The Underground Railroad / Black Conductors of Columbus - Columbus, OH
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Marine Biologist
N 39° 57.740 W 082° 59.880
17S E 329351 N 4425488
A historical marker about the Underground Railroad and the Black Conductors of Columbus is located on the grounds of the Ohio Statehouse on Capitol Square in downtown Columbus, Ohio.
Waymark Code: WMAF96
Location: Ohio, United States
Date Posted: 01/08/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member MrsMcFly
Views: 12

The marker text reads as follows:

Side A: THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
The Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad, but a system of loosely connected safe havens where those escaping the brutal conditions of slavery were sheltered, fed, clothed, nursed, concealed, disguised, and instructed during their journey to freedom. Although this movement was one of America’s greatest social, moral, and humanitarian endeavors, the details about it were often cloaked in secrecy to protect those involved from the retribution of civil law and slave-catchers.

Ohio’s history has been permanently shaped by the thousands of runaway slaves passing through or finding permanent residence in this state.

Side B: BLACK CONDUCTORS OF COLUMBUS
Early legislators did not want slavery In Ohio, nor did they want Blacks to settle here. Declaring people of color a menace, they passed the Black Laws. Outside the Statehouse, Blacks went unnoticed. The turnover of black waiters and porters at the Buckeye House aroused no suspicion. White customers overlooked barbers James Poindexter and Andrew Redmond. No one saw John T. Ward, clerk at Zettler’s. These men were invisible to all but the desperate faces secreted in attics, barns, smokehouses, and in wagons traveling northward at night to Clintonville. Teamsters Louis Washington and his son Thomas were drivers. “The UGRR was actually going on here in Columbus when I came in 1828,” recounted James Poindexter. Conductors David Jenkins, NB Ferguson, and John Bookel were all members of Poindexter’s Antislavery Baptist Church.

In 1842, John T. Ward began assisting Shepherd Alexander to convey runaway slaves through Columbus. William Washington, William Ferguson, Jeremiah Freeland, and others were involved as well. “Some one or the other of us was with Alexander on every trip,” stated Ward.

Address:
Ohio Statehouse Grounds on Capitol Square
Columbus, OH USA
43215


Web site: [Web Link]

Site Details: Available 24/7, free

Open to the public?: Public

Name of organization who placed the marker: OHDOT (Ohio Department of Transportation) and Friends of Freedom Society.

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