Poke
Patch Station is gone. That fact did not stop our search to find it.
Nature has
reclaimed the meadow near Dirtyface Creek below
Negro Creek Road
. Log cabins that once stood against the elements have succumbed to
them. Time hides forever
the tangible traces of this once active station on the Underground
Railroad. There’s
poetic irony in the hiding. Poke Patch once existed to hide its
people. The community once concealed a spirit for freedom in this
pokeweed infested spot that gave it its name. Today only the round
cluster of berries of the pokeweed nods its head of purple. The
people and their struggle are long gone.
Poke Patch was
one of the first stations we visited. To test ideas for the longer
journey ahead, we rode throughout the area in August 1998, searching
for signs of the former community. What we found was good will among
the current residents, but no reminders of the bygone community.
Although Poke Patch harbored perhaps as many as two hundred
fugitives, no signs remained of the community from the 1800s. The
old burial grounds have also been hidden by the passage of time. We
learned that National Forest personnel seek its whereabouts.
Stationmasters like John J. Steward and his wife are probably buried
there, but because of poor records and lack of stone grave markers
the location eludes present day hunters. The old abolitionist
residents died off, and generations that followed did so too. The
National Forest now owns and manages much of the land. Today the
young people around Poke Patch must move away. Lack of jobs for
current residents, both Black and White, make economic conditions
little better than they were for the abolitionists of the 1800s.
Survival
was especially harsh for people of color back in 1820 when Free
Blacks settled this community. Poke Patch was no more than an
hour’s walk from the main road, now
Ohio
93 and the nearby coal company town of Blackfork. But it might as
well have been a hundred miles.
White owners as a rule ran the industries of
Appalachia
back then. The good jobs went to those whose race was in power.
Since White Ohio legislators made the laws, those laws were designed
to keep Blacks under control and out of power. Without question both
industry and the law in
Ohio
treated the Black population with contempt as ignorant intruders.
Ohio
’s Black Laws, as they were called, required every Black or
mulatto (a person with Black ancestors) who settled in the state to
post a two-hundred-dollar bond. A newcomer had to register at the
county seat and pay fees for all family members who settled here.
Every Black had to produce a certificate from the
U.S. Federal District Court
certifying his or her free status. If a Black failed to produce the
certificate he could not legally work even if certified. Blacks
could not serve on a jury. They could not give evidence or testify.
As the defendant a Black person’s only witnesses would have to be
White. Blacks were, in effect, bound and gagged by and in
Ohio
courts of law. And the great state of
Ohio
called itself a
free state
. Those same laws
affected the future of Black children who were denied an education
and not allowed to attend school. Historians have written that these
laws were passed to curb the migration of Blacks into
Ohio
from neighboring Slave States like
Virginia
(now
West Virginia
) and
Kentucky
. For Blacks who lived
in
Ohio
or for those who chose to run away to
Ohio
, these regulations almost certainly guaranteed a life of poverty
and ignorance.
Not
every Black man buckled under the oppression of such discriminatory
laws. Some defied the laws outright. They learned to read and to
write. They worked. And secretly they forged a network of safe
places for fugitives, which became known as the Underground
Railroad. One such man was John Parker, former slave and active
conductor from Ripley. He wrote that the passage of the federal
Fugitive Slave Law in 1850 forced fugitives and abolitionists
everywhere in the nation to be more secretive than ever. This
national law imposed severe penalties on anyone who came to the aid
of a fugitive slave. It meant confiscation of property. It included
a fine of up to one thousand dollars. And it meant a jail sentence
for up to six months. It allowed the owner of a runaway slave to
pursue his property wherever that fugitive went. The owner could
arrest the slave once he located him and take him back home.
Joy
and I were hunting our historical slaves and the stations that
harbored them long after the Fugitive Slave Law was nullified by the
Civil War. We sought the locations of stations such as Poke Patch,
and we wanted information about fugitives. No one was under any
legal responsibility to help us, but help, they did. We discovered
an atmosphere of neighborliness and cooperation that existed among
rural people of all colors. We were delighted at the generosity and
the kindness of residents and historians to assist us.
Stations
like Poke Patch provided safe hiding places from slave hunters and
the law. Conductors like Jacob Steward were knowledgeable guides
through the area. Fugitives
sometimes referred to by code as “freight" found shelter in
or near the home of John J. Steward and his wife, the chief station
keepers in the community. Chief conductors out of Poke Patch were
John’s brothers, one of whom was Jacob. Every resident of Poke
Patch it would seem was involved in some manner in this clandestine
protest against human bondage. Some of our information came from a
book by Wilbur H. Siebert called The
Mysteries of Ohio’s Underground Railroad first published in
1951. Professor Siebert sent his history students to their home
counties across
Ohio
to gather data on the Underground Railroad in the late 1800s. Based
on the letters these students collected Siebert recorded the names
of conductors, the routes they supposedly used, and the locations of
stations throughout the state. Unfortunately, because it was
published long after the time when the Underground Railroad
flourished, it is criticized as not being necessarily accurate.
What
we do know for sure is that conductors used a variety of methods to
move freight to places like Poke Patch. False-bottomed wagons
carried passengers unseen day or night, though night was the safest
time. Conductors near Getaway down in
Lawrence
County
guided fugitives on foot westward along Rankins Creek under the dim
light of a waning moon. At the intersection of another creek the
nervous party might veer north to follow the North Star. Fugitive
slaves understood this instruction. North was the principle
direction in this region that led to the
land
of
Canaan
and freedom. Word among the fugitives down in
Lawrence
County
was to go north until they came to the valley of pokeberries. There
they would be safe. No single road, main path or one method
identified this or any Underground Railroad route. Flexibility was
the key to escape. Secrecy kept conductors safe from imprisonment
and kept the whole of the Underground Railroad network a mystery.
Pursued
by slave hunters, runaways bound for Poke Patch slipped across the
Ohio River
. We decided to start our journey on the
Ohio
side. The fugitives ran north, away from plantations in
Kentucky
,
Virginia
and from plantations deeper in the South. They rowed across the
river in small boats concealed on the shore just for this purpose.
Or they half-waded, half-swam, clinging to floating debris. They
left behind as quickly as possible the river with its ever-vigilant
armed patrols. Anxiety, fear and dangers filled their journeys on a
desperate dash for freedom. Their goal was to get far away from the
hunters who they knew pursued them. Their strength and their lives
were taxed sometimes to the limit and sometimes beyond.
Negro Creek Road
, now Washington Township 166, ran along a ridge in
Lawrence
County
and stretched due north toward the community of Poke Patch. Before
the Civil War Poke Patch was simply a few cabins sheltered in a
small valley overrun with pokeweed. Fugitives able to travel the
twenty miles between the Ohio River and this tiny settlement nestled
in Gallia County might do so on one long day’s journey or by two
nights of travel. What route a conductor with slaves, or slaves
alone took to get there depended upon conditions and the activities
of slave hunters. We decided to make the journey in reverse. We
began our search in Poke Patch, then traveled south into more
populated areas. But we, too, traveled a route designed to avoid
contact with people and a present-day menace, vehicles. We wanted
our horseback journey to be problem free and as pleasant as
possible. We did not want to face any of the dangers or hardships
that awaited fugitives (or even the slave hunters) of long ago.
We
selected Poke Patch because it had served the area as a significant
yet typical stop on the Underground Railroad. By the end of the
Civil War, conductors like James Dicher and William Chavis had taken
many fugitives through the community. Back then the residents of
Poke Patch believed in freedom to such an extent that they took
great personal risks to aid these unknown refugees. James Dicher
took perhaps eighty runaways to Poke Patch following a railroad
track part of the way. This
cleared right of way, like many others in the area, had been build
to serve the thriving iron-making industry. One ran to nearby
Mt.Vernon Furnace, which had been built in part by abolitionist John
Campbell, and others.
Campbell
, as mentioned earlier in this book, was an active supporter of the
Underground Railroad. Following the path created by railroad
builders conductors on this train made escape on foot much easier
and faster. At a landmark known to conductor Dicher, he would lead
his party off the railroad bed near Poke Patch and scramble over
hills and woods to reach the settlement.
Another
conductor named William Chavis brought fugitives some thirty miles
north to this remote pokeberry field from another station at
Burlington
down on the
Ohio River
. Runaways who were helped by these two men probably wore little
more than the rags they were dressed in at the moment of their
escape. With or without shoes they ran. Whatever the weather
conditions, they ran. Whatever hardships they faced, they kept
travelling north.
Joy
and I had the luxury of packing extra clean clothes for our trek. We
had good boots to wear to protect our feet from rain and mud, or
from painful occasions when one of our horses’ hooves might step
on our toes. More importantly, we had horses to ride. Fugitives may
not have worn any shoes even though they traveled by foot. We
carried our own food supply for the entire journey, a small
backpacker’s stove to prepare hot meals, and a tent for protection
from bad weather and bugs. I doubt the slave hunters would have been
as comfortable. I’m certain the fugitives were not.
Lucky
fugitives were sheltered and cared for by free Blacks like John J.
Stewart and his wife who hid them in or near their cabin in Poke
Patch. As was the
custom, they fed and clothed the travelers with whatever they could
provide from their own meager supplies.
These stationmasters provided the shelter if there was to be
any, safe hiding for a little while, and a rare opportunity for
rest. With this kind of help, most of the fugitives continued the
journey toward freedom north of
Ohio
and outside the
U.S.
Another
Black, Cornnelius Harris, was once a resident of this abolitionist
hamlet. His great granddaughter, Wilma Fox, believes he may have
been a fugitive who ran as far as Poke Patch and then decided to
stay. Wilma Fox lives today in nearby Ironton. A retired hospital
clerk she explained to me what little she knew of her great
grandfather’s life in an interview I had with her months before
our ride. She’d heard from family stories that Harris and two
siblings arrived in Poke Patch from the state of
North Carolina
in the 1800s before the Civil War.
Cornnelius
Harris, a brother named Lewis Marsh, and a sister named Telitha
Marsh were the offspring of a union between Marsh, a plantation
owner and Harris, one of Marsh’s female slaves. Cornnelius Harris
took the name and the dark complexion of his mother. Telitha and
Lewis chose the last name of their White father and were themselves
light in color. What brought the young Harris and his siblings to
Poke Patch from
North Carolina
is mystery to Fox and her family. Perhaps the answer was luck or
perhaps circumstances. Fox turned to archives, census data, and
whatever was available to find clues to her family history. One
source she used was the Siebert book held on reserve at her local
library.
Siebert’s
research identified Peter Coker as one who arrived in Poke Patch in
the 1840s. Coker secretly promoted the work of the Underground
station over the years. Fox points out that Coker had a daughter
named
Elizabeth
. This young girl, Elizabeth Coker, daughter of the abolitionist
cited in Siebert’s book, married Cornnelius Harris. The couple
from Poke Patch history is Wilma Fox’s great grandparents.
Absent from
family stories about
Elizabeth
and Cornnelius were any substantial details about Cornnelius
Harris’ life prior to taking up residence in Poke Patch.
Relatives’ lack of information suggested to Fox that Harris
and his siblings might have been fugitives. The fear of being
discovered as a fugitive slave would have been motivation enough for
concealing his past from everyone. Yet Harris remained in Poke Patch
in spite of
Ohio
’s hostile laws and with the knowledge that if captured, he could
be returned to slavery. Perhaps it was a pretty little
Elizabeth
that prevented him from moving on. Perhaps he had faith in members
of the local Underground network, believing that they might protect
him from bondage as long as he remained hidden among the friendly
folks in the valley of the Pokeweed in
Gallia
County
.
Maybe
places like Poke Patch, which were strategically located, offered
the best defense against discovery and capture. Far from the centers
of White government and law in the county seats which were often
centrally located, these remote areas were difficult to monitor and
even more difficult to force to comply with the laws of the day.
Regional historian of Black history, Michel Perdreau, has learned to
look for Underground Railroad stations where the borders of three
counties converge. There he noted are the locations of past Free
Black communities. There among these distant settlements, far from
the notice and clutches of White law, historians like Perdreau and
slave hunters like us searched the secret stations for mysterious
stories of conductors and slaves.
Poke Patch once lay at the convergence of three
Ohio
counties, Gallia,
Lawrence
, and
Jackson
.
Joy and I were
slave hunters looking for whatever remained visible. We hunted for
graves of the conductors who had defied the law for the sake of
freedom. We found no unmarked graves. We hunted for the stations
where fugitives were protected with sympathy and shelter. The
buildings were gone. In places like Poke Patch we found nothing. But
we learned more than expected about the generosity and goodness of
country people who live near there, some of them descendents of
former slaves.
Pokeweeds
still grow in the poor soil where at one time the Underground
Railroad thrived amid the poverty of one southeast
Ohio
settlement. Science long
ago proved that pokeweed root was poisonous to humans just as
history long ago proved that the Underground Railroad was poisonous
to the institution of slavery. In late summer and early autumn many
fugitives made their escape while pokeberries ripened to a deep
purple. The hard ground made it difficult for slave hunters to track
them. Water in the
creeks confused the hounds trailing their scent.
Corn stood in fields ripe for eating.
Someone somewhere secretly offered aid and sympathy.
Eventually violence erupted in the War Between the States. After
many bloody years both the war and the institution of slavery came
to an end.
In
1879 the people of Poke Patch built a log church in the valley.
There they joyously gave thanks for the spiritual blessings
bestowed upon them which now included freedom. Near that, a cemetery
received the bodies of the dead. Forty years passed and by 1919 the
log church had to be replaced. Church members built a new structure
on top of Niner Hill overlooking the valley of pokeweeds. This
church, bigger, stronger and more beautiful than its humble
predecessor radiates in testament to a surviving people. A
photograph of the old log building hangs inside to remind members of
the past. Though everything is gone, the log church, the cabins,
conductors, stationmasters, and even their graves, the spirit of the
Underground Railroad lives on. This new church was where we chose to
begin our hunt.
Wilma
Fox presented a letter of introduction from Joy and me to her
cousin, Lee Keels, of Black Fork. Lee was the assistant clerk for
the
Union
Baptist
Church
, the beautiful church on top of Niner Hill that replaced the old
log structure down in Poke Patch. Lee wrote back giving us
permission to camp on or near the church grounds. She explained that
the
Wayne
National Forest
land came right up to the church property. This proved to be an
ideal spot to set up a base camp for the week.
Beyond
the well-kept churchyard and beyond the fenced-in cemetery members
of the church kept a small yard of forest property that was void of
trees mowed off. Once we arrived with our horses Joy and I strung up
high lines in the woods to restrain the horses overnight. We stacked
extra hay and gear along the edge of the woods in the yard and
covered the hay with a bright blue tarp. The Sunday twilight was
clear and warm. A gentle breeze floated down into the valley. We had
just tied the horses to the high lines and before we had the tent
unpacked visitors began to arrive, church trustees, Carlos
Galliamore and Harold “Bus” Craddolph.
They
had come to wish us well and brought their families with them.
Carlos’ wife and daughter, Martha and Debbie came in the
Galliamore car. Harold arrived next, followed by Lee Keels and her
husband, Lewis. Joy and I dropped our chores and spent some time
visiting with our hosts while Joy’s husband, Don, snapped a few
photos of our group. Lee was amazed when darkness approached and our
spouses left us. She was not aware that two women alone
planned to accomplish this journey. We assured her we felt quite
safe. Each of us carried a cellular phone in our saddlebags in case
of emergency. We reminded Lee and Carlos that we carried their phone
numbers with us if we needed their help.
Little did we know that we would call for help before the
week was gone.
The
next twenty-four hours established our tempo for the rest of the
week. We set up the tent within the fenced cemetery for protection
from night critters. We ate our dinner by the light of the stars
long after darkness had fallen. Then we slept until morning light as
soundly as the dead who lay beneath us. By the crack of
noon
the next day we were saddled up and on the road.
We
planned to ride a loop on Monday and return to our base camp where
we left our gear. The ride would give us an opportunity to get the
horses used to each other, and give us a chance to explore the Poke
Patch area. The horse I brought was a big gray, a twenty-four-year
old Appaloosa gelding I called Moose. He dwarfed Joy’s two ponies,
Jacka, the Chincoteaque pinto, and
Pearl
, the black Chinco-fino. But Moose loved to explore new trails. He
had as much energy and enthusiasm as the two young mares he followed
most of the way, and he proved to be a perfect gentleman toward them
on the ride. His one bad habit was playing ring around in circles
when tied. No matter how tired or how hot he was whenever I gave him
a break and tied him up, be it to a high line or to a tree, he would
prance round and round until his lead line would twist into a tight
knot. Eventually, however, even this anxious behavior ceased, once
he got into the rhythm of our rides each day.
We
wanted to find the tunnel that James Dicher probably took fugitives
through on his way along the rail line to Poke Patch. But after we
passed over top of the tunnel (without realizing we had done so) we
encountered a local man who advised us not to go down into it. He
had heard there were many copperheads down there. By that he meant
snakes, not pro-slavery people. Access seemed difficult at best, so
we noted the tunnel location on our map and rode away up
Dry Ridge Road
.
I was
discovering things that first day that would not work well for the
year 2000 journey. I realized that Moose was not the horse for the
long journey simply because of his age and size. He alone consumed
as much grain and hay as the two ponies combined that Joy was
training for the big ride and used this week. My notebook, even
thought it measured less than ten inches by eight inches was also
too big. I needed to carry index cards or something small that would
fit easily into my saddle bags or vest pocket. Road maps were a
nuisance from the back of a horse, and I was already thinking of
laminating small segments of maps for the future. These would be
weather resistant and could be more easily carried while riding. The
smaller version would also not require folding and unfolding for
use. I then realized the need to carry highlighters to mark our
trail on the maps. The thought of carrying GPS equipment also
crossed my mind briefly.
That
evening back in the churchyard Phyllis Harris brought us water,
fresh tomatoes, and cans of cold pop. We felt very good about the
day. The horses had behaved well in each other’s company. No one
was thrown off or hurt. Strangers had been most helpful. We were
looking forward to Tuesday when we would leave
Union
Baptist
Church
behind and set out to put some distance between it and our next
stop. However, Tuesday turned into a disaster.
It
was our first day out with the pack.
Pearl
was the designated packhorse for this trip, and we were struggling
to figure out the bright orange panniers Joy purchased. Although Joy
wanted to get an early start, we weren’t on the trail until nearly
1:30
that afternoon. Would the crack of
noon
become the crack of
midday
? We had brought too much stuff. Equally packing the two sides of
the panniers proved to be time consuming and difficult. She would
stuff a few items into one side and then stuff a few more into the
other. But she always seemed to have an uneven load. One side would
be heavier than the other, and she would have to start all over.
Some things were just too big to fit, like my red sleeping bag.
Eventually, I had to tie my blue duffel bag of clothes and my red
sleeping bag to the saddle on Moose. That meant I had no room to
ride, and had to lead him on foot for the day. Not only that, the
unbalanced overflow of stuff in an orange bag swinging from the
saddle’s horn on Moose caused the saddle to slip all the way under
him. I was re-packing before
two o’clock
.
Walking
on foot I slowed the horses down considerably and reduced the miles
we could cover that day. In addition, it turned out to be
blisteringly hot. The humidity was high, and the sun beat down on my
back relentlessly. I felt hot Moose breath on my neck with every
sweaty step. Moose had a bad habit of walking with his nose right
against my back. In the heat this trait proved most annoying. I felt
as if I spent most of the miserable day shaking my lead line in a
fruitless attempt to send a signal to Moose to back off.
As
the day began to close Joy spoke to a young man named Charles
Chambers who lived on
Dry Ridge Road
. He directed us to a campsite in the
Wayne
National Forest
back a mile or so in the direction we had come. Charles was a
natural resources student at
Hocking
College
, where I worked, and hoped his training would get him a job with
the National Forest that surrounded his family’s home. This kind
young man watered our horses and took our overloaded supplies so I
could ride Moose up the ridge to the campsite. While we rode back up
the hill to find the turnoff to the campsite he drove to the
Union
Baptist
Church
and brought back some hay for the horses. Amid towering pines we
assembled the tent on a soft carpet of pine needles. We high-lined
the horses and fed them plenty of hay, grain, and water thanks to
Charles. That night we fell asleep inside the tent as a heavy
rainstorm came and washed off our dirty horses. The next morning we
awoke to thick fog drifting among the pines and somewhat cooler
temperatures.
Joy
repacked the Panniers on
Pearl
. She was able to layer my sleeping bag inside the roll that lay
across the top of
Pearl
. I tied the blue duffel once again behind my saddle, and dangled
the orange bag of food from the saddle horn. The change in what got
packed by
Pearl
and what I had to carry on Moose allowed some space in the saddle
for me to ride. I was grateful. I had come to understand one reason
why a person on foot might prefer to travel by moonlight to the heat
of a summer sun. It had nothing to do with avoiding people. Joy cut
a few minutes off packing time, and we were on the trail by
12:40
. This late start every day bothered me. I would have liked to start
the ride as early as seven. Ride for three hours. Rest the horses
over the hottest hours of the day. Then resume the ride travelling
into the dusk and cooler evening hours. But packing problems
wouldn’t allow it. I needed another alternative. But what
alternative to packing a horse I didn’t know right then.
We
rode along quiet township roads most of that day and only
encountered one vehicle. Later in the afternoon we turned down
Mt. Vernon Road
, so named because of nearby Mt. Vernon Furnace. The car traffic
picked up almost at once. Because we had been riding on a ridge top
we had not found any water for the horses to drink since morning. By
the time we came to
Littles
Cemetery
they were thirsty though not dehydrated. We had always walked the
horses, and much of the trip they had passed through shade. But it
was time to use the cell phones and call for help. Wouldn’t you
know it, my cell phone battery was dead! Fortunately, Joy’s phone
was charged and working.
Joy
called Carlos about our predicament. He gave us John Boyd’s number
and she then called him. John brought us a huge tank of water in the
back of his truck within the hour. Together he and Carlos dropped
the heavy plastic barrel from the tailgate onto the ground at
Littles
Cemetery
. We were saved. Soon the horses had their fill, we had enough water
to make dinner, clean ourselves up a bit, and still had plenty left
over for the horses to drink through the night and into the morning.
Slave hunters of the past would not have been so cheerfully aided if
their horses had been thirsty. Certainly their horses would probably
have received humane treatment by the locals. But I doubted
seriously if any member of the Poke Patch community would have gone
out of their way like John and Carlos had done to assist the humans.
Then I wondered about the fugitives, fearful of turning to strangers
for something as simple as water, afraid that the hand that offered
a pitcher of cold liquid could also be the hand that legally bound
them back into slavery.
The
fact that we had a need, and one as basic as water, pointed out the
necessity for a backup crew or a support vehicle of some kind.
Although I knew that Joy wanted to rely on luck for the sake of
adventure, I felt we needed to protect our horses and see to their
comfort if there was any means possible. I figured my old truck was
the means possible. It could haul the hay and water for the horses,
as well as our own food and maybe electronic equipment. It was
something to think about and discuss. All I had to do was find a
driver willing to spend most of her days alone, willing to support
us in whatever needs became apparent along the way, and do this
labor for free. I shuddered at the thought that I had just described
our need for a slave.
The
next day we came upon Diane McKenzie at her farm near
Zion
Church
. Joy offered to pay her if she would bring us two bales of their
hay and some water for the horses at the John’s Creek Trailhead at
Vesuvius
State Park
that night. Diane’s family was composed of horse owners and she
knew exactly what we needed and agreed to Joy’s offer. When we
arrived at the trailhead Diane and her family were waiting for us.
They told us about two choices they were familiar with for camping.
One spot was in a small area at the base of the water tower, and the
other spot was in the field a little distance away. Once we saw the
lush grass of the open meadow there was no question where we would
stay. The horses must have thought they’d walked to Heaven and at
once set about grazing. Jim McKenzie, Diane’s husband, carried a
bale of hay in one hand and one side of a water container in the
other. I carried the other side of the container. The water weighed
so heavily that the handle cut off the circulation in my fingers. It
took all my will power to maintain my grip. Their young daughter,
Anna, carried a full 5-gallon collapsible water jug on her own. The
Mackenzies then refused to accept any payment for their services.
With the
arrival of Friday morning our ride was about over. We planned to
explore the Vesuvius horse trails leaving our gear in camp for the
day. Our husbands knew to pick us up at this site on Saturday so
there was no where else we needed to travel to. We could have some
fun riding in the woods. We had learned a lot about what we needed
to do to prepare for our future adventure. Packing a horse caused
too many delays. Perhaps a backup or support crew would solve that
problem. We realized that once on our journey we would need to be
flexible, able to adjust our path with the circumstances that
presented themselves. We would need to be as adaptable as the
elusive slaves we tracked. We also realized that we would need help
from strangers along the way in order to succeed. In effect we
needed present-day conductors and stationmasters.
When all they
had was each other, it’s little wonder that the long tradition of
Blacks helping Blacks sustained settlers and fugitives in a time and
place when little else did. The helping tradition, which supported
the fugitives who passed through
Ohio
on their way to
Canada
, is still alive. The residents of Blackfork and the members of the
Union
Baptist
Church
were our stationmasters on this journey. They maintained that spirit
of generosity and helpfulness and extended it to us. Unsuccessful
hunters that we were we discovered as have historical researchers
and descendents that the tangible evidence of the Underground
Railroad continues to evade those who hunt for it. The spirit,
however, lives on in the stories of former slaves, and in the
generosity of their children’s children.