Jean M. Fox. Tracking The Underground Rail Road. The Farmington Hills Historical Commission, 1993.
1 | Tracking THE UNDERGROUND RAIL ROAD By Jean M. Fox Monograph |
2 | Tracking THE UNDERGROUND RAIL ROAD By Jean M. Fox Monograph |
3 | This monograph is a typescript of a talk Mrs. Fox gave many |
4 | TRACKING THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD By Jean M. Fox We always |
5 | Her work makes up the last chapter of The AVERY WATERCOLORS |
6 | 14th Vermont 1791 free 15th Kentucky 1792 slave Tennessee 1 |
7 | a famous decision against a wealthy Englishman residing in |
8 | Facts are difficult to come by. It was all illegal. After p |
9 | When Mrs. Avery did her researches in 1915 "One man intervi |
10 | "Trains" -- which were the bottom of farm wagons heaped wit |
11 | He was a sister of Lucrclia Coffin, who married Richard Mol |
12 | MEMORIES OF THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD A "local man" who was |
13 | Cass County Home S, $lt Qthelk uaer netabo ari n trhe aatbh |
14 | required the keeper of every station to deliver all passeng |
15 | S NAIL 0OF *LIBERfgTY In the history room of the Farmington |
16 | In May, 1985 Husscy described his station: "Over 1,000 pers |
17 | At Climax, outside the village, the conductor was Williams |
18 | had raided in Cass County. We got use of a building in Batt |
19 | site of Finney's Hotel, in the back of which a livery stabl |
20 | George de Baptiste, who came up the UGRR from Madison, Indi |
21 | I always thought the UGRR went from Ohio to Canada. But of |
22 | In Canada there were three main areas of settlement in addi |
23 | jAN Adam Crosswhite Frances Troutman, Kentuckian from Bourb |
24 | Troutman returned to Kentucky vowing vengeance. Kentuckians |
25 | Let us not forget the direct line of Adam Crosswhite in 184 |
26 | In July, 1854, a new political party -- the Republican Part |
27 | 3) Blacks would in Michigan be entitled to trial by jury. 4 |
28 | Farmington's Conductor, Dr. Carlyle Davidson, writing in Mi |
29 | Laura Hlaviland is honored in Adrian where a statue of the |
30 | 1842 ... 18th 2nd month ... 16 days to Marshall to state an |
31 | Intricate family relationships were involved, but basically |
32 | "'t seemed that Uncle Nathan had more people than he could |
33 | Aaron Wilson's Citizenship Papers Ellen Wilson Ellen Wilson |
34 | Another reputed but unverified site is the Philbrick Tavern |
35 | A Waterford Township resident who lived at Clintonville, Mr |
36 | "Not a great while afterward there appeared at my place one |
37 | CHORUS: O Slaveholders, that hand, that hand of thine, Can |
38 | Your cup is full unto the brim, of all inquity, And if you |
39 | We were the first state to 1) Pass a "personal Liberty" law |
40 | NOTES 1) Michigan Manual, 1865 2) A Farmington Childhood: T |
41 | 31) Mochlmann, Ruth. "If Walls Could Talk: Heritage Homes o |