No, because if they did do you think the slaves would escape at all, yeah that's what I thought!
Yes they did and that is why it was so amazingly secrative. Yes because some of the whites helped the slaves get to freedom by using the Underground Railroad.
The Underground Railroad was not an actual railroad, but a series of "safe houses" that escaped slaves would travel along the way to the North or Canada. Houses that were part of the underground railroad were often marked by a quilt or lanterns, that only railroad guides, or "conductors", would know.
She did not choose to be a slave she was kidnapped and did not know where she was
if the slaves seen a lantern on a hitching post in front of a house or a quilt in the window they new they were safe.
The Underground Railroad was a series of free blacks and Northerners who were against slavery that would guide slaves up to the North to Freedom. It wasn't an actual railroad, but at times it went underground to hide slaves. It was coined "Underground Railroad" so slave masters wouldn't know what it really was, and it was almost like a railroad. The main people who came directly to the slaves and guided them along the "Railroad" were coined "conductors". One very famous conductor is Harriet Tubman, also nicknamed "Black Moses".
It was an underground escape rout that helped slaves escape from their owners.
she escaped slaves (i don't know how many times) and she is the cunductor of the underground railroad
Yes in fact neighbors and other non salves were a big part of transportation. With out them the railroad wouldn't have worked.
The Northern States and Canada, but I don't know what the Northern States are though!
I'd expect that most people would know this, but it is the Underground Railroad.
By trains. I think so anyway; the slaves may even walk bare foot. Go to Wikipedia.com/underground railroad, 'Cause I don't know for sure. THANKS =)
There was no literal "underground railroad". The name was a nickname for a program that freed slaves. They avoided getting lost by having people at one house they arrived at tell them where to go next if they didn't know. The houses where slaves were helped would have a light or candle in a window at night so they could find safe houses to go to.