Saturday, May 5, 2012

Underground Railroad Field Trip!


We took a field trip to Belmont Mansion with our homeschool co-op this week to learn more about the Underground Railroad.  This house first belonged to the Peters family, who purchased the property from William Penn in 1742.  The original owner was a loyalist and so headed back to Britain prior to the war.  His son, a patriot, lived here and eventually became a judge and served as George Washington's Secretary of War.  His son became the president of the Pennsylvania Society for the Abolition of Slavery and was actively involved int eh underground railroad.  Runaway slaves would leave boxcars from a train near the house, hide in the attic and then be taken further along by Quakers. 

 There was a wonderful display of pictures and narrations from former slaves, often in their 90's, telling about daily slave life. 




 It says: "Pennsylvania became the firs stop for enslaved people on the way north to freedom after the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery passed in 1780.  Their helpers, called conductors, made a network of escape routes, called the Underground Railroad, along which runaways hid in houses, barns, caves and churches, called stations.  Most runaways did not stay in Pennsylvania because they risked recapture under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793."


Wonderful moulding from the main drawing room of the house: 






 Monkey wrench, wagon wheel, crossroads and bear claw quilt patterns, part of Harriet Tubman's 13 quilt code. 



 African dolls from that time period.

 It would be a wonderful view of the city if the fog was not there.  As it is, Katy commented that it actually gave us a much more realistic view of what the Peters family would have seen from their lawn. 
 Side views of the house.


I also found some nifty websites to complement our trip, so the day after we looked through these sites and did some creative writing.  

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