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Canadian Geographic|Best of Canadian Geographic, 2019
Exploring the historic links to the Underground Railroad and Canadian black history in Chatham-Kent, Ont.
Heather Greenwood Davis
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WHEN THE AMERICAN Fugitive Slave Act passed in 1850, slaves caught anywhere in the United States could be returned to their owners. Their only hope of escaping the brutal system was to head north to Canada, where the slave trade was abolished in 1807. For many, the area of choice was southwestern Ontario’s municipality of Chatham-Kent, a stopping point on the Underground Railroad — a secret network of safe houses that brought 30,000 to 40,000 fugitive slaves to Canada. Chatham-Kent’s location on Lake Erie was just far enough from the border to deter slave catchers from kidnapping these escapees and returning them to captivity. And once they came, they stayed.

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Denne historien er fra Best of Canadian Geographic, 2019-utgaven av Canadian Geographic.

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Canadian Geographic

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Canadian Geographic

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Canadian Geographic

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