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To Be a Slave

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One quilt would be draped over a fence at a time. ... Using the code words and quilt patterns, you follow Miss Harriet to station ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: To Be a Slave


1
To Be a Slave
  • Traveling on the Underground Railroad

2
If You Were Born a Slave
  • You were considered to be property just like the
    livestock your master owned.
  • You started working early in your childhood,
    doing small tasks until you could be trained to
    perform skilled work or work in the fields.

3
  • You worked from sunup to sundown every day of the
    year, with part of the day off to celebrate
    Christmas.

4
  • You lived in the quarters which was nothing
    more than a one-room shack

5
  • while the master lived in grandeur.

6
  • You were, by law, considered to be 3/5 of a human
    being.
  • You would not be taught to read or write in
    fact, there were laws against teaching slaves
    these skills in several states.
  • You could, at any point, be sold away from the
    only family you knew.

7
  • You were the sole property of your master and he
    had the right to mistreat you if he saw fit to do
    so.
  • You had no legal rights you could not vote.

8
As a slave, there would be no documentation no
licenses or legal certificates like ones granted
to whites. Hence, you would not have a birth
certificate, marriage license, or death
certificate. Some slave owners did keep
handwritten records of their slaves and for many
African-Americans today, these records are the
only proof they have of their ancestors
existence.
9
What Could You Do?
  • You grow tired of the grueling work, the
    beatings, the hopelessness of your life. Youve
    heard about other slaves on neighboring
    plantations who have tried to run away heard
    about how some of them were caught and brought
    back. How some of those poor souls were beaten,
    maimed, or sold southa fate worse than death.
    Still, a little voice inside your head says,
    Yes, but just think about it. To be free! Free
    from the horrors of life in bondage. Free to be
    your own person with no master.

10
You decide to run!
  • Youve even heard tell of a place way up north
    called Canada where you could be free to work and
    earn your own way, to have a real home, to be
    able to hold your head high like any other
    person. But youve never been more than fifteen
    miles from your masters plantation. How would
    you get there? You cant read a map. No one
    youve ever heard of would risk helping a runaway
    slave.

11
  • Just as you decide to give up your dream of
    freedom, you hear some of the field hands singing
    a song

When the sun goes back and the first quail
callsFollow the drinking gourdThe old man is
a-waitin' forto carry you to freedom.Follow the
drinking gourd.For the old man is a-waitin'to
carry you to freedom.Follow the drinking
gourd. The river bed makes a mighty fine
road,Dead trees to show you the wayAnd it's
left foot, peg foot, traveling on.Follow the
drinking gourd. The river ends between two
hills.Follow the drinking gourdThere's another
river on the other side.Follow the drinking
gourd.
12
  • You look up in the sky and there it is the
    Drinking Gourd!

You begin to learn the song, memorizing the words
and you realize it holds a secret message. A
code telling you how to get north, what to look
for.
13
The Underground Railroad
  • You discover that this song is only one of many
    code songs that were used to help those slaves
    who wanted to make a run for freedom. The trail
    it speaks of is on what is known as the
    Underground Railroad. Not an actual railroad
    with tracks laid on the ground, but a series of
    routes with people to guide you called
    conductors and houses where you can get help
    called stations.

14
Riding the Freedom Train
  • With your family, you pack only the things
    necessary for your journey and you wait for the
    cover of darkness to Steal Away, Steal Away,
    following the North Star, looking for signs along
    the way

15
  • You stumble upon some other runaways who plan to
    join a group led by none other than Harriet
    Tubman, the Moses of her people. She has led
    many others to the promised land always to return
    and lead even more. You know that your chances
    of reaching Canada will be better if you put your
    life in her hands.

16
  • You travel by night and hide during the day
    because bounty hunters lurk everywhere, ready to
    take you back to your former master for the
    reward that has been placed on your head.

17
The Fugitive Slave Bill of 1850 gave slave
owners the right to organize a posse anywhere in
the United States to help return runaway slaves.
Courts and police everywhere were obligated to
assist them. Private citizens had to aid in the
recapture of runaways, too. Furthermore, anyone
caught helping escaping slaves served jail time
and had to pay fines and restitution to the slave
owner.
  • If the bounty hunters capture you whether
    youre in a free state or not they can by law
    take you back for the reward on your head.

18
  • You learn from Miss Harriet that the trail you
    will follow has secret code words and signals,
    that there will be people both black and white
    called abolitionists who will give you a
    place to hide (safe houses) and see you to the
    next stop along the way at the risk of their own
    lives. Many of these people are Quakers whose
    religion opposes slavery and some are runaway
    slaves who now live free.

19
Code Words
20
Underground Quilt Codes
  • There were over ten quilts that the slaves
    learned to use as signals to help them find their
    way. Each one featured its own pattern. One
    quilt would be draped over a fence at a time.
    Back then, it was common practice to air out
    quilts this way so no one would have thought it
    was suspicious. Since slaves couldnt read, the
    patterns would hide a secret message telling them
    what to do next.

21
Coded Quilt Tale
  • The monkey wrench turns the wagon wheel toward
    Canada on a bears paw trail to the crossroads.
    Once you get to the crossroads you dig a log
    cabin on the ground. Shoofly says to dress up in
    cotton and satin bowties and go to the cathedral
    church, get married and exchange double wedding
    rings. Flying geese stay on the drunkards path
    and follow the stars.

22
A Map to Freedom
23
  • You memorize the quilt story, knowing every word
    by heart, knowing your life may depend on
    remembering the meaning of each quilt pattern.

24
Monkey Wrench
  • The monkey wrench pattern was the first quilt
    pattern to be used as a signal for escaping
    slaves. Its message was to gather up your tools
    you will need for the journeyin other words, get
    ready to leave soon.

25
North Star
  • The North Star pattern served as a reminder to
    runaway slaves to keep their eyes on the North
    Star to show them the way to the promised land
    and freedom.

26
Bear Paw
  • The Bear Paw design was a secret message to tell
    them to look for a bears path when they were in
    the mountains so they could find food and water.

27
Flying Geese
  • The points on the triangle shapes, looking like a
    flock of migrating geese, showed what direction
    to follow,.

28
Log Cabin
  • In the early 1800s a log cabin design always
    featured a red square at its center to symbolize
    the hearth or the heart of the home. But those
    who helped escaping slaves began to make their
    log cabin quilts with a black center and display
    them outside as a signal that this home was a
    safe house.  

29
Drunkards Path
  • The Drunkards Path told slaves to make a zigzag
    path, a warning not to take a straight route
    because bounty hunters would be there searching
    for them.

30
Sailboat
  • The Sailboat pattern indicated that they were to
    take a boat across the Great Lakes to Canada.

31
Crossroads
  • This pattern symbolized reaching Cleveland, Ohio,
    where there were several routes slaves could take
    from there to Canada. They knew that Cleveland
    was a point in the journey where their lives
    would be forever changed so they had to be
    willing to continue the trip.

32
Wagon Wheel
  • The Wagon Wheel pattern told runaways to be ready
    to escape in a wagon, hiding under produce.

33
Shoofly
  • The Shoofly quilt indicated a guide who was
    sympathetic to their cause and would help them on
    their way.

34
Tumbling Blocks
  • The Tumbling Blocks design was used to alert
    escaping slaves to pack up and move on.

35
Bowtie
  • Bowtie quilts warned slaves to dress up in a
    disguise or a change of clothing.

36
  • Using the code words and quilt patterns, you
    follow Miss Harriet to station after station
    along the way, staying in safe houses where there
    were hiding places to keep you out of sight when
    bounty hunters were in the area or when neighbors
    stopped by.

37
  • Along the journey, you meet with many kind people
    who feed you and let you stay while you get a
    much needed rest. You must be ready to flee at a
    moments notice and willing to leave behind
    personal items if you must.

38
  • You meet several famous people during your escape.

39
  • You stay in several houses and follow strange
    paths.

40
  • You face many dangers

41
  • but see few warnings on your journey.

42
The Last Leg of the Journey
  • From Cleveland, you travel to Buffalo, New York,
    on the banks of Lake Erie. Canada the promised
    land! is just across Lake Erie. You stay
    overnight on Michigan Avenue, the site of the
    present Michigan Street Baptist Church. The next
    morning, Miss Harriet takes you to Lewiston on
    the Niagara River.

43
  • She leads you to the Lewiston First
    Presbyterian Church where Reverend Josiah Tryon
    has built a hideaway shelter at the top of the
    Niagara Gorge with tunnels that lead down to the
    river. Miss Harriet calls it Tryons Folly.

44
  • The gorge is a scary place so high above the
    roaring river, you get dizzy just looking down at
    the water.

45
  • Late that night with Miss Harriet leading the
    way, you sing and dance and clap your way all the
    way across the Whirlpool Bridge, called by
    runaways the Freedom Crossing. You reach the
    other side and fall to your knees, laughing and
    crying at the same time, joyous in your new-found
    freedom.

46
  • Together, you sing,
  • Free at Last, Free at Last!
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