African
history is the oldest human history in the World. From Ancient Egypt to
the present great leaders have
shaped Africa and world history.
Plantation owners used slaves to work their farms. Many of them picked cotton that was sold to clothing factories in Britain.
In the early 1800s, people known as abolitionists started an
anti-slavery movement, and they worked to set up the Underground
Railroad.
The Underground Railroad was a secret network of “safe houses” that
were used to help slaves reach Canada, where slavery was strictly
forbidden.
Estimates state that 30,000 to 40,000 African-Americans risked their lives to escape to either Canada or Mexico.
Professional bounty hunters stalked them so that they could return
the slaves back to the plantation owners. Many African-Americans died
while trying to escape to freedom.
It was also very dangerous for people to help the fleeing
African-Americans, because if they were caught helping them, they could
end up in jail or worse...
The fugitive African-Americans would travel at night following the big dipper and the North Star.
During the day, they would stay in safe houses. Often people who ran
the safe houses would hang a lit lantern outside their homes letting the
fugitives know their house was “safe.”
The fugitives arrived at points as far east as Nova Scotia and as far
west as British Columbia, but most African-Americans landed in
Southwestern Ontario.
Many of the fugitives went to the Dawn settlement (present day
Dresden, Ontario), which had been started by a fugitive African-American
named Josiah Henson.
This settlement was well established by 1842 and had a school, the
British-American Institute, where African-Americans could be educated.
The settlement included farms, a gristmill, and a sawmill.
Abolitionists in the United States gave money to support the Dawn
Settlement.
The book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, was apparently based on the life of Josiah Henson.