No names followed to choose from, as your question stated "which of the following people," but I believe you are looking for Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman, from Maryland, escaped slavery in 1849 and fled to Philadelphia. She returned soon after for her family. Afterward, Harriet spent atleast 10 years helping other slaves escape using the underground railroad. The Underground railroad was actually a network of homes, owned by salvery protesters, that opened their doors to fleeing slaves heading for the North.
The Underground Railroad (URR) emerged as a result of over four hundred years of slavery in the United States. Oppressed slaves wanted a way out, and with the help of Abolitionist and other Anti-Slavery proponents, many slaves escaped to freedom in Canada. A lot of them were helped along their way via the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad. It was a loosely constructed network of escape routes that originated in the Southern United States, through the less restricted North and eventually stretched to Canada. Slaves escaped not only to Canada, but also to Mexico and the Caribbean. This system of escape started as early as the 1500s and operated well into the 1800s.
underground railroad ;P
Harriet Tubman
The undergrond railroad
Harriett Tubman
Harriet Tubman was a abolitionist who escaped from slavery and became a conductor to the underground railroad.
One of the most important "conductors" of the underground railroad was an escaped slave and abolitionist named Harriet Tubman. Otherwise known as "Moses" to the slaves she rescued.
.the abolitionists
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.
Escaped slaves often joined existing communities of free African Americans, formed their own independent settlements, or sought refuge in abolitionist networks that helped them find safe passage to freedom in the North or Canada. Some escaped slaves also joined the Underground Railroad or engaged in other forms of resistance against slavery.
The underground railroad helped take escaped slaves away to the North where it was safe.
Harriet Tubman was a famous abolitionist who also spied for the Union. Tubman herself was born into slavery. When she escaped, she helped up to 70 other slaves escape with the assistance of the Underground Railroad.
Three abolitionists are:1. Harriet Tubman-escaped slave, conductor of the Underground Railroad.2. William Lloyd-publisher of the Liberator.3. Frederick Douglass-an escaped slave, founded the Northstar, was also a writer.
Harriet Tubman
Frederick Douglass became involved in the Underground Railroad in the 1830s. He escaped slavery himself in 1838 and became an abolitionist, actively supporting and aiding others in their escape for many years after.
Moses Draper, an American abolitionist, died in 1866 at the age of 42 from illness. He was known for his work in the antislavery movement and efforts to help escaped slaves on the Underground Railroad.
100,000 slaves escaped through the undreground railroad to freedom 50,000 slaves were reported to have escaped between 1830 and 1860.