;[2][3][4] however, a network of safe houses generally known as the Underground Railroad began to organize in the 1780s among Abolitionist Societies in the North.[5][6] It ran north and grew steadily until the Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863 by President Abraham Lincoln.[7] The escapees sought primarily to escape into free states, and potentially from there to Canada.[8]
The network, primarily the work of free and enslaved African Americans,[9] was assisted by abolitionists and others sympathetic to the cause of the escapees.[10] The enslaved people who risked capture and those who aided them are also collectively referred to as the passengers and conductors of the Railroad, respectively.[11] Various other routes led to Mexico,[12] where slavery had been abolished, and to islands in the Caribbean that were not part of the slave trade.[13] An earlier escape route running south toward Florida, then a Spanish possession (except 1763–1783), existed from the late 17th century until approximately 1790.[14][15] During the American Civil War, freedom seekers escaped to Union lines in the South to obtain their freedom. One estimate suggests that by 1850, approximately 100,000 slaves had escaped to freedom via the network.[7] According to former professor of Pan-African studies J. Blaine Hudson, who was dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Louisville, by the end of the Civil War, 500,000 or more African Americans self-emancipated from slavery on the Underground Railroad.[16]
'A network of houses and other places abolitionists used to help enslaved Africans escape to freedom in the northern states or in Canada ... ' – American Heritage Dictionary
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