It was extremely difficult for escaping slaves to know who could be trusted. Were sympathetic whites legitimate abolitionists - or - were they merely opportunistic folks looking for award money? How to distinguish those differences was sometimes impossible.
Slaves who owned nothing, but longed to be free, faced incredible risks. How would they leave? What provisions would they need? How far would they travel before someone helped? What would happen if the master quickly learned of their departure?
Escaping was a dream, but how would it become reality? And even if escape were possible, the choice between staying or leaving was not as simple as it may seem to us today.
Individuals working the Underground Railroad - that incredibly important network of people who helped escaped slaves stay in safe places as they journeyed to free states in the north (or to Canada where American Fugitive Slave Laws were unenforceable) - used railway terms for what they did:
- Travel routes were called "lines"
- Stopping places were called stations
- Escaped slaves were called passengers or cargo
- Key people who helped were called conductors
Harriet Tubman, one of the most important conductors on the Underground Railroad, was once a slave herself. Lets meet her, plus several other leading people who risked serious punishment to do what was right.