There is no possible way to tell, because the railroad was secret. Many houses began and stopped aiding slaves during the railroad times, so the number frequently changed. Hundreds of buildings, caves, ditches, backyards and basements were hiding places, and owners of the places rarely kept a record for fear of getting busted.
The underground railroad were a series of underground passages that led to "safe houses" for the slaves. The slaves could stop at these houses for food and rest without fear of being turned in. The passages, or underground railroad, led to states where slavery was illegal and therefore they gained their freedom.
no
The underground railroad was named for the slaves' method of escape to freedom. "Underground" means the movement was secret and intentionally took place below the awareness of public officials and most members of society. The "railroad" designation took its name from the code for safe houses, which were called "stations" or "depots," and the participating abolitionists, who were called "station masters." In many respects, the underground railroad resembled a real railroad operation in that there were fixed routes, conductors, stations or depots, and a final destination. The underground railroad was the support network for slaves' freedom train.
{| |- | The Underground Railroad is the name given the system of moving slaves out of the South. Through a system of 'safe houses' slaves could work their way to freedom in Canada. Many people risked criminal charges to assist them, opening their homes to the travellers. |}
over 300 slaves were saved in the underground railroad, by harriet tubman.
no slaves rode the underground railroad, as there was not actually a train underground taking them to safety. people would walk on a series of safe houses to the north
The underground railroad were a series of underground passages that led to "safe houses" for the slaves. The slaves could stop at these houses for food and rest without fear of being turned in. The passages, or underground railroad, led to states where slavery was illegal and therefore they gained their freedom.
Harriet Tubman played a major role in the freedom for many slave's. The underground railroad was a secret route leading to safe houses that helped the slaves seek freedom.
No way to know. Historians are still finding places that were stops.
There were many safe houses for the salves to hide on the Underground Railroad. Helpers would have special homes that the slaves would sleep in for a short time, even hours, and then they would go on to the next.
about how many slaves used the underground railroad, which was about 100,000.
It is an estimate that 3,000 people worked on the underground railroad.
The Underground railroad helped many slaves to freedom.
no
The underground railroad was named for the slaves' method of escape to freedom. "Underground" means the movement was secret and intentionally took place below the awareness of public officials and most members of society. The "railroad" designation took its name from the code for safe houses, which were called "stations" or "depots," and the participating abolitionists, who were called "station masters." In many respects, the underground railroad resembled a real railroad operation in that there were fixed routes, conductors, stations or depots, and a final destination. The underground railroad was the support network for slaves' freedom train.
{| |- | The Underground Railroad is the name given the system of moving slaves out of the South. Through a system of 'safe houses' slaves could work their way to freedom in Canada. Many people risked criminal charges to assist them, opening their homes to the travellers. |}
over 300 slaves were saved in the underground railroad, by harriet tubman.