Many slaves! The underground railroad was a system of smuggling slaves! There were ofter signs or signals in a persons window so a slave could know the house was a safe place to hide in. The slaves mostly traveled at night and hid in the day. Once a slave got to the north they were considered free but, if their owner found them they could take them back. Also if another white man thought he was his even though he wasn't he could still take the slave because the white men were always right.
They farted.
The 'passengers' of the Underground Railroad were enslaved African Americans and 'conductors' were abolitionists(people against slavery). But remember, the Underground Railroad wasn't underground and wasn't an actual railroad
idek
The stationmaster provided a shelter for the "passengers" using the railroad. They were called stationmasters because their homes were like Train stations, and obviously, they were the master.
No it is known as the underground railroad as it was hidden from sight
They farted.
The 'passengers' of the Underground Railroad were enslaved African Americans and 'conductors' were abolitionists(people against slavery). But remember, the Underground Railroad wasn't underground and wasn't an actual railroad
idek
The stationmaster provided a shelter for the "passengers" using the railroad. They were called stationmasters because their homes were like Train stations, and obviously, they were the master.
No it is known as the underground railroad as it was hidden from sight
The Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad.
the underground railroad started in 1816 and ended in 1856.
The underground railroad happened in the 1830
National Association of Railroad Passengers was created in 1967.
The Underground Railroad was started in the 1810. The Underground Railroad was responsible for helping thousands of slaves find freedom.
There was no underground railroad in other countries. The underground railroad was not a real railroad, but one that was a series of stops that moved escaped slaves north.
Yes, he was the superintendent of the Underground Railroad.