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Digital Bookshelf: Digital Texts: Editor's Picks

Here is a list of our top twenty editor's picks as the most essential Underground Railroad sources currently available in digital text:


1793 Fugitive Slave Act (February 12, 1793)

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Source Type:  Laws & Legal Documents

Editor's Rating:  Essential


1850 Fugitive Slave Act (September 18, 1850).

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Source Type: Laws & Legal Documents

Editor's Rating: Essential


Anonymous.  Boston slave riot, and trial of Anthony Burns : containing the report of the Faneuil Hall meeting, the murder of Batchelder, Theodore Parker's lesson for the day, speeches of counsel on both sides, corrected by themselves, verbatim report of Judge Loring's decision, and, a detailed account of the embarkation.  Boston: Fetridge and Company, 1854.

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Source Type: Fugitive Case

Editor's Rating:  Essential

The forced rendition of fugitive slave Anthony Burns from Boston, Massachusetts to Norfolk, Virginia on June 2, 1854 proved to be one of the most searing events of the antebellum fugitive crisis.  Thousands of onlookers jeered and cried as federal troops guarded his return to slavery. The pamphlet focuses on this infamous "embarkation" and also on the unruly mass meeting at Fanueil Hall on May 26, 1854 that followed Burns's arrest and led to violence which resulted in the death of James Batchelder, one of the hired slave patrollers who had tracked the slave to Boston.  The pamphlet was published, however, before Pastor Leonard A. Grimes successfully organized congregants in a black Baptist church in Boston to help purchase Burns's freedom for $1,300 on February 22, 1855.


Bibb, Henry. Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, an American Slave, Written by Himself. New York: The Author, 1849. Click Here

Source Type: Slave Narrative

Editor's Rating: Essential

Born in Kentucky, Henry Bibb became one of the antebellum era's best known fugitive slaves.  He lectured across the North and helped settle ex-slave communities in Canada.  Bibb was editor of Canada's first black newspaper, The Voice of the Fugitive.


Borome, Joseph A.  "The Vigilant Committee of Philadelphia." Pennsylvania Magazine ofHistory and Biography 92 (January 1968): 320-351.

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Source Type:  Diaries & Journals

Editor's Rating: Essential

In 1968, Joseph Borome edited records from the Philadelphia "Vigilant" Committee (or Association) for the Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography that included detailed records of assistance provided to fugitive slaves passing through Philadelphia between 1839 and the early 1840s.  Journal entries include physical descriptions of fugitives, summaries of their routes of escape and notations about expenses.


Boston Vigilance Committee.  "Account Book of Francis Jackson."  1850-1855. Vigilance Committee of Boston Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, MA.  Data compiled by Alison Woitunski for Primary Research (W. Dean Eastman, Project Director).

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Source Type: Diaries & Journals

Editor's Rating:  Essential

Francis Jackson was the treasurer of the Boston Vigilance Committee.  A team of Boston-area high school teachers and students have posted digital transcriptions of his account books (maintained by the Massachusetts Historical Society) which record fugitive aid transactions and member expenses from 1850 to 1855.


Brown, Henry Box. Narrative of Henry Box Brown, Who escaped from Slavery Enclosed in a Box 3 Feet Long and 2 Wide. Written from a Statement of Facts Made by Himself. With, Remarks Upon the Remedy for Slavery. Ed. Charles Stearns. Boston: Brown and Stearns. 1849.

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Source Type: Slave Narrative

Editor's Rating: Essential

Henry "Box" Brown made perhaps the most famous escape from slavery in his era when he arranged for Samuel A. Smith, a white Underground Railroad agent, to ship him from Richmond to Philadelphia on March 23, 1849.  He survived the 24-hour journey, greeted in Philadelphia by William Still, J. Miller McKim and other representatives from the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee.  The scene of his unpacking, or "resurrection" became an iconic image.  Brown relocated to England for more than two decades before returning to the US as a performer in the 1870s.  Samuel Smith spent several years in a Virginia jail for his role in the escape.


Brown, William Wells.  The Escape; or, A leap for freedom : a drama, in five acts. Boston, MA:  J.B. Yerrinton and Son, 1858.

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Source Type: Literature

Editor's Rating:  Essential

Generally regarded as the first black American playwright, William Wells Brown frequently read this drama about a fugitive escape to anti-slavery meetings.  Brown had been born into slavery in Kentucky in 1814.  After his own escape in 1834, he served for several years as an Underground Railroad agent while working on steamboats in Lake Erie.  Brown's own slave narrative, published in 1849, was very influential and he was widely regarded as one of the most prominent African Americans of the middle of the nineteenth century.


Cannon, Arthur.  Case of Passmore Williamson : report of the proceedings on the writ of habeas corpus, issued by the Hon. John K. Kane, judge of the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in the case of the United States of America ex rel. John H. Wheeler vs. Passmore Williamson, including the several opinions delivered, and the arguments of counsel / reported by Arthur Cannon.  Philadelphia : Uriah Hunt & Son, 1856.

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Source Type: Fugitive Case

Editor's Rating: Essential

The Passmore Williamson case, involving the imprisonment of a white Vigilance Committee member in Philadelphia in 1855 for assisting in the escape of Jane Johnson and her daughters from Col. John H. Wheeler, a southern slaveholder and US diplomat who was traveling through Philadelphia, proved to be one of the more important episodes of the antebellum fugitive crisis.  The story is also featured prominently in William Still's Underground Railroad (1872).  And the struggles of Jane Johnson and her family provide the major plotline for Lorene Cary's modern novel, The Price of A Child (1995).


Coffin, Levi. Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the reputed president of the Underground Railroad: being a brief history of the labors of a lifetime in behalf of the slave, with the stories of numerous fugitives, who gained their freedom through his instrumentality, and many other incidents. Cincinnati: Western tract society, 1876.

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Source Type:  Recollection

Editor's Rating:  Essential

While Levi Coffin's claim to be the "President of the Underground Railroad" was overblown, his central role in assisting fugitives in the Ohio Valley is undisputed.


Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave. Written by Himself. Boston: American Anti-slavery Society, 1845.

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Source Type: Slave Narrative

Editor's Rating: Essential

In each successive autobiography (he wrote three altogether), Frederick Douglass offered new details about his origins, experiences and escape from slavery.  In 1838, Douglass fled from Baltimore through Philadelphia before arriving safely in New Bedford, Massachusetts.  He was careful to leave out operational details from his pre-war narratives (published in 1845 and 1855) because, as he warned in his first Narrative, too much talk about  methods of escape might have turned the Underground Railroad "most emphatically into "the upperground railroad."


Drew, Benjamin. A North-Side View of Slavery. The Refugee: or, The Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada. Related by Themselves. With an Account of the History and Condition of the Colored Population of Upper Canada. Boston: J. P. Jewett, 1856.

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Source Type:  Slave Narrative

Editor's Rating: Essential

Benjamin Drew was a Boston abolitionist who interviewed ex-slaves in Canada for John P. Jewett (the publisher of Uncle Tom's Cabin) and provided a rare compilation of contemporary ex-slave interviews.  Harriet Tubman was one of his subjects.  Drew changed some names and fictionalized some accounts to protect fugitives.


McDougall, Marion Gleason. Fugitive Slaves (1619-1865). Boston: Ginn & Company, 1891.

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Source Type:  Fugitive Case

Editor's Rating:  Essential

Strictly speaking, this compilation by Marion McDougall Gleason is a reference work rather than a primary source.  The book contains a vast inventory of summaries of fugitive cases in American courts from 1619 to 1865.


New York Committee of Vigilance.  The First annual report of the New York Committee of Vigilance for the year 1837 : together with important facts relative to their proceedings. New York:  Piercy and Reed, 1837.

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Source Type:  Diaries & Journals

Editor's Rating:  Essential

The New York Vigilance Committee was the forerunner for other vigilance operations in northern cities.  This annual report demonstrates how such committees could organize publicly to protect free black residents from kidnapping without hindering their covert efforts to aid fugitives.


Peters, Richard.  Report of the case of Edward Prigg against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, argued and adjudged in the Supreme Court of the United States, at January term, 1842 : in which it was decided that all the laws of the several states relative to fugitive slaves are unconstitutional and void, and that Congress have the exclusive power of legislation on the subject of fugitive slaves escaping into other states / by Richard Peters, reporter of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.  Philadelphia : Stereotyped by L. Johnson, 1842.

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Source Type: Fugitive Case

Editor's Rating: Essential

The Supreme Court's decision in the Prigg case in 1842 ushered in a new era of tension between northern and southern states over the recapture of fugitive slaves.


Robbins, James J.  Report of the trial of Castner Hanway for treason, in the resistance of the execution of the Fugitive slave law of September 1850. Before Judges Grier and Kane, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the eastern district of Pennsylvania. Held at Philadelphia in November and December, 1851. Philadelphia, King & Baird, 1852.

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Source Type:  Fugitive Case

Editor's Rating:  Essential

The Christiana "Riot" of September 11, 1851 and the subsequent treason trial in November-December 1851 was one of the most pivotal episodes in the antebellum fugitive crisis.  A Maryland slave owner named Edward Gorsuch died while unsuccessfully attempting to recapture four of his runaway slaves in southern Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The treason charges brought against Castner Hanway and 37 other men, both white and black, who resisted Gorsuch and his party, remains the largest single treason trial in American history.  Hanway was acquitted by the jury after almost immediately after the trial concluded.  Prosecutors then released the other accused figures and southerners raged against northern indifference to the new fugitive slave law.


Siebert, Wilbur Henry. The Underground Railroad: From Slavery to Freedom. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1898. Click Here

Source Type:  Recollection

Editor's Rating:  Essential

Wilbur Siebert produced the first serious academic studies of the Underground Railroad.  He collected an extraordinary body of recollections, particularly with white abolitionists who had supported the Underground Railroad.  Siebert's work has since been thoroughly superseded as analysis, but his interviews remain invaluable.


Smedley, Robert Clemens. History of the Underground Railroad in Chester and the Neighboring Counties of Pennsylvania. Lancaster, PA: Office of the Journal, 1883.

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Source Type: Recollection

Editor's Rating:  Essential

Robert Smedley relied heavily on interviews with former Underground Railroad agents and Quaker abolitionists to produce a detailed though anecdotal survey of the fugitive aid network in southeastern Pennsylvania.


Still, William.  "Journal C of Station No. 2, William Still, 1852-1857, Vigilance Committee of Philadelphia," PAS Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.

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Source Type: Diaries & Journals

Editor's Rating:  Essential

William Still not only headed the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee during the 1850s, but also somehow managed to keep records of their efforts.  "Journal C of Station 2" stands as the most comprehensive contemporary manuscript source on the Underground Railroad anywhere in the country.  While the full collection remains preserved at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, extensive excerpts from the journal now appear online at an HSP exhibit that includes a wide variety of resources for teachers.


Still, William. The Underground Railroad. Philadelphia: Porter and Coates, 1872.

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Source Type: Recollection

Editor's Rating:  Essential

After the Civil War, William Still reviewed his journals and other papers from his days as head of the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee and produced a memoir of the experience that remains the single most important source on the operations of the Underground Railroad.  Still's recollection actually contains hundreds of pages of contemporary documents, includes excerpts from the vigilance committee journals, letters, newspaper clippings and numerous fugitive slave notices.


 

 

 

 

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