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During
the early 19th century, Quaker Hill
was at the center of the ever-increasing
hostility between the slave states
of the South and the free North.
With the Mason-Dixon line just a
few miles away in Chester County,
Pennsylvania, Wilmington became
an embarkation point for runaway
slaves: the last stop on the line
to freedom.
As political and social tensions
escalated prior to the Civil War,
there evolved a covert network of
freedom fighters throughout the
young nation, whose purpose was
to aid in the escape of slaves.
From the Eastern Shore of Maryland
to the Delaware River, thousands
fled the cruel practices of human
bondage, often fighting their way
to liberty.
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Born
on August 21, 1789 in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania,
Thomas Garrett was one of the most prominent
figures in the history of the Underground
Railroad. He has been called Delaware's
greatest humanitarian and is credited with
helping more than 2,700 slaves escape to
freedom over a forty year period.
A white Quaker, whose family hid runaway
slaves in its Delaware County farmhouse
when he was a child, Garrett was raised
with the teachings of tolerance espoused
by his church, one of the first to openly
challenge the rights of slaveholders. When
Garret was a young man, an employee of the
family was kidnapped and nearly forced into
slavery. Garrett chased after the offenders,
freeing his family's friend. According to
scholars, Garret experienced a spiritual
awakening that day, and would ever after
devote his life to the active quest for
human equality and dignity. |
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Garrett relocated to Quaker Hill,
and ran a moderately successful hardware
business there. He was now living
at the geographical and political
crossroads of the country, the dividing
line between the north and south.
Whether he chose his location because
of his abolitionist ambition, or found
himself aiding almost daily in the
escape of fugitives because of his
move to the border state of Delaware,
Garrett soon became known in anti-slavery
circles as a great "station master"
of the Underground Railroad.
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Fugitives
made their way through the lowlands
and swamps of Maryland and Delaware,
sometimes with the aid of "conductors",
like Harriet Tubman, who worked
with Garrett. Often helped by
support networks in the free
black, and white anti-slavery
communities, many runaways were
directed by signal or word of
mouth to make for the house
of Thomas Garrett. Garrett was
able to secret thousands away
to the Philadelphia Anti-Slavery
Offices, where a free black
man named William Still had
quickly risen to become a formidable
freedom fighter and "station
master". Still kept meticulous
records of slaves' experiences,
and was often able to reunite
entire families in the free
states. Still even found one
weary fugitive to be his own,
long lost brother. |
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Harriet Tubman
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Published in 1872, Still's landmark
work "The Underground Railroad"
provides an intimate portrait
of the people who passed through
the Eastern Line with the help
of these two freedom fighters,
who may never have met face
to face. Garret, sadly, was
forced to burn his correspondences
with Still for fear of discovery,
at a time where the Fugitive
Slave Laws passed by the government
allowed stiff penalties for
aiding in the escape of southerners'
"stolen property".
In 1848, Thomas Garrett and
a fellow abolitionist John Hunn
were tried and convicted for
aiding in the escape of the
Hawkins family, from Maryland.
Both men were fined nearly to
the point of bankruptcy.
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In
his closing address to the jury,
in the court building that still
stands in New Castle, Delaware,
Garrett regaled the considerable
audience with a redoubled commitment
to help runaway slaves. Eyewitness
accounts detail the particular
contrition of a slave-holding
juror from southern Delaware
who rose to shake Garrett's
hand and apologize at the close
of the impassioned speech.
Following the Civil War, Garrett
continued his work for minority
groups in America. In 1870,
when black Americans were given
the right to vote by the establishment
of the 15th Amendment, Garrett
was carried on the shoulders
of his supporters through the
streets of Wilmington as they
hailed him "our Moses."
Less than one year later, on
January 25, 1871, Thomas Garrett
died. His funeral, attended
by many of the black residents
of the city, featured a procession
of Garrett's coffin - borne
from shoulder to shoulder up
to his final resting place,
still marked by a humble stone,
in the cemetery at the Wilmington
Friends Meeting House at 5th
and West Streets in Quaker Hill. |
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Find
out more about Whispers of Angels:
the nationally broadcast documentary
about Delaware's role in The Underground
Railroad.
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Quaker
Hill Historic Preservation Foundation
521 N. West St.
Wilmington, DE 19801 (302) 655-2500
Email
Us!
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