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Zirblis, Raymond Paul.
Friends of Freedom: The Vermont Underground Railroad Survey Report
. Montpelier: State of Vermont Department of State Buildings and Division for Historic Preservation, 1996.

P
AMPHLETS
, D
ISSERTATIONS
, A
RTICLES, AND
R
EPORTS

Beal, Gertrude. “The Underground Railroad in Guilford County.”
The Southern Friend
2(1), Spring 1980.

Borome, Joseph A. “The Vigilant Committee of Philadelphia.”
The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
92(1), 1968.

Brown, Ira V. “An Anti-Slavery Agent: C. C. Burleigh in Pennsylvania, 1836–1837.”
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
105: 1981.

Brown, Maxine F.
The Role of Free Blacks in Indiana's Underground Railroad: The Case of Floyd, Harrison, and Washington Counties.
Indianapolis: Indiana Department of Natural Resources, 2001.

Caccamo, James F.
Hudson, Ohio, and the Underground Railroad.
Hudson: The Friends of the Hudson Library, Inc., 1992.

“Connecticut as a Slave State.”
Connecticut Western News,
May 23, 1916.

Coon, Diane Perrine. “Reconstructing the Underground Railroad Crossings at Madison, Indiana.” University of Louisville, 1998.

———. “Indiana's Underground Railroad Routes and Operations.” Study for the Indiana department of Natural Resources, 2001.

———. “Chronicles of Rev. Chapman Harris.” Unpublished paper. Copy in possession of the author.

———. “Great Escapes: The Underground Railroad.”
Northern Kentucky Heritage
9, no. 2, spring/summer 2002.

Cooper, Afua Ava Pamela.
“Doing Battle in Freedom's Cause”: Henry Bibb, Abolitionism, Race Uplift, and Black Manhood, 1842–1854
. Ph.D. diss., University of Toronto, 2000.

Ebersole, Mark C. “Abolition Divides the Meeting House: Quakers and Slavery in Early Lancaster County.”
Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society
102 (1), Spring 2000.

Farrell, John Kevin.
The History of the Negro Community in Chatham, Ontario.
Thesis, University of Ottawa, 1955.

Finkelman, Paul. “Prigg v. Pennsylvania and Northern State Courts: Anti-Slavery Use of a Pro-Slavery Decision.”
Civil War History
25: 1979.

Fuller, James.
Letters to the Farmers of Somerset.
Bristol, England: John Wright, 1836.

Gaspar, Doris.
Fort Malden Historical Study.
Report, Library of the Fort Malden National Historical Park, Amherstburg, Ontario.

Goodall, Hurley C.
Underground Railroad: The Invisible Road to Freedom through Indiana as Recorded by the Works Progress Administration Writers Project.
Indianapolis: Indiana Department of Natural Resources, 2000.

Goodheart, Lawrence B. “The Chronicles of Kidnapping in New York: Resistance to the Fugitive Slave Law, 1834–1835.”
Afro-Americans in New York Life and History
8, January 1984.

Graf, Hildegarde. “The Underground Railroad in Erie County.”
Niagara Frontier
, autumn 1954.

Hamm, Thomas D.
The Antislavery Movement in Henry County, Indiana.
New Castle: Henry County Historical Society, 1987.

Henderson, Alice.
The History of the New York State Anti-Slavery Society
. Ph.D. diss., University of Michigan, 1963.

Hopkins, Leroy. “Black Eldorado on the Susquehannah: The Emergence of Black Columbia, 1726-1861.”
Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society
89 (4), 1985.

———. “Bethel African Methodist Church in Lancaster: Prolegomenon to a Social History.”
Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society
90 (4), 1986.

———.
Among These Hills: African Americans in Lancaster County's Southern End
. Paper presented to the Southern Lancaster County Historical Society, July 6, 2000.

Hopper, Isaac Tatum.
Exposition of the Proceedings of John P. Darg, Henry W. Merritt, and Others, in Relation to the Robbery of Darg, the Elopement of His Alleged Slave, and the Trial of Barney Corse, Who Was Unjustly Charged as an Accessory.
New York: Isaac T. Hopper, 1840.

Huff, Daniel.
Reminiscence of Newport and Fountain City and its Environs from 1830 to 1896
. Manuscript, 1896: Friends Historical Library, Earlham College.

———.
The Unnamed Anti-Slavery Heroes of Old Newport
. Paper presented to the Wayne County (Indiana) Historical Society, September 23, 1905; Friends Historical Library, Earlham College.

Jacobs, John S. “A True Tale of Slavery.”
The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation,
February 7, 14, 21, and 28, 1861 (nos. 476–479).

Kelley, William T. “The Underground Railroad in the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Delaware.”
Friends Intelligencer
55, 1898.

Kenrick, John.
Horrors of Slavery.
Cambridge, England: Hilliard and Metcalf, 1817.

Kohler, Lyle.
Cincinnati's Black Peoples: A Chronology and Bibliography, 1787–1982
. Unpublished paper prepared for the Cincinnati Arts Consortium, 1986: Cincinnati Public Library.

Landon, Fred. “Amherstburg, Terminus of the Underground Railroad.”
The Journal of Negro History
10 (1), 1925.

———. “The Negro Migration to Canada after the Passing of the Fugitive Slave Act.”
The Journal of Negro History
5, January 1920.

Law, Howard. “‘Self-Reliance Is the True Road to Independence': Ideology and the Ex-Slaves in Buxton and Chatham.”
Ontario History
77, 2, 1985.

Leslie, William R. “The Pennsylvania Fugitive Slave Act of 1826.”
Journal of Southern History
13, 1952.

Levy, Leonard W. “The Sims Case: The Fugitive Slave Law in Boston in 1851.”
Journal of Negro History
35, 1950.

Lumpkin, Katherine Du Pre. “‘The General Plan Was Freedom': A Negro Secret Order on the Underground Railroad.”
Phylon: Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture,
Spring 1967.

Mott, Lucretia,
Slavery and‘ The Woman Question': Lucretia Mott's Diary of Her Visit to Great Britain to Attend the World's Anti-Slavery Convention of 1840.”
Supplement No. 23 to the
Journal of the Friends' Historical Society,
1952.

Myers, John L. “The Beginning of Anti-Slavery Agencies in New York State, 1833–1836.”
New York History,
April 1962.

———. “The Major Effort of National Anti-Slavery Agents in New York State, 1836-1837.”
New York History,
April 1965.

Nagle, George F. “Central Pennsylvania Fugitive Slave Cases.”
The Bugle
12 (1), 2002.

Pease, Jane H., and William H. Pease. “Confrontation and Abolition in the 1850's.”
Journal of American History
58: 1972.

Pingeon, Frances D. “An Abominable Business: The New Jersey Slave Trade, 1818.”
New Jersey History
15–36, Fall/Winter 1991.

Polakow-Suransky, Sasha. “Sins of Our Fathers.”
Brown Alumni Magazine
36–42, July/August 2003.

Porter, Dorothy B. “David Ruggles, an Apostle of Human Rights.”
Journal of Negro History
28 (1), 1943.

Ratner, Vivienne. “The Underground Railroad in Westchester.”
Westchester Historian
59(2), Spring 1983.

Ruggles, David.
The “Extinguisher” Extinguished: An Address on Slavery.
New York: David Ruggles, 1834.

———.
An Antidote: An Appeal to the Reason and Religion of American Christians.
New York: David Ruggles, 1838.

Russell, Hilary.
Final Research Report: The Operation of the Underground Railroad in Washington, D. C., c. 1800–1860.
Washington, D. C.: Historical Society of Washington and the National Park Service, 2001.

Siebert, Wilbur H. “The Underground Railroad in Massachusetts.”
New England Quarterly
9, September 1936.

Silverman, Jason H. “‘We Shall Be Heard!': The Development of the Fugitive Slave Press in Canada.”
Canadian Historical Review,
65 (1), 1984.

Smith, Jay P. “Many Michigan Cities on Underground Route in Days of Civil War.”
Detroit Sunday News,
April 14, 1918.

Spotts, Charles D. “The Pilgrim's Pathway: The Underground Railroad in Lancaster County.”
Community History Annual
5, 1966.

Turner, Edward R. “The Underground Railroad in Pennsylvania.”
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
36, 1912.

“Underground Railroad: Reminiscences of the Days of Slavery.”
Detroit Post,
May 16, 1870.

Wagner, Thomas E. “Cincinnati and Southwestern Ohio: An Abolitionist Training Ground.” Thesis, Miami University, 1967.

Walton, Jonathan W. “Blacks in Buxton and Chatham, Ontario, 1830-1890: Did the 49th Parallel Make a Difference?” Ph.D. diss., Princeton University, 1979.

Wright, Barbara. “North Carolina Quakers and Slavery.” Thesis, University of North Carolina, 1974.

Wayne, Michael. “The Black Population of Canada West on the Eve of the American Civil War: A Reassessment Based on the Manuscript Census of 1861.”
Histoire Sociale/Social History,
vol. 28, no. 56, 1995.

Wellman, Judith. “The Burned-Over District Revisited: Benevolence, Reform and Abolitionism in Mexico, Paris, and Ithaca, New York, 1825–1842.” Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, 1974.

Willey, Larry Gene.
The Reverend John Rankin: Early Ohio Antislavery Leader
. Thesis: University of Iowa, 1976.

Winch, Julie. “Philadelphia and the Other Underground Railroad.”
The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
111 (1), January 1987.

Yanuck, Julius. “The Garner Fugitive Slave Case.”
Mississippi Valley Historical Review
40, 1953.

Zirblis, Raymond Paul.
Friends of Freedom: The Vermont Underground Railroad Survey Report.
Montpelier: State of Vermont Department of State Buildings and Division for Historic Preservation, 1996.

Abbott, Wilson Ruffin

Abolition Intelligencer and Missionary

Magazine

abolitionist movement

beginnings of

blacks' frustrations with

Canandaigua convention of

Cazenovia convention of

Christiana resistance and

Compromise of 1850 and

evangelists in

factional split in

first national convention of

free blacks in

Jerry rescue and

Liberty Party and

militancy's rise within

Nat Turner revolt and

organization of

Pearl
incident and

Shadrach rescue and

in South

underground railroad and

violence toward members of

Walker as icon of

women in

Adams, James

Adams, Nehemiah

African Americans

see
free blacks

African Methodist Episcopal Church

Africans: first North American enslavement of

19th-Century prejudices toward

as victims of slave trade

Agnew, Allen

Alabama

secession of

Allen, Henry

Allen, Richard

Allen, William G.

American Anti-Slavery Society

Douglass and

formation of

growth of

lecturers of

New York vigilance committee and

racism in

split in

structure and function of

underground railroad and

women in

American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society

American Colonization Society

American Democrat, The
(Cooper)

Americans As They Are, The
(Postl)

AME Zion Church

Amish

Amistad
revolt

Anderson, Elijah

Anderson, Jeremiah

Anderson, Osborne P.

Angolans

Anne
(schooner)

Anthony, Susan B.

Anti-Slavery Yearly Meeting

antiwar movement

Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World
(Walker)

Arkansas

secession of

Arnold, Benedict

Ashantis

Association on American Indian Affairs

Astor, John Jacob

Atlantic Monthly,

Atwater, Caleb

Auburn, N. Y.

Austria As It Is
(Postl)

Ayres (kidnap plotter)

 

Bahamas

Bailey, Frederick (Frederick Douglass)

Bailey, Gamalial

Baker (fugitive)

Ball, Charles

Baltimore, Md.

Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

Baptists

Barnes, Jack

Bartram, William

Beaman, Amos

Beard, William

Beardsley, Samuel

Beck, Isaac

Beckham, Fountain

Beecher, Henry Ward

Bell, Daniel

Bell, James

Bell, John

Benezet, Anthony

Benson, Benjamin

Berlin, Ira

Bethel AME Church

Beyond the River
(Hagedorn)

Bibb, Henry

Voice of the Fugitive
of

Bibb, Malinda

Bibb, Mary

Bible

Bigelow, Francis

Bigelow, Jacob

Birney, James G.

Blackburn, Ruth

Blackburn, Thornton

Blakesley, J. M.

Blount, Martha

Bonaparte, Joseph

Bond, John H.

Bond, Shadrach

Bonsall, Abraham

Book and Slavery Irreconcilable, The
(Bourne)

Booth, Griffin

Borden, Joseph

border ruffians

Boston, Mass.: anti-abolitionist violence in

Shadrach rescue in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

vigilance committee in

Boudinot (New York constable)

Bound for the Promised Land
(Larson)

Bourne, Georg

Bowley, Araminta

Bowley, James

Bowley, John

Bowley, Kessiah

Bradford, Sarah

“Branded Hand, The” (Whittier)

Brazil

Bristol, R. I., slave trade in

British-American Manual Training

Institute

Brown, Frederick

Brown, Henry

in Kansas

Brown, Jason

Brown, John

childhood and youth of

Douglass and

Gerrit Smith and

Harpers Ferry raid of

in Kansas

Missouri raid of

religious views of

slave-liberation plan of

trial and execution of

in underground railroad

Brown, John (fugitive)

Brown, Oliver

Brown, Owen

Brown, Salmon

Brown, Watson

Brown, William Wells

Brown family

Brown University

Buchanan, James

Buley

Burgess

Burgesses, House of (Virginia)

Burleigh, C. C.

Burr, Aaron

Burrel, Robert

Buswell, M. C.

Butler, Benjamin

Butler, Pierce

Buxton Mission

Byrd, William

 

Caldwell, Robert C.

Calhoun, John C.

and Compromise of 1850

California: gold rush in

statehood of

Campbell family

Canaan, Conn.

Canada: black settlements in

blacks in military of

free blacks in

Fugitive Slave Law and

legal protection of fugitives in

as slave refuge

slavery in

underground railroad in

Canandaigua, N. Y., abolitionist convention in

Capeheart, John

Caribbean

Carr, John

Carter, John

Cartwright, S. A.

Castigator,

Catlett, Anthony

Catlin, George

Cazenovia, N. Y., abolitionist convention in

Central Rail Road

Chaplin, William

imprisonment of

as Liberty Party candidate

Pearl
incident and

Chapman (steamboat captain)

Charity (slave)

Charleston, S. C.: in Civil War

slave trade in

Charlie (underground man)

Chase, John

Chase, Salmon P.

Chatham Journal,

Cherokees

Child, Lydia Maria

Chillicothe Presbytery

Choctaws

Christiana resistance

Christian Citizen

Christian Commission

Cincinnati, Ohio: free blacks in

Garner family tragedy in

Henson at

Lane Seminary debates at

underground railroad in

City of Buffalo,
S. S.

civil disobedience, underground railroad as

“Civil Disobedience” (Thoreau)

civil rights movement

Civil War, U. S.

blacks in

Harpers Ferry raid and

Uncle Tom's Cabin
and

underground railroad and

Clark, George Washington

Clark, Henry

Clark, Starr

Clarke, Lewis

Clarkson, Thomas

Clay, Henry

and Compromise of 1850

Shadrach rescue and

Cleveland, Ohio

Clinton, George

Coffin, Addison

Coffin, Bethuel

Coffin, Catherine White

Uncle Tom's Cabin
and

Coffin, Charles

Coffin, Levi

Canada trip of

in Civil War

death of

Garner tragedy and

in Illinois

in Indiana

marriage of

in North Carolina

Uncle Tom's Cabin
and

as underground railroad's “president,”

western trip of

Coffin, Vestal

Coffin, William C.

Colborne, John

Colchester, Canada

Coles, Edward

Collins, John A.

Collins family

Colored American,

Columbus
Standard,

Comfort, Charles

Committee for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade

Committee of Nine

Communist Party

Compromise of 1850

Concklin, Seth

death of

Concord, Mass.

Confederate States of America

Congregationalists

Congress, U. S.:

Civil War declaration of

Kansas-Nebraska Act passed by

Missouri Compromise passed by

Connecticut: abolitionist movement in

slavery in

Connecticut Society for the Promotion of

Freedom, and for the Relief of Persons

Holden in Bondage

Constitution, U. S.: fugitive slaves and

slavery issue and

Continental Congress

Cook, Elder (Peterboro guest)

Cooper, George

Cooper, James Fenimore

Cooper, Lucy

Copeland, John

Coppoc, Edward

Cornelia
(ship)

Cornish, Samuel E.

Corse, Barney

cotton gin

cotton industry: and growth of slavery

Whitney's gin and growth of

Cotton Triangle

Covenanters

Craft, Ellen

Craft, William

Crampton, Mrs. (Peterboro guest)

Creole
mutiny

Crèvecoeur, Hector St. John de

Crowe, John Finley

Crystal Palace exhibition

Cuffe, Paul

Curtis, L. Q.

Cuyler, Samuel B.

 

Dahomans

Dana, Richard Henry

Daniels, Jim

Darg, John P.

Davis, Caleb

Davis, Jefferson

Davis, Thomas

Dawes, William

Dawes brothers (slaveholders)

Dawn Institute

see,
British-American Manual Training Institute

DeBaptiste, George

death of

underground activities of

DeBow, James D. B.

Declaration of Independence (1776)

Deere, John

Delaware: emancipation in

free blacks in

Quakers in

slavery in

slave trade in

underground railroad in

Democratic Party

Detroit, Mich.

Detroit Daily Advertiser,

Detroit Tribune,

Dickens, Charles

Dickinson, Ben

Dickinson College

Diggs, Judson

Dimery, John

Doak, Samuel

Dodge, D. K.

Dodge, Mrs. D. K.

Doram, Kitty

Dorr, Ebenezer

Douglass, Anna Murray

Douglass, Frederick

autobiography of

at Cazenovia convention

in Civil War

on Compromise of 1850

death of

escape of

on Fugitive Slave Law

Harpers Ferry Raid and

Harriet Tubman and

on John Brown

lecture tour of 1843 by

North Star
founded by

Parker incident and

on secrecy's value

Shadd's attack on

violence against

Walker trial and

women's rights movement and

Drayton, Daniel

Dred Scott decision

Dresser, Amos

Drew, Benjamin

Driscol, Peter

Duane, James

DuBois, W. E. B.

Ducket, Thomas

Dunbar, William

DuPont family

Durham, Jeremiah

Durham, Mrs. Jeremiah

 

Earth First!

Edison, Thomas

Edmonson sisters (fugitives)

Efiks

Electoral College

Elgin, James Bruce, Lord

Elgin Settlement

organization of

population of

Eliot, Samuel A.

Eliza Catherine
(sloop)

emancipation: British movement for

Jefferson's plan for

movement for immediate

in North Carolina

in Pennsylvania

public support for gradual

Emancipation Proclamation (1863)

Emancipator,

Embree, Elihu

Emerson, Ralph Waldo

English, Chester

Enlightenment

Equiano, Olaudah

Erie Canal

“Essay Concerning Human Understanding

An” (Locke)

Essex
(whaler)

 

Fairbank, Calvin

childhood and youth of

Civil War death of

Hayden rescue and

imprisonment of

Tamar rescue attempt of

Fairfield, John

Fanny (fugitive)

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