"Underground railroads" Essays and Research Papers

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    Underground Railroad

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    Knowing ones self is an invaluable gift. Many people believe they know themselves by knowing what they like or dislike‚ how they dress ‚ the company they keep and so forth. There is an underlying and overlooked complicity to really know ones self. For many of us it is only in our imaginations where we come from. Given the fact we know we are from parts our parents‚ grandparents ‚ great-grand parents‚ what does that mean ? Where did we come from? In this society with the ideas of ethnocentrism‚ I

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    general information about the Underground Railroad in that state‚ and well-known abolitionists from that state or region. The book contained many narratives of slaves escaping north. Some of the most popular narratives were John Brown‚ Eliza Harris‚ Frederick Douglass‚ Harriet Tubman‚ and Solomon Northup. In addition to the narratives of escaped slaves‚ the book also had information about Underground Railroad routes‚

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    Did you know the underground railroad was not underground or a railroad?! It got its name by its activities to carry out secret‚ in darkness or disguise. Because the railway terms used those involved in the system to tell how it worked. Even before the 1800s‚ a system to abet runaways seems to have existed. George Washington complained in 1786 that one of his runaway slaves was aided by "a society of Quakers‚ formed for such purposes." Quakers‚ more correctly called the Religious Society of Friends

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    helped in running the Underground Railroad‚ many slaves might not have been able to gain their freedom. Many people didn’t help on the Underground Railroad. According to the Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History‚ “The secretive nature of the operation makes it difficult to ascertain how many fugitive slaves used the Underground Railroad; the most common estimate is 100‚000. Because of the great dangers faced in assisting slaves‚ no more than 3‚000 people actually ran the Railroad‚ but the knowledge

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    The Weather Underground

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    The 2008 U.S. presidential election brought the issue of domestic terrorism to national attention when it was reported that then-candidate Barack Obama was professionally linked to William “Bill” Ayers‚ co-founder of the Weather Underground. The Weather Underground was a militant faction of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)‚ a national organization representing the New Left on college campuses. The American public was forced to confront the actions of the Weathermen‚ as they were known

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    The Undergorund Railroad served as a "gateway to heaven" for slaves of the southern United States. It provided slaves a way to get north to the freeland‚ where they would not be forced into slavery. It was the best way for slaves to get away. The Underground Railroad was a network of people that helped fugitive slaves get to the freeland (northern U.S. and Canada). It was not ran/maintained by one person or organization‚ instead it was made up of lots of individuals. Some of these people were

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    The Underground Railroad had a powerful impact in the abolition of slavery. Slavery itself prevented a large number of the population from having a voice in politics. Even though it was not actually a railroad it still gave slaves a change to escape for freedom. The North Star acted as a guide for slaves that escaped‚ they used this star to figure out what direction they need to travel in. It gave slaves a way to escape since slavery did not exist there. Many whites‚ Native Americans and freed slaves

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    The Underground Railroad was apart of American history that led us to how present day America is. It was a terrible and shameful time period that included the institution of slavery. The Underground Railroad played a big role in the destruction of slavery all together. The Underground Railroad started towards the end of the 18th century‚ and consisted of lots of complications and risks to get to freedom. Each person who helped with the Underground Railroad had different tasks and responsibilities

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    Underground Railroad Through the development of the Underground Railroad slave escape in the mid 1800s‚ there was much leading into this great historical occurrence. Two key things that factored into this were the many dangers involved in the travel and journey and also the abolitionists that helped the slaves through their rigorous escape. In analysis of the excursion with the dangers faced and the perseverant abolitionists‚ through the many struggles their rough journey ended in success for

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    The underground railroad helped aid thousands of slaves to freedom but the common image‚ Harriet Tubman‚ checkpoint houses and tunnels from south to north‚ it is incorrect. Eric Foner shatters that image in Gateway to Freedom in which he illustrates the complex narrative of the underground railroad in New York. Foner portrays the railroad not of an organized system going from south to north but rather the combined efforts of groups and individuals that have gone untold with time. Foner writes of

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