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... :) White people
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.
to Canada or some where slavery wasn't
Im pretty sure you can visit some places that still has tunnnels or underground houses that was apart of the underground railroad.
Many people did! Many people did help with the Under Ground Railroad but one of the main person was Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman was a courageous "conductor" on the Under ground railroad. The Underground railroad was a organization was not an actual railroad but was a network of people who arranged transportation and hiding places for fugitives, or escaped slaves.
... :) White people
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.
Important people involved in the underground railroad were, Harriet Tubman, and Henry "box" Brown. those are some important people involved.
Not really but, some people did help the underground railroad but were very secritive about it because it was illegal.
to Canada or some where slavery wasn't
The Secret of the Underground Railroad, The Secret Railroad, Railroad Power, The Secret Network for Slaves, Slavery Secret.
Im pretty sure you can visit some places that still has tunnnels or underground houses that was apart of the underground railroad.
Many people did! Many people did help with the Under Ground Railroad but one of the main person was Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman was a courageous "conductor" on the Under ground railroad. The Underground railroad was a organization was not an actual railroad but was a network of people who arranged transportation and hiding places for fugitives, or escaped slaves.
traveling conditions
secretive,
The number of people involved in the Underground Railroad is a subject of some historical debate, but it is believed that over 100,000 slaves escaped via the Railroad, traveling through dozens of "stations" leading to the north. The locations of many stations and the identity of many people involved of the Underground Railroad were never discovered and have been lost to history.
There were people on the Underground Railroad that helped the slaves run away. Some of these people were Quakers, others weren't. They were called lots of things, from abolitionists to "conductors."