From History of Clarion Co., Pennsylvania, edited by A. J. Davis, 1887.
"The Underground Railroad" was the title given by Southerners
to the secret organized dispatch of escaped slaves, through the north
to Canada, and safe northern points. Few, even among the oldest
citizens, have known that for years there was a systematic transportation
of fugitive slaves through Clarion county, in other words, that one of
the main lines of the Underground Railroad passed through this county;
that there were no fewer than four stations here, and that the conductors
were among the most respected and substantial citizens of the county.
The harboring and aiding of fugitive slaves was illegal
(penalty by act of Congress, 1850, fine not exceeding $1,000, and imprisonment
not exceeding six months, also civil damages), and the greatest care was
exercised to conceal the operations of the movement; the conveyance of
the slaves from point to point was necessarily done by night, and so circumspectly
and secretly was the work carried on that it was rare for those engaged
in it to know who the agents were beyond their immediate stations.
The slaves who passed through western Pennsylvania
were all from Virginia, and of the male sex. In escaping from their
masters, they would start soon after nightfall, provided with horses whenever
possible, and by the time their absence would be discovered they would
have considerably handicapped their pursuers.
The first assisted fugitives (six in number) arrived
in Clarion county in June, 1847, and from thence to 1855 they came from
time to time, in numbers from two to seven. For our purpose it suffices
to trace the links of this mysterious chain back to Armstrong county.
Rev. John Hindman was an Associated
(Seceder) minister, resident near Dayton; he received and forwarded the
negroes to William Blair, of Porter township, this county.
Mr. Blair in turn sent them on to Rev. John
McAuley, a Seceder clergyman, of Rimersburg. It appears
that the majority of active abolitionists in this vicinity belonged
to that denomination, a sect whose members, of the old school, were noted
as men of strong and decided views, and resolute in carrying out their
principles.
Mr. McAuley kept the "contrabands"
in his barn, and under cover of darkness generally, sometimes in the
twilight -- through by paths -- he, or his eldest son, brought them
to the house
of James Fulton, a member of his congregation, who lived
a little north of Rimersburg. Mr. Jackson Fulton,
his son, in speaking of the first party, says: "One of these
was a powerful man; stood six feet, three or four inches, and weighed
240
or 250 pounds; he told me that frequently when his master would go to
whip him, he would catch him and hold him, and thereby he escaped
many
a whipping." The last, a twain, came in the spring of 1855. Mr.
Fulton says: "One of these left a wife; he told
me if the Lord spared him to get through he would return and steal her. I
said to him he would certainly be running a great risk. He said
he would risk his life that they might enjoy their freedom together." Mr. James
Fulton fed and cared for the fugitives,
and then conveyed them by wagon to Benjamin Gardner, sr.,
of Licking township, two or three miles north of Callensburg. Once
or twice Mr. Fulton was bold enough to conduct them
in daylight. Mr. Gardner was an ardent abolitionist.
The next station was Elihu Chadwick's,
of Rockland township, Venango county, sixteen miles away. Mr.
Chadwick had several rooms in his commodious barn fitted up
specially for the reception of his dusky protégés. The
venerable
Benjamin Gardner, jr., enables us to follow the fortunes
of the last pair, mentioned by Mr. Fulton. He
writes:
"He (his father) concealed them in one compartment until dark,
and then escorted them by the underground train to next station, but Mr.
Chadwick was absent and father put them through that night
to Franklin, twenty-five miles. He left his passengers at this
end of the bridge and went over to see if the coast was clear, and
on returning
the darkies were missing, but upon reconnoitering the place he found
them behind the abutment near the water's edge. Poor fellows!
they thought they were abandoned."
|