Details

ISBN-10: 025207954X
ISBN-13: 9780252079542
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publish Date: 12/12/2013
Dimensions: 8.90" L, 6.00" W, 0.90" H

Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad: The Geography of Resistance

Paperback

Price: $27.00

Overview

This enlightening study employs the tools of archaeology to uncover a new historical perspective on the Underground Railroad. Unlike previous histories of the Underground Railroad, which have focused on frightened fugitive slaves and their benevolent abolitionist accomplices, Cheryl LaRoche focuses instead on free African American communities, the crucial help they provided to individuals fleeing slavery, and the terrain where those flights to freedom occurred. This study foregrounds several small, rural hamlets on the treacherous southern edge of the free North in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. LaRoche demonstrates how landscape features such as waterways, iron forges, and caves played a key role in the conduct and effectiveness of the Underground Railroad. Rich in oral histories, maps, memoirs, and archaeological investigations, this examination of the “geography of resistance” tells the new powerful and inspiring story of African Americans ensuring their own liberation in the midst of oppression.

Read More
Reviews
"In this book Cheryl Janifer LaRoche provides a corrective to this gap in the history by taking a broader landscape approach to 'geographies of resistance, ' and she also traces in understated terms but powerful examples the silencing of the same history."–The Journal of American History
More Reviews

Details

ISBN-10: 025207954X
ISBN-13: 9780252079542
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publish Date: 12/12/2013
Dimensions: 8.90" L, 6.00" W, 0.90" H
Skip to content