In keeping with the
celebration of Black History Month, Erma DeRosear has
submitted several stories passed on to her by people
associated with this important, not widely known part
of American history. Information was rarely documented
due to the secrecy of these operations.
The Underground Railroad was not a railroad at all. It
was a network of safe houses, barns, root cellars, and
similar places where people who had escaped from
slavery were hidden during their flight to safety. If
these places could talk, their tales would be ones of
fear and hope, desperation and inspiration. When it
became necessary to communicate by mail regarding the
transportation of slaves, cleverly coded messages were
sent between stations, which were not more than nine
or ten miles apart.
During the Civil War thousands of slaves rode the
Underground Railroad to freedom. Most of us associate
this path to liberty with Kentucky, Missouri, and
Tennessee. The “railroad” however had some of its
important routes right here in the Hawkeye State.
These five stories tell it as it was, so if you are
ready, “All Aboard!”
The Slave Hunter: On June 2, 1843, nine slaves working
on the property of Ruel Daggs (born in Virginia and a
farmer) near Luray, MO left the homestead. Daggs had
not been mean to them but he was living in an area
where some people frowned on slavery and he was
thinking of selling them into the South. The slaves
said they were afraid of being sold and decided to
head north to freedom instead. Daggs and his sons
hired two slave hunters to track them and bring them
back.
One of the men was James McClure and the other was
Samuel Slaughter, a Virginian and farmer living in
Section 33 of Harrison Township in Lee County. They
followed the wagon trails which lead to Salem, IA
where they found themselves among the Quakers, who
would not allow the men to take the slaves back to
Missouri because there were no arrest 9 warrants.
Eventually, five of them had escaped to freedom and
the other four ended up back in Missouri. Daggs
decided to sue the Quakers because he said he had lost
too many hours of work from their absence. Daggs was
awarded $2900 from several of the Friends but never
collected any of it because the ones who had been
involved had willed or given all their possessions
away so there was nothing left.
Samuel Slaughter raised a large family in a heavy
wooded area where he watched for slaves coming north
out of Missouri. The census of 1860 shows him with a
lot of wealth but in the 1870 census, which was after
the Civil War, he has very little. He has many
descendants living in Harrison Township today.
Conductor Benjamin Cook: Benjamin Cook came to Iowa
from Ohio and married Susanna Hill in Lee County in
1851. They owned a farm in Section 11 about a mile and
a half north of Primrose. They were Quakers, among
quite a few in the area -- the Cooks, Carvers,
McMillens, Hills, Hamptons and others -- many of whom
are buried in the Cook Cemetery which was located on
his farm. In 2004, Cook family descendants revealed
that great grandpa Benjamin had a hiding place for
slaves in his home. The Atlas of 1874 shows Benjamin
owning the bottom half of the southwest corner of the
section. There were three Quaker schools in Lee
County: Chestnut Hill, Old Pilot Grove and Rabbit
Ridge. Few people in the county today know where
Rabbit Ridge School was located; it is called Fairview
and stood where the home of Stanley and Marilyn
Watkins now stands. The Cooks are buried in the
cemetery on the land they owned. This farm was a
station on the Underground Railroad.
The “Hidey Place”: Edward and Helen (Kirchner) Hohl
bought their old home place in 1914 on the west edge
of Franklin from William Thomas. When their sons Jacob
Hohl of Donnellson and Carl Hohl of Keosauqua tore it
down in the 1980’s, they found a trap door in the
living room in the northeast corner of the house which
opened to a “hidey place” in the basement. The floor
boards, originally 1 inch thick, were worn down one
half inch with the knotholes still the original size,
indicating a lot of traffic or activity near the
entrance to the trap door. Howard Raid, the historian
for the Mennonite College in Bluffton, OH, had lived
in Donnellson and felt sure that house was a station
on the Railroad.
The Light in the Window: May Crowe of Charleston wrote
this wonderful story for the library. The pre-Civil
War house of Brian and Hazel Hancock stood in Section
31 of Charleston Township about one and one-half miles
northwest of Argyle. The Hancocks had moved to this
house in the 1950’s. May says “When we visited Uncle
Brian and Aunt Hazel, we admired the noble
architecture of the large home, with floor-to-ceiling
windows in the living rooms, the expansive views over
the fields from the bedrooms upstairs. The
unforgettable highlights of the house, however, were
the Underground Railroad connections”.
At the top of the house, possibly the third floor,
small windows opened facing south. The station to the
south was a house in Revere, MO. If an escaping slave
was being helped, the Missouri people would place a
lighted lantern in an upper window which made it
visible in Iowa. If it was safe to bring the slave
over, an answering lantern would be placed in the Iowa
window.
We were shown the secret closet in the basement where
the slaves were hidden after they arrived. The Lee
County family then placed a signal in the north window
and the next safe house north would signal back and
receive the slave. The route ran north to Salem and
eventually into Canada and freedom.
On a fierce windy day in April 1968, fire destroyed
the house but a new house was built in its place – now
the home of Howard and Joy Hancock.
The 1874 Atlas of Charleston Township shows a
lithograph of the old homestead.
Mary’s Story: This last story was researched by Betty
Eis of Bonaparte, Mary Savage of Salem and Erma
DeRosear of Donnellson. This is a story that has not
come to a close but continues to be researched and
documented. These ladies believe it is time after all
their efforts for Mary’s story to be written and told.
If you were caught harboring a slave in the
mid-1800’s, you were fined $1000. Henry and
Eleanor Pickard, Quakers who lived in the New Garden
area near Pilot Grove sheltered a little slave girl in
their home. Lewis Savage, a historian and Quaker
minister, and his cousin Mary Savage, came to the
Donnellson Library in the summer of 2004 seeking
information. They told of a slave on his way to
freedom in Canada in 1857 that left his child with the
Pickards saying he would return for her. He said
her mother had been “sold down the river”.
In 1933 Mary came to a Pickard Reunion in Donnellson
as Mrs. Wm G. Mills. She had lived about 20 years with
the Pickards and then left. Her name has been found as
well as that of her parents; information was found on
her marriage, where she worked, and where she lived
and died.
In addition to Mary’s Story, the Underground Railroad
is still being researched and documented, adding
information to a part of American history that is not
widely known.
Researched, compiled and submitted by Erma Derosear.
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