How quilts were used in the Underground Railroad
#31
We have to remember that everything we "google" on the Internet is not true. There are no checks and balances re: what someone puts on the Internet. The only way to do accurate research on the Internet is to check the sources and reliability of the article/authors you are reading and to get as much info as you can from source documents (original, validated writings such as period letters, journals, etc.) The journal and quilt piece found in the hiding place mentioned above is a good example of a source document. It is concerning that we are becoming so trusting of everything we read on the Internet. There are even Internet groups that say the Holocaust never happened!
#33
Power Poster
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Citrus County, Florida
Posts: 10,849
A lot of the research and documentation came from oral histories. Really, would you document what the symbols are and what they stand for? If it fell into the wrong hands it would all be over. Fact or fiction?? I don't know but then our history books don't promote the fact that many African-Americans were confederate soldiers either. As I do genealogy research I find that all too many things are not written down or preserved
#34
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Corpus Christi, Tx.
Posts: 16,105
Myth or not, I too love the story. It's very similar though to days of the past when hobos (vagrants, transients) would mark houses in small towns that were friendly. They would mark at the railroad crossings such as ll>lll^ which would mean 2nd street go left 3rd house on north side of street. I know this because when I grew up in a small town in Northern Indiana along the tracks a vagrant was caught illegally entering a house. He said the house was marked as friendly. He also stated there was no mark stating he had to knock. no wonder he met an older gal with a 30-06. LOL! Have to also remember back in the days of the underground railroad very few slaves could read and therefore had to relay on different signals. I'm still going to believe it to be non-fiction.
#35
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 724
Sure some people are going to want to claim it was a myth... couldn't have the slaves outsmart anyone now could they? (sarcasm) How brave and courageous everyone involved had to be. I also love to read about the underground railroad quilts. Jennifer Chiaverini (elm creek quilt books) has some great stories, Eleanor Burns, Hidden in Plain View: A Secret Story of Quilts and the Underground Railroad byJacqueline L. Tobin and several others. Some claim it was Pres. Lincolns passing that had people changing the block designs in the log cabin to a black center. Some say it was a story made up to sell quilts. I guess it is something we will never really know for sure. I for one find the stories very interesting. Dee
#37
How disappointing to read that the UGR story is a myth. I made an underground railroad quilt for my grandson and gave him the story to read with it. When I was telling him about it he listened with his mouth open and was very
sad what the black people had to endure. So I thought I made a point how blessed we are to live in a free country.
He took it all in and he treasure his quilt.
sad what the black people had to endure. So I thought I made a point how blessed we are to live in a free country.
He took it all in and he treasure his quilt.
#38
#39
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: near Peoria Illinois
Posts: 1,638
Just as FYI. There were two houses in my area used for the undergraound railroad. While it is not known if a quilt was used as a signal, one had a quilt survive from that era. But the story told most was that they used words set to familiar songs to convey the trail route. That being true, why would a quilt not be believable? Hobo's used symbals on fences in later decades to show what was lurking at different houses. A quilt could've been used. Maybe it wasn't the block in the quilt, but that there was a quilt hanging was the signal.
Worse myths have survived.
Worse myths have survived.
#40
Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Omaha, NE
Posts: 51
This isn't quilt related, but I lived in Leavenworth, KS for several years. Leavenworth is just across the river from Weston, MO which did have a slave trading landing. Since Kansas was a free state, many people did their best to escape across the river to freedom. Friends of mine bought an old (1850's) house. It had false walls with a vertical space wide/tall enough for about seven adults to stand fairly comfortably. This was in the upstairs, with access through a nursery room just off a bedroom. It would have been easy to hide the access behind a chest or bookshelf. The story was that this home was a known part of the Underground Railroad and had been built by a Quaker family who sheltered runaways during the initial search for them. Leavenworth did become a fairly safe slave refuge, with a black Catholic orphanage, a black Catholic school and hospital system, and so forth from about the mid-1850's. No one made much of the history anymore, though. It seems to be a chapter best forgotten amid today's tensions.
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