No. Too far north.
it would very on how far it was from where the slaves were held to Canada.
no
The distance between safe houses on the Underground Railroad varied significantly, depending on the region and the specific routes taken. Generally, safe houses were located approximately 10 to 20 miles apart, allowing fugitives to travel by night and rest during the day. However, some routes could be longer or shorter, influenced by geography and the availability of sympathetic individuals willing to provide shelter. Overall, the network was designed to facilitate the escape of enslaved individuals while minimizing the risk of capture.
Many underground routes, particularly those associated with the Underground Railroad, extended as far north as Canada. The routes were often designed to help enslaved individuals escape to free states and ultimately to Canada, where slavery was abolished. Some routes reached into northern states like New York, Ohio, and Michigan, but the ultimate goal for many was to cross the border into Canada for safety and freedom.
No. Too far north.
it would very on how far it was from where the slaves were held to Canada.
The railroad went from coast to coast, so they could go 2,500 miles by rail.
The underground railroad couldn't have a length, as it was not a physical structure, but a system of people and "stations" that was used in the mid 1800's to transport slaves to the north (as far as Canada after 1851) .
no
The distance between safe houses on the Underground Railroad varied significantly, depending on the region and the specific routes taken. Generally, safe houses were located approximately 10 to 20 miles apart, allowing fugitives to travel by night and rest during the day. However, some routes could be longer or shorter, influenced by geography and the availability of sympathetic individuals willing to provide shelter. Overall, the network was designed to facilitate the escape of enslaved individuals while minimizing the risk of capture.
You can't. The London Underground and London Buses only go as far as the suburbs.
The Underground Railroad wasn't an actual railroad. It was an organization of runaway slaves in America during the Civil War that helped to free other slaves from the South by bringing them North or even as far as Canada using a system of safe-houses where the runaways could rest along the way.
420km
In a day it could travel 150 miles
Enslaved African-Americans escaped to freedom on the Underground Railroad by following a network of secret routes and safe houses. They were often aided by free African Americans, sympathetic white abolitionists, and conductors who helped them travel north to free states or Canada. The network relied on secrecy and code language to evade capture and reach safety.
Far Rockaway Branch Railroad was created in 1868.