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Railroad of Courage
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RAILROAD OF COURAGE
Railroad
of Courage
Dan Rubenstein &
Nancy Dyson
RONSDALE PRESS
RAILROAD OF COURAGE
Copyright © 2017 Dan Rubenstein & Nancy Dyson
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without prior written permission of the publisher, or, in Canada, in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright (the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency).
RONSDALE PRESS
3350 West 21st Avenue, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6S 1G7
www.ronsdalepress.com
Typesetting: Julie Cochrane, in Minion 12 pt on 16
Cover Art & Design: Nancy de Brouwer, Massive Graphic Design
Paper: 55 lb. Enviro Book Antique Natural (FSC) 100% post-consumer waste, totally chlorine-free and acid-free
Ronsdale Press wishes to thank the following for their support of its publishing program: the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada, the British Columbia Arts Council, and the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Book Publishing Tax Credit program.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Rubenstein, Daniel Blake, author
Railroad of courage / Dan Rubenstein & Nancy Dyson.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-55380-514-4 (softcover)
ISBN 978-1-55380-515-1 (ebook) / ISBN 978-1-55380-516-8 (pdf)
1. Underground Railroad—Juvenile fiction. 2. Slaves—Juvenile fiction. I. Rubenstein, Nancy, author II. Title.
PS8635.U2953R35 2017jC813’.6C2017-903887-7C2017-903888-5
At Ronsdale Press we are committed to protecting the environment. To this end we are working with Canopy and printers to phase out our use of paper produced from ancient forests. This book is one step towards that goal.
Printed in Canada by Marquis Printing, Quebec
This book is dedicated
to those individuals, black and white,
who formed the Underground Railroad,
a work of moral imagination driven
by the courage of the runaways
Table of Contents
CHAPTER ONE: Deciding
CHAPTER TWO: Stepping into the River
CHAPTER THREE: The Bayou of Death
CHAPTER FOUR: My Uncle Josiah
CHAPTER FIVE: The Zigzag Route
CHAPTER SIX: Travelling as the Dead
CHAPTER SEVEN: Delilah
CHAPTER EIGHT: The Steamboat
CHAPTER NINE: Disaster on Board
CHAPTER TEN: Saving an Enemy
CHAPTER ELEVEN: Underground Ferry to Freedom
CHAPTER TWELVE: The Handcars
CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Delayed
CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Waiting in Chicago
CHAPTER FIFTEEN: Learning to Read
CHAPTER SIXTEEN: The New York Central Railroad
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: The Secret Passage
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: Dawn in Canada
LATER EVENTS IN THE FIGHT FOR EQUALITY
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
CHAPTER ONE
Deciding
My name is Rebecca and I was born into slavery in the spring of 1842 on a cotton plantation near Rock Hill, South Carolina. When I was twelve years old, I ran away with my ma Deborah and my pa Obadiah. The owner of the plantation, Grower Brown, was a hard man and all of us slaves were afraid of him. I worked in the kitchen while my pa and my ma worked in the fields. I have since travelled far from that life.
Grower Brown had a son named Master Jeff who was just as mean as his father, but his daughter, Miss Clarissa, was kind to me. Miss Clarissa and I, we were the same age so when Miss Clarissa’s ma died giving birth to her, my ma was brought into the house to nurse her. We were like sisters but she was free and I was not.
As we grew up, we had to be careful around Miss Clarissa’s father and brother. When they saw us playing together, they threatened to whip me and send me into the fields to work. Working the cotton was a hard job, and I was not very strong. Once, when Grower Brown said he would whip me, Miss Clarissa stood in front of me and told her father he would have to whip her, too. Grower Brown stared at his daughter, then cursed and sent me to work in the fields for the rest of the day. But he didn’t whip me, thanks to Miss Clarissa, and the next day I was back working in the kitchen.
Grower Brown and Master Jeff both had terrible tempers, and they were cruel to the other slaves. Miss Clarissa told me that she would never let them hurt me, no matter how much they threatened, and I believed her, but I wondered whether she was strong enough to stand up to them. Miss Clarissa was my friend and I miss her. I hope someday we will be friends again, in a different world.
One day Grower Brown called a meeting of all the plantation owners in the county. I passed food and drink to the men gathered on the veranda. As they drank whiskey and ate fried chicken, they talked about the problem of runaway slaves. Every few weeks, slaves ran away from Grower Brown’s plantation and other plantations. Most of them were caught. The others disappeared and we never knew what happened to them. My pa said it was foolish to run away, foolish and dangerous.
Master Jeff stood on a chair and spoke in a loud voice, “My father and I have called you here because we have a problem. Every month we lose slaves from our plantations. When those runaways reach northern towns, they walk the streets and act as if they are free men. But they are not free men; they belong to us. They’re our property, just like our pigs and horses. The Founding Fathers of the United States of America protected our right to own slaves. North of the Mason–Dixon Line, the federal marshals should be arresting runaways and returning them to us. That’s the law. But we know that the marshals are not catching them. What’s worse is that some white people in the free states of the North take runaways into their homes, feed them, hide them and smuggle them into Canada. The law says those abolitionists should be fined, but the federal government does nothing so we’ve got to do something!”
Grower Brown looked proudly at his son as the growers raised their glasses and shouted, “Amen, Jeff. Amen.” Standing on that chair, Master Jeff stood taller than all the other growers, but Miss Clarissa stood in a corner, looking ashamed of her father and brother. She looked down at the floor as I moved among the growers, passing the fried chicken, filling their glasses with whiskey.
Master Jeff nodded to his father and continued, “Our runaway slaves are not being arrested because the abolitionists, those slave lovers, are pressuring the government to ignore the Fugitive Slave Act. But there is an answer—the Knights of the Golden Circle. Only the Knights are defending our right to own slaves, not only in the South but in Border States like Illinois and Ohio. They need our help; they need our money. They plan to form a secret army in the North, and when that army is organized, it will return our runaway slaves to us. To support that army, I ask you to join my father and me in forming a castle, a local branch of the Knights, right here in our county.”
For the second time, the growers cheered Master Jeff’s speech. They slapped him on the back and shouted, “You’re right, Jeff. We own our slaves and runaways should be returned to us.” They threw money into a big wide-brimmed hat that Master Jeff passed from man to man. They asked Master Jeff to be the leader of the castle and he was quick to agree. He promised them that he would go to Cincinnati to meet with the leader of the Knights, a man named George W. Bickley, and he would give him the money they had raised.
After the growers left, I cleared the platters and washed the cups and
dishes in the kitchen. Ada, the cook, packed up the leftover food. Miss Clarissa came in and stood beside me. She asked, “Rebecca, you know I don’t like it when my father and brother whip slaves. I don’t see any need to be so cruel. But I can’t imagine this plantation without slaves to work the fields, can you? Can you imagine being free, Rebecca?”
I didn’t know how to answer; I didn’t know my own mind then. My pa and my ma were slaves, I was born into slavery and I thought my children would be slaves, too. I believed it was the way it had to be. But then I thought about Grower Brown’s cruelty. He whipped slaves and worked them so hard that they fell to the ground. I wanted to believe there was a place where that would not happen. I kept drying the dishes and putting them away, but my mind was busy thinking about a world without slavery.
That night I told my ma and pa what I had heard at the meeting. I asked them, “Why aren’t runaways free, even in the North?”
My pa looked sad. He said, “In the northern states, a white man cannot buy, sell or own slaves, but runaways can be captured and sent back to their owners. It’s only if runaways get as far as Canada that they can’t be returned to their owners. But Canada is a long way north.”
“Master Jeff said white people in the North help runaways,” I said. “He said abolitionists hide runaways, feed them and smuggle them into Canada.”
My pa shook his head. “Rebecca, I have never met a white man I could trust. It’s hard for me to believe white people will help runaways if it might bring trouble to them. I’ve heard they can be fined or put in jail if they help runaway slaves.”
That night as I went to bed, my pa said, “We’re lucky to be together as a family. For some slaves, freedom is something they hunger for, but not me. I never want to be a runaway. Running is too dangerous.”
My ma agreed. “Yes, we’re lucky to be together. Your father and I get to watch you grow up, Rebecca, and I hope someday you’ll help Miss Clarissa raise her children.” My pa wrapped his arms around her.
As I fell asleep, I thought about Moses, a black woman who led runaways to freedom in Canada. People called her Moses because in the book of Exodus in the Bible, it was Moses who led his people out of Egypt to the Promised Land. Moses came to Grower Brown’s plantation from time to time. If she came again, would any slaves follow her?
A few days later, I was stirring a pot of corn mush on the stove when Miss Clarissa came into the kitchen. Her eyes were red from crying, but when I asked her what was wrong, she said she couldn’t tell me. I asked, “Why not?” She shook her head and I knew then that something bad was going to happen, and I figured it was going to happen to me or my family.
I begged her to tell me what was wrong and finally she broke down. “My pa is going to sell your father Obadiah down the river. A grower in the Mississippi Delta needs slaves to work on his rice plantation and he’s offering a good price.”
Miss Clarissa started to cry and soon I was crying, too. I wanted to run into the fields right away to tell my pa and ma what my friend had told me, but I had to stay in the kitchen and keep working. I had to wait for them to come in from the fields.
That night I told my parents what Miss Clarissa had said. My pa and ma were quiet, as if they didn’t have the breath to speak. My pa sat on a stool, his back bent, his head in his hands. My ma stood by him and there was a long silence.
“Obadiah,” my ma said, “what do you think we should do? Do you think we should run away?”
He shook his head. “No, I remember Old Foss. He ran away but Grower Brown found him and brought him back. Foss had been whipped so hard, he might as well have been dead. In the end, Grower Brown sold him down the river but I doubt Old Foss lived to see the plantation he was headed for.”
My ma asked, “But what else can we do? If we don’t run away, Rebecca and I will never see you again. Maybe we’ll have to go with Moses, all of us. Maybe there’s no other way.”
My pa sat in silence for a long time. My ma put a hand on his shoulder and waited for him to speak. Finally he said, “No, it’s too dangerous to run away. Master Jeff said there are people in the North who will help runaways, but in the South, we know that runaways are caught and whipped. You can’t reach the North without passing through the South. I will go to the Mississippi Delta while you two stay here. Maybe someday I can make my way back.” My pa lowered his head and covered his face with his hands. Tears flowed through his calloused fingers.
Never before had I seen my pa so troubled. Something in the way he looked made me speak and I heard a voice that was not my own. “Pa, if you let Grower Brown sell you down the river, you will be dead to me. I will run away from here, even if you won’t.”
My pa looked startled. “What are you saying, child?”
“If you let yourself be sold down the river, I will go with Moses. I will not stay here. There will be no life for me on this plantation.” I was surprised by the sound of my own voice. Where did those harsh words come from?
My ma looked at me with worried eyes. I waited for her to speak but she just stared at me for a long time. Then, shaking her head, she smiled. She knew my pa well. He often said he would walk on burning coals for me. Would he become a runaway?
My pa stood up and hugged me. “Rebecca, when you came out of your mother’s womb, I never knew what a force of nature had been born. Maybe the Lord is speaking through the mouth of a child, an innocent child, and telling me what I need to do.”
He walked to the window and looked out. “You know I won’t let you go north alone, Rebecca. No, I won’t do that. My pa and his pa before him were slaves, but maybe we’re finished being slaves. Maybe we can make it to Canada; maybe we can make it to freedom.”
My ma said, “So it’s decided. We’ll go with Moses.”
CHAPTER TWO
Stepping into the River
Now we had to wait until Moses made her way to Grower Brown’s. There was no telling when she would come but we knew what would happen when she did. One night there would be a knock on the door and there Moses would be. She would go from shack to shack, telling the slaves that they could follow her to freedom. She was a small woman, not much taller than me, but she was fearless, and there were always slaves who believed in her and followed her.
Moses would say, “Who’s coming on the train to freedom? Who’s riding the Underground Railroad?”
This time, when Moses asked, my pa, my ma and I would answer, “We are. We want to ride the train from slavery to freedom, from midnight to dawn.”
Night after night, we waited for the knock on the door. We put out the word among other slaves that our family wanted to ride the Underground Railroad. There was a grapevine where word was passed from slave to slave, from plantation to plantation. We knew we could trust the grapevine; slaves would never tell growers who was planning to run away. We prayed. We prayed day and night that Moses would come before my pa was sent down the river. We waited and waited yet Moses did not come.
Even so, our prayers must have reached heaven because the agent who was going to ship my pa to Mississippi got sick. He sent word to Grower Brown that he couldn’t travel for some weeks.
We kept praying. Then one night, there was a knock on our door. It was Moses! She said, “I heard you’re ready to ride the Underground Railroad. It’s best for me to keep moving so we’ll leave tonight.” Moses was a tiny woman but she stood as though she were ten feet tall, strong and proud, with a revolver tucked in her belt.
Moses told us to pack cornbread in a calico bag and to wrap blankets around our shoulders. We left the shack quietly and followed Moses into the darkness. Grower Brown’s dogs were barking in the pen. The dogs were mean and the barking sent shivers down my spine. When we looked back at the big house, we could see by the light on the table that Grower Brown was sitting on the veranda drinking whiskey. We hoped that it would be morning before he learned that we had run away. We crawled through the grass until the ground became soft and muddy, and we knew we’d reached the swamp. Then
we followed Moses into the murky water and walked through the swamp to reach the river.
There were snakes in the swamp and I was scared. Part of me wanted to run out of there, back to our shack, but a bigger part of me never wanted to go back. My pa reached out and took my hand. We were on the Underground Railroad, we had put our faith in Moses, and we had no choice but to follow her.
Soon I heard the gentle current of the river, the water gurgling over the rocks. Moses stepped into the river and reached back to help me. We stepped deeper and deeper into the water.
Moses whispered, “We’ve got to wade in the water or the dogs will get our scent.” It was hard going. Although the current was weak, the rocks under our feet were slippery. Sometimes I fell but my pa lifted me up.
After we’d walked in the river for some time, I leaned into my ma and said, “I can’t keep going. I need to rest.” I had been a house slave and my legs weren’t strong.
Ma said, “Moses and I worked in the fields, so we’re almost as strong as a man. You were a house slave—why, I thought that was a good thing, but tonight I wish you had worked in the fields. You have to keep walking, Rebecca.”
I knew my ma was right. We walked and walked until the sun came up. Moses stopped and pointed to the north. “There’s an island there where we can hide and the dogs can’t follow us. We can rest in a big hollowed-out tree, but before we sleep, we have to build a raft.” We looked at her, puzzled. She said, “The water runs deep on the other side of the island. If Grower Brown follows us there, we’ll need a raft to get away.”
Moses smiled. “I don’t leave anything to chance. What if we woke up and the growers and their dogs were on the riverbank? We’d be trapped out there. That’s why we’re going to build a raft out of deadfall trees and leave it on the other side of the island, out of sight. Then we can climb onto that raft and get away if need be.”