Underground Railroad
09 Feb 2021 — Sandusky Register
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Editor's note: The following is an excerpt from a piece named "Erie County Historical Society: History is Alive - Underground Railroad Historic Walking Tour." The version, which spotlights Sandusky's Facer Park and the city's role in the Underground Railroad, appeared in the Register's first of four commemorative bicentennial editions, publishing March 18, 2018.

SANDUSKY - While gazing across Sandusky Bay at a world-class amusement park or watching pleasure craft glide serenely across the water while standing in Sandusky's Facer Park, we easily forget the active role the city's waterfront played in the operation of the Underground Railroad more than a century and a half earlier.

With the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1787, which condoned slavery, the institution and its accompanying controversy escalated until the Civil War erupted in 1861.

The rapid expansion of cotton in the Gulf States, coupled with the successful production of crops, such as sugar, required a never-ending supply of labor to thrive.

As cotton fields stretched westward so did the insatiable demand for slave labor. Escalating cotton prices, in turn, drove up the cost of labor, with the price of prime field hands easily exceeding $1,000 by the Civil War.

Eastern slaveholders in states such as Virginia and Kentucky callously sold their slaves to traders, supplying the western markets.

While the harsh treatment of enslaved peoples and the despicable practices they endured are well documented, the heart-wrenching practice of tearing families apart is often overlooked and served as a primary force chasing people to freedom.

Geography, demographics and a rapidly developing transportation system precipitated Ohio's prominent role within the Underground Railroad.

Ohio's southern river boundary of 451 miles established the longest natural boundary between free and slave soil.

When the river was crossed, freedom-seekers funneled to lakeport cities, such as Cleveland and Sandusky, no farther than 250 miles away at its most distant point within the state on the Ohio River.

A short 40-mile voyage across Lake Erie deposited fugitives in Canada, where slavery had been outlawed by Great Britain since 1833.

Demographics also played a critical role in northern Ohio's attraction.

Land granted to Revolutionary War veterans from New England in the area, knowns as the Firelands, drew settlers from a region of the young country who sympathized with the plight of the slave.

Despite the risks, many willingly provided food and shelter to fugitives while secluding them. A number of dedicated men also piloted craft carrying freedom-seekers across the lake.

This sentiment also encouraged both free and escaped slaves to settle in the area. Though receiving less recognition than their white counterparts, residents of African-American descent, such as Rev. Thomas Holland Boston, worked tirelessly at great risk with the Underground Railroad.

We often hear the Underground Railroad was not a railroad but an intricate network of operatives directing fugitives from station to station.

But by the early 1850s, Sandusky was regularly serviced by railway lines from the south, which did indeed whisk a number of fugitives to Sandusky's mile-long waterfront to board vessels for freedom.

Over the years, documentation has been uncovered confirming Sandusky's prominence during that volatile period.

Yet even in the decade leading up to the Civil War, Sandusky's role was highly recognized. Harriet Beecher Stowe wove the city into her widely popular "Uncle Tom's Cabin" storyline, released in 1852.

With a little imagination, one can almost visualize the dramatic events from the past while standing in Facer Park:

• There's the real Eliza dressed as a male holding the hand of her young son attired in girl's clothing boarding the Arrow for the voyage to freedom.

• Or perhaps we see Josiah Henson with his family, believed to be Stowe's model for her lead character, Tom, waiting nervously for the rowboat west of town to transport them to a larger vessel, the Commerce, to carry them safely to Canada.

• We squint to catch a glimpse of Tice Davids in 1831 pausing briefly in Sandusky after leaving his perplexed owner, scratching his head in the riverfront town of Ripley and mumbling as if he found some road underground and totally disappeared. Many attribute that event to the unofficial naming of the Underground Railroad.

• Looking northward, we see the armada of ships over the years churning through Sandusky Bay toward the channel leading to Lake Erie There's the Walk-in-the-Water, United States, Bay City and the Mayflower.

• Returning our focus to the mainland, we see a fugitive sneak into C.C. Keech's shop several storefronts to our east, where the hatmaker and furrier provided temporary employment for escaped slaves. We also hear storied of Sanduskian Henry Merry providing work as woodcutters on his property south of town.

• We encounter carriage maker George Reynolds, of mixed American-Indian and African-American descent, whose name surfaces frequently in Sandusky's Underground Railroad lore. Reynolds maintained close ties with John Brown but resisted Brown's pleas to join the ill-fated assault in Harpers Ferry.

• Several blocks from the waterfront, we pass the duplex on Lawrence Street where the Irvine brothers, John and Samuel, live. In 1855, they received a coffin shipped to them in the suffocating heat of the summer via railroad. Fortunately, they revived the man inside and, within several days, sent him to Canada. John's namesake son fought with John Brown in Bloody Kansas.

• In front of the Sloane House, we recall an earlier occupant of the dwelling, Rush Sloane. The lawyer intervened in the 1852 attempt to return seven captured slaves to Kentucky. In a highly publicized court case in 1854, Sloane was convicted of breaking the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act and was fined $3,000 plus court costs. In 1847, attorney Francis Parish was prosecuted under the 1793 Fugitive Slave Law and fined $1,000.

• Several blocks to the north, we overhear a conversation between the Folletts at their home on the corner of East Adams and Wayne streets. Oran, a well-respected Sanduskian and partner in the firm that published the 1858 "Lincoln-Douglas Debates" is admonishing his wife, Eliza, for harboring fugitives. He represents the body of abolitionists who vehemently oppose slavery but feel the institution should be dissolved through the orderly legal process. Maintaining the long-recognized privilege of getting in the last work, Mrs. Follett curtly rebuts, "But husband, there is a higher law than man's!"

This story is provided free courtesy of The Sandusky Register.
"Underground Railroad" Sandusky Register 09 Feb 2021: A3