From the National Park Service and Dickinson College

Category: Miller

(1838) Frederick Douglass Escape

Frederick Douglass escapes from slavery in Baltimore to become a leading antislavery writer, orator, and arguably the most famous Black man in the United States


Date(s): escaped 1838

Location(s): Eastern Shore, Maryland; Baltimore, Maryland; New York, New York; New Bedford, Massachusetts

Outcome: Freedom

Summary:

Douglass engraving, cleanshaven, dark hair

Frederick Douglass (House Divided Project)

Frederick Bailey’s (later Douglass) enslaver allowed him to hire his time out in Baltimore. That meant Douglass could find his own work, but had to hand over his wages to enslaver Hugh Auld. Douglass did not relish handing over most or all of his hard-earned pay, but hiring out had its advantages. Mainly, it afforded enslaved people like Douglass opportunities to make connections with free African Americans, and even plot their escapes. After Douglass had had a dispute with Auld over the arrangement, Douglass did exactly that. Many enslaved people borrowed free papers from free African American allies, but Douglass did not fit any of his free friends’ physical descriptions. Instead, Douglass borrowed his friend’s sailors’ protection papers, even though the physical description was not a perfect match to Douglass’s appearance. He also had help from a free Black woman, Anna Murray, whom Douglass would later marry. Douglass escaped by train and sought to minimize the amount of times the sailor’s protection document was closely examined. A train conductor briefly scanned the false document, but did not notice that the physical description did not match Douglass. When Douglass arrived in New York City in early September, he met David Ruggles, the Black abolitionist who spearheaded the city’s vigilance committee. Ruggles advised him not to stay in New York and encouraged him to travel to New Bedford, Massachusetts. There, Douglass took work as a physical laborer, became a regular reader of the antislavery newspaper The Liberator, and a fixture at antislavery gatherings. In New Bedford, Douglass formally changed his name from Frederick Bailey to Frederick Douglass. As Douglass, the freedom seeker went on to publish his Narrative (1845), the first of three autobiographies, become one of the most famous orators in the country, and arguably the most famous freedom seeker in American history.


Related Sources


Related Essays

(1844) Lewis and Harriet Hayden Escape

Lewis and Harriet Hayden escape slavery in Kentucky with the help of Underground Railroad operatives and spend the next decade assisting freedom seekers as part of Boston’s antislavery vigilance committee


Date(s): escaped 1844

Location(s): Lexington, Kentucky; Detroit, Michigan; Canada West; Boston

Outcome: Freedom

Summary:

headshot man

Lewis Hayden (National Park Service)

Lewis Hayden lost his family to the internal slave trade in the 1830s. Kentucky statesman Henry Clay reportedly sold Hayden’s first wife, Esther Harvey and their son. Fearing that the same fate awaited him, Hayden and his new wife, Harriet Bell, decided to run away. In 1844, the Haydens (Lewis, Harriet, and Harriet’s son from a previous marriage) escaped using a carriage and driver provided by white abolitionists Calvin Fairbank and Delia Webster. The Haydens successfully reached Detroit and later Canada, but Kentucky officials caught up with the two abolitionists and convicted them under the state’s harsh slave-stealing statutes. Neither Fairbank or Webster stopped their Underground Railroad activism, even though Fairbank spent four years and Webster spent two months in prison for assisting the Haydens. Meanwhile, the Haydens relocated to Boston, where they became active members of the city’s antislavery vigilance committee and regularly sheltered freedom seekers in their home at 66 Phillips Street. In 1850, Lewis and Harriet sheltered freedom seekers William and Ellen Craft and threatened to blow up their house if the slave catchers pursuing the couple dared enter. Lewis Hayden also entered politics, winning political patronage as messenger for Massachusetts’s Republican secretary of state and serving a single term in the Massachusetts legislature in 1873.

engraving of woman, with name typed at bottom

Harriet Hayden (National Park Service)


Related Sources


Related Essays

(1998) Congress Establishes Network to Freedom

Congress establishes the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program to preserve and document Underground Railroad sites. Since its founding, the program has identified over 700 sites.

The National Park Service Network To Freedom (NTF) consists of sites, locations with a verifiable connection to the Underground Railroad; programs, with educational and interpretive programming that pertain to the Underground Railroad; and facilities, either research, educational or interpretive centers. There are currently over 700 locations as part of the network in 39 states, plus Washington DC and the US Virgin Islands.

 

[This post is still under construction, more forthcoming in 2023]

Douglass, Frederick

Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) was perhaps the most famous freedom seeker in US history, escaping from slavery in Baltimore in 1838 to become an abolitionist orator, writer, and politician.

ESSAYS: Blackett // Barker // Crew // Finkelman // Jackson // Miller

ROLES: Abolitionist // UGRR Operative

 

Douglass

Frederick Douglass used forged papers to escape from Baltimore in 1838 (House Divided Project)

Fairbank, Calvin

Calvin Fairbank (1816-1898) was a Methodist minister and Underground Railroad operative convicted in Kentucky for aiding the 1844 escape of Harriet and Lewis Hayden along with school teacher Delia Webster and then convicted again for a second offense in 1851.  He ended up serving a total of seventeen years in Kentucky state prison before his release in 1864.

ESSAYS: Blackett // Baker // Larson // Miller // Pinsker // Sinha

ROLES: UGRR Operative

 

engraving man head

Calvin Fairbank served a total of seventeen years in Kentucky prison for “slave stealing” (House Divided Project)

Parker, John

John Parker (1827-1900) was a freedom seeker and Underground Railroad operative in Ripley, Ohio.

ESSAYS: Churchill // Miller // Sinha //

ROLES: Freedom Seeker // UGRR Operative

 

Parker House

John Parker House, Ripley, OH (National Park Service)

Phillips, Wendell

Wendell Phillips (1811-1884) was a leading abolitionist from Massachusetts

ESSAYS:  Miller

ROLES:  Abolitionist

 

Phillips

Wendell Phillips (House Divided Project)

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