
When Slavery Was A Routine Part Of Life In America's South, A Secret Network Of Activists And Escape Routes Enabled Slaves To Make Their Way To Freedom In What Is Now Canada. The 'underground Railroad' Has Become Part Of Folklore, But One Part Of The Story Is Only Now Coming To Light. In New York, A City Whose Banks, Business And Politics Were Deeply Enmeshed In The Slave Economy, Three Men Played A Remarkable Part, At Huge Personal Risk. In Gateway To Freedom, Pulitzer Prize-winning Historian Eric Foner Tells The Story Of Sydney Howard Gay, An Abolitionist Newspaper Editor; Louis Napoleon, Furniture Polisher; And Charles B. Ray, A Black Minister. Between 1830 And 1860, With The Secret Help Of Black Dockworkers, The Network Led By These Three Men Helped No Fewer Than 3,000 Fugitives To Liberty. The Previously Unexamined Records Compiled By Gay Offer A Portrait Of Fugitive Slaves Who Passed Through New York City — Where They Originated, How They Escaped, Who Helped Them In Both North And South, And How They Were Forwarded To Freedom In Canada.
How did the clandestine network of the Underground Railroad operate within the economic and political heart of a city deeply invested in the slave trade? Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Eric Foner utilizes newly discovered records from abolitionist Sydney Howard Gay to reconstruct the mechanics of the anti-slavery movement in New York City. By analyzing the specific contributions of Gay, Louis Napoleon, and Charles B. Ray, Foner argues that the city served as a critical, albeit dangerous, transit point for thousands of individuals seeking liberty. The work provides a granular examination of the logistics, risks, and collaborative efforts required to facilitate escapes between 1830 and 1860.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of the abolitionist movement due to its reliance on previously unexamined primary source material. Readers frequently note that the prose is accessible while maintaining the rigorous standards of academic historical research.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191057819
ISBN-13:
9780191057816
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