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July 28, 2005
The Underground Railroad
in the New York Hudson Valley
WE KNOW the Hudson Valley was one of the main arteries of the Underground Railroad. We know that large numbers of fugitives were sent from Philadelphia to New York City, and up through the valley to Albany and Troy. Between 1842 and 1843—fugitives—virtually all, probably, from New York City. Most of them were sent onward to Central New York, Vermont, or Massachusetts.
But there is almost no record of how they traveled. Compared to other areas—for example, Central New York State, southern Pennsylvania, the Ohio River Valley, Detroit—the absence of records is deeply puzzling.
How did they travel? What routes did they follow? And who helped them?
Before we get to the answer, I want to go back in time somewhat. New York was once home to the largest number of slaves of any state in the North—more than Georgia, until the late 18th century. The heaviest concentration of them was on plantations in the Hudson Valley, many owned by the prominent Livingston family. At times, slaves had made up as much as 10% of the population. Slavery was cruel here as it was anywhere in the South. Slaves were branded with irons, and notched in the ears, like cattle. Sometimes they were punished with castration.
In the early 19th century, there were about 2,000 slaves in Dutchess County—in some areas of the county, one-third of the population was enslaved.
Support for slavery—or at least tolerance for it—persisted in the valley's staunch antebellum Democratic Party politics. Especially in the plantation country along the east shore of the river, the atmosphere was, frankly, intensely hostile to abolitionism.
In 1833 and 1834, agents for the newly-formed American Anti-Slavery Society swarmed through the state, setting up hundreds of local branches, and recruiting many thousands of members. They were less successful in the Hudson Valley than in any other part of the state. Apart from the Quaker strongholds of Poughkeepsie and Hudson, they recruited almost no one. In 1839, an agent assigned to the mid-Hudson was mobbed and driven out of Newburgh. The same year, a Liberty Party ticket received only 29 votes in Dutchess County—compared to 438 votes in Madison County, near Syracuse, which was a hotbed of abolitionist activity.
And in 1840, Samuel Ringgold Ward of Poughkeepsie—the state abolition society's first black lecturer—was prevented from speaking anywhere. No churches or public buildings were opened to him. And the wheels were even stolen from his wagon.
In 1846, in a referendum on black suffrage, the vote in the valley against allowing blacks to vote was overwhelming: 92% in Columbia County, 96% in Westchester and Ulster, and almost 98% in Putnam.
The land route
So let's come back to the question I began with. We know fugitives traveled through the valley in big numbers. But how did they do it?
In the early decades of the century, fugitives were assisted by the tacit alliance that formed the nucleus of the underground in many parts of the county: Quakers and free blacks.
But: Bear in mind that in this early period many of the fugitives handled by the underground were not coming from the South, but fleeing from slavery right here in New York State, or from New Jersey, or Connecticut.
The main route—as best as I have been able to determine it—ran more or less due north through a chain of Quaker communities that extended from New York City to Vermont. Families and meetings were intertwined. Quakers could travel from New York to Burlington without ever sleeping beneath a non-Quaker's roof. So could fugitives.
In the 1830s, fugitives were dispatched northward by underground men like David Ruggles and Isaac T. Hopper. Ruggles—who had connections in Poughkeepsie—was the founder of the New York City Vigilance Committee, the first black-operated underground unit in the country. Hopper was, in a sense, the “father of the Underground Railroad.” He began doing underground work in Philadelphia as early as the 1790s.
Fugitives dispatched from the city found protection at three Quaker-owned mills, and possibly at the Colored Peoples Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, in New Rochelle, and among Quakers in Mamaroneck and Scarsdale.
The route continued north to the homes of Joseph Pierce at Pleasantville, and John Jay Jr. at Bedford, in northern Westchester. The Jay family included some of the most important, if underappreciated heroes of the abolitionist movement. His grandfather, also named John Jay, the first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, was a founder of the New York Manumission Society (though a slave owner himself). His father, Judge William Jay, was one of the most prolific pamphleteers of the abolitionist movement. His son, William Jay Jr., reportedly forwarded fugitives out of New York City while he was a student at Columbia University. (I'll come back to the Jays later.)
Fugitives probably also found refuge, or at least assistance, in an African-American settlement known as “The Hills,” near the town of Harrison.
From northern Westchester, fugitives continued on through Brewster, in Putnam County, and into Dutchess County to the Quaker stronghold known as Quaker Hill, near Pawling. Many, if not most, found shelter at the home of a Quaker farmer named David Irish.
Dutchess County had the largest concentration of Quakers outside Philadelphia. The eastern portion of the county was densely settled with Quakers. The Oblong Meeting of Quaker Hill was was the first in the country—in 1769—to free slaves as an official action of the body.
North of Quaker Hill, fugitives could count on protection from Quakers belonging to the Oswego Meeting, to the northwest. Some were sheltered at Susan Moore's Floral Hill boarding house, a few miles from the Meeting, at Moore's Mills.
About twenty miles north of Quaker Hill stood the most important single abolitionist institution in the valley—and one of the most important in the country: the Nine Partners School, just east of present-day Millbrook.
This Quaker school may, in fact, have served as a sort of command center for the underground in the entire region. As early as the 1810's, students were required to memorize a lengthy anti-slavery catechism that described slavery as a “dreadful evil.” Ending slavery, it went on, was “a great revolution,” a “noble purpose” for which men and women had been created by their Heavenly Father.
The school had a profound influence on students who went on to shape the entire abolitionist movement—and other great reform movements. They included abolitionist and women's rights advocate Lucretia Coffin and her future husband James Mott, also a prominent abolitionist. And Daniel Anthony, later a stationmaster on the Underground Railroad, and the father of Susan B. Anthony.
The school's headmaster Jacob Willetts—he was author of the most popular textbooks of the day—personally sheltered fugitives at his home just down the road from the school. So did several of his Quaker neighbors.
Some fugitives may have been sent west to Poughkeepsie, where there was a strong abolitionist community. Underground activity in the city has not yet been documented. But fugitives may very well have been assisted by members of the Congregational church, which sponsored a first-rate school for African-Americans as early as the mid-1830s. (David Ruggles probably taught there, along with Samuel Ringgold Ward.)
But the main land route continued due north. The best evidence I've seen for what route they may have followed is in a letter written by Roland Robinson, the owner of Rokeby, the wonderful museum and underground site just south of Burlington, Vermont. Robinson was a close friend of Isaac T. Hopper and other hard-core Quaker abolitionists. His home was, in effect, a northern terminus of the Underground Railroad. Robinson was describing the route he followed in Columbia and Dutchess counties in the course of a trip to New York City. His stops included meetings at Nine Partners, Pleasant Valley, Poughkeepsie, and Crum Elbow, near Hyde Park, all in Dutchess County; and Claverack, Hudson, Ghent, and Chatham, in Columbia County; and then Troy. I think this is certainly the route by which fugitives were sent.
Incidentally, there is a remarkable archaeological project underway near the old Crum Elbow meeting, in Hyde Park, at the site of a black hamlet known in the nineteenth century as the Guinea Settlement. (It was abandoned in the 1870s, and the site lost until recently.) The settlement was populated mainly by former slaves who had worked on the great river plantations. But archaeologists and researchers—Chris Lindner of Bard College, and Susan Hinkle—have identified by name three fugitive slaves who lived there. The community was more or less under the protection of the Quaker Crum Elbow meeting, some of whose members lived there. It's the best example I know of the intimate interaction between Quakers and blacks in the valley, and the best proof so far that communities like this were integral parts of the Underground Railroad.
The most important underground center in Columbia County was Hudson. In the early nineteenth century, two-thirds of the families in the city were Quakers—and the rest were said to be “half-Quakers.” A contemporary described it as “a city of bustling warehouses, wharves, and docks, ropewalks, and industry,” with a population of about 5,000. The meeting house is still there...
Until his death in 1843, the pivotal underground figure in Hudson was a man named Charles Marriott. He was an English-born Quaker and gentleman farmer. Marriott is another one of the great forgotten figures of the underground. His home is still standing, after a fashion...
Marriott was a key link in the whle web of underground activity in eastern New York. He was in constant touch with fellow antislavery Quakers in Vermont, Rhode Island, Rochester, and New York City. He was an intimate collaborator with Isaac Hopper, in New York City, and with Roland Robinson, the proprietor of Rokeby, near Burlington, Vermont. (He also kept a home in New York City, on Mott St., in present-day Chinatown: the site now houses a Chinese hair salon, and herbal medicine store.)
In his letters, Marriott eloquently expressed the moral radicalism of the underground. He wrote, for example, in 1835, “Friends [i.e. fellow Quakers] generally seem to deplore the present excitement. For my share, I hope it will never subside until slavery be abolished.” He was also one of the few underground men who left documentary proof of what they were doing. In a letter at Rokeby, he wrote matter-of-factly, in 1838, “Many fugitives from the South effect their escape. 3 passed through my hands last week.”
So far, I've been talking about the Quaker route up the eastern edge of the valley. There is also evidence that a west-to-east land route also crossed the valley from Port Jervis, on the Delaware River, to Newburgh, on the Hudson. This was, apparently, one of several alternate routes available to the Philadelphia underground. The best source for this route is Roger King's small book “The Silent Rebellion: The UGRR in Orange County". King ferretted out old news stories and memoirs chronicling the passage of fugitives through the towns of Chester and Goshen to Newburgh. In Newburgh, they were often received by an African-American family named the Alsdorfs. King also suggests the existence some kind of route up the western shore of the river from New Jersey.
There is also some evidence that fugitives were sometimes rowed across the Hudson from Newburgh to the vicinity of Beacon, and led from there across Dutchess County to the Quaker enclave at Quaker Hill. Some fugitives may also have found refuge in the African-American hamlet of Baxtertown, near Beacon. Baxtertown's site has been lost. But, like the Guinea Settlement, it is only waiting to be rediscovered.
River travel
After the 1830s, something odd happens. There is almost no mention of fugitives at all in the valley. What's going on?
The answer, I think, has to do with something that happened in the valley in the year 1807, that had nothing whatever to do with slavery...the first successful steamboat, Robert Fulton's “Clermont.”
After that, the Hudson rapidly became the great Interstate Highway of its day. Between 1826 and the Civil War, travel time between New York City and Albany dropped from 15 hours to just 7 hours. Sending fugitives by river was both cheap and fast. Traveling from New York to Albany by land might take ten days or two weeks, and require a massive commitment of escorts, wagons, shelter—and money.
Rev. Charles B. Ray, a central figure in the New York City underground explained how they did it: “New York was a kind of receiving depot, whence we forwarded to Albany, Troy, sometimes to New Bedford and Boston, and occasionally we dropped a few on Long Island. When we had parties to forward from here, we would alternate in sending between Albany and Troy, and when we had a large party, we would divide between the two cities.”
On one occasion, Ray had a party of twenty-eight people on his hands, ranging from a grandmother to a child of five years. Ray recalled, “I secured passage for them in a barge, and Mr. Wright and myself spent the day in providing food, and personally saw them on the barge. I then took the regular passenger boat [at the] foot of Cortlandt St., and started. Arriving in the morning, I reported to the committee at Albany and then returned to Troy, and gave Brother Garnet notice, and he and I spent the day in visiting friends of the cause there, to raise money to help the party through to Toronto.”
With luck, a fugitive could expect to be in Canada less than a week after stepping on board a steamboat in Manhattan.
Charles Ray makes it clear that it was commonplace to put fugitives on barges. Travelers also had a choice of about 20 regularly scheduled steamboats, not to mention hundreds of cargo sloops and steamers, scows, and canal boats that were towed in long chains from the city up to the Erie Canal. In mid-century, on any given day, as many as 500 ships were traveling on the river, many of them crewed or captained by African Americans.
Some fugitives may have traveled on so-called “Abolition boats” such as the People's Line owned by committed abolitionists, who carried fugitives on regular trips. Among these may well have been the family of Samuel Schuyler, a former Albany slave who had bought his freedom, and founded a prosperous tow-boat business that was carried on throughout the antebellum period by his sons.
Black stewards also served on the steamships that plied the Hudson between NYC and Albany. One of them was Steven Myers, a leader of the Albany underground. Myers worked as a steward on the Armenia, which sailed between Albany and New York. Considering that he was the head of the underground in Albany, it's almost inconceivable that he didn't escort fugitives as a regular thing. (Steamboats were incredibly dangerous: they blew up, burned, and hit snags and sank all the time. In July 1852, the Armenia was beaten by the Henry Clay in the most famous race ever on the river—famous because, near Yonkers, the Henry Clay caught fire and became a floating inferno, killing eighty on board, including Nathaniel Hawthorne's sister.) Fortunately Myers lived on to serve the underground until the Civil War.
The image of fugitive slaves sneaking northward in the dead of night has a terrific iconic power. But in much of the North this was a myth. By the 1850s—and in spite of the Fugitive Slave Law—more and more of the underground's work took place completely in the open. In June 1852, the warden of Sing Sing penitentiary, in Westchester, released one day early a prisoner, a fugitive who had served two years for the theft of a boat—to keep him from falling into the hands of the U.S. Commissioner, who intended to hand him over to his former master. And when local Democrats complained to one Northern sheriff about the number of fugitive slaves who were passing openly through the county, he replied: “Let ‘ em!"
The underground always embraced new technology. Just as steamboats replaced the old land route, the underground literally took to the rails wherever it could. The opening of the railroad up the eastern shore of the river in 1851 cut travel time in half. In the 1850s, the Philadelphia Anti-Slavery office gave fugitives train fare for travel from New York City north. In January 1855, Harriet Tubman simply took three of her brothers, and several other companions she had led all the way from Maryland, to Grand Central Station and bought them tickets for Albany.
Conclusion
Although the land route was largely superseded, it apparently was never abandoned. Earlier I mentioned the Jay family.
William Jay Jr., the great-grandson of John Jay was deeply active in the underground. He was also a close friend of Stephen Myers, the head of the underground here in Albany. He was apparently also one of the underground's main financial supports.
The curator of the Jay home recently shared with me a remarkable letter.
In August 1860, Stephen Myers's Harriet wrote to William Jay Jr. from Albany (Stephen was working at the time as a butler at Lake George): “The two fugitives arrived here that you sent, and I sent them immediately on their route for Canada... I have to attend to the fugitives myself. I was very thankful that you gave some aid, for it was on Saturday they came, and it would have been difficult to get money to send them on that day.” She went on to thank him profusely “for all the favors you have done for the downtrodden that come to this office.”
The relationship was so close that the Myerses named one of their grandchildren after him: William John Jay Myers. It is a signpost to the kind of remarkable relationships that the Underground Railroad inspired across racial and class lines. It was of course, just one of many—and an indication of the social and moral radicalism that the underground embodied.
It's a fitting place for me to end. —Fergus M. Bordewich
Posted by Fergus at July 28, 2005 10:21 PM
Comments
I have been doing research on the religious tract societies of the nineteenth century, especially the New York City societies who saw themselves as moral guardians. I came across a wonderful pamphlet by Judge Jay (printed in England by the anti-slavery society). He withdraws support from the American Tract Society for being mute on the "sin" of slavery and excising anti-slavery passages in the tracts by authors on a variety of subjects. Thanks for aditional info in Jay.
Posted by: Mark L. at January 12, 2007 09:19 PM
This article is most informative! You mention a possible NY/NJ Hudson River connection. Fredrick Douglass in his autobiography stated that right after the John Brown raid in 1859, the US Gov. tried to capture him while he was in Philadelphia about to make a speech. He immediately fled taking the ferry to NYC, but out of fear of capture he doubled back to Hoboken, NJ. where he was sheltered by friends, Assing and Johnston. They took him at night in a "private conveyance" [carriage] to Paterson, NJ where he escaped using a Paterson, NJ over-ground train to Rochester. I seriously doubt if Douglass would have chanced this without prior knowledge of UGRR activity to and through Paterson. From Rochester he used an UGRR escape route to Canada.
Paterson, NJ is believed to have had a strong abolitionist following and UGRR station(s). The city designated the Huntoon/Van Rensalier UGRR station an historic site in 1996. My black g grandfather William Van Rensalier and Josiah Huntoon, a spice merchant and avid aboitionist, were agents and conductors at Huntoon's home and spice factory about four blocks away from that train station.
Thomas Van Renselear of NYC (also mentioned with David Ruggles in Douglass' autobiography as "fast friends" in NYC) was also an avid black abolitionist and founder of the Ram's Horn weekly paper that Douglass wrote articles for. With help from UGRR researchers like yourself, I hope to make a family connection someday between Thomas and William Van Rensalier with documentation still to be found. The Northern NJ/NY connection is hard to document, but it was definitely there.
Dolores Van Rensalier
Posted by: Dolores Van Rensalier at November 18, 2006 07:32 PM
Maybe I can fill in a few gaps regarding Dutchess County and the underground railroad.
I am a descendant of Dutchess County Quakers who migrated to Canada as late loyalists. Strong ties remained between the Cold Creek Meeting in Dutchess County and the Meeting Houses in Canada where we settled along Lake Ontario.
Similar to the heroine in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" who walks across a frozen Lake Erie to freedom, some crossed Lake Ontario in winter. Many escaping slaves made their way up the well travelled Indian route up the Hudson and Mohawk valleys to Rochester. Rochester was the final station before freedom. In summer the slaves traveled across Lake Ontario to freedom by boat. In winter they walked across the frozen ice. In the 19th century Lake Ontario used to freeze solid.
The slaves were gathered at the Quaker meeting houses along Lake Ontario and were then subsequently settled into the community.
When Dawn Mills was established, I had family members travel from Eastern Ontario to Southwestern Ontario to help establish the community. Relatives in my family are still practicing Quakers.
What I am telling you now is part of the untold history of the underground railroad in Canada.
Posted by: Malcolm Montgomery at June 12, 2006 12:32 AM
Hi i recently, went on your website and i think it went over how slaves were treated and clear about the whole idea. Can i ask you for a favortie? Can u please send me how the Underground Railroad took a stand in history? Because i'm doing this project in school called National History Day. So if you please do that it will be so helpful
Thaks so much!
-Patience
Posted by: patience gbahtuo at January 31, 2006 12:58 PM
I remember a very old abandoned house on the corner of South Road (9D) and Middlebush Road in Wappingers that was supposed to be part of the underground railroad...It was torn down in the 1980's, and probably had been abandoned for at least 30 years before that. I wish I knew more.
Posted by: Jon Stuart at December 19, 2005 12:35 AM
A fascinating story. I work at John Jay Homestead State Historic Site in Katonah, NY and have been doing some research on William Jay (d. 1858) and his activities (for better or worse) within the abolition movement. I enjoyed your description of the aboliton activities--or lack thereof--in lower New York. William Jay as Liberty Party candidate for state senator in 1845 received not a single vote in Westchester (William was out of town at the time...). There's an interesting mention in Joseph Sturge's account of his Visit to the United States in 1841 of meeting with William at Bedford: "On the 21st, I proceeded to the residence of Judge Jay, where I was very kindly received by his wife and family, the Judge himself being from home. On his return the next day, I had much interesting conversation with him on the prospects of our cause. He is convinced that it is making steady progress, notwithstanding the schism in the anti-slavery ranks. He said also, that of the runaway slaves who called at his house, some have told him that their condition had improved of late years; others saw no change in their treatment; not one has complained that they suffered more than formerly, in consequence of the discussions at the North about abolition." I have no records--at least none with which I am familiar--of William Jay's direct enganement with fugitives. I had always concluded that he was pretty hands-off when it came to the UGRR.
Between your work and the new exhibit at the N-YHS, the word on slavery in New York state is beginning to get out...
Thanks!
Steve
Posted by: Steve Oakes at December 14, 2005 02:59 PM
I am printing out your essay and look forward to reading it. I live in Pawling New York and we have a Quaker Meeting House here. I was hoping to get information on Underground Railroad spots here in Pawling. THank you
Maureen
Posted by: Maureenalice at November 7, 2005 05:01 PM