The
Underground Railroad: Next Stop, Toronto!
by Adrienne Shadd, Afua Cooper
and Karolyn Smard
Frost
Imagine
that a law was passed where you could be arrested at any time, for no
justifiable reason. No, this is not a new crime show on television, but a part
of our history.
Slavery existed in North America almost from the time
of the first European settlement on the continent. Through the assistance of
the Underground Railroad (UGRR), many black slaves and indentured servants
escaped the abuse and settled in Upper Canada (now Ontario). The Underground Railroad: Next Stop,
Toronto! examines the unique urban story of the UGRR in Toronto. Three of
the leading experts on black history in Canada – Adrienne Shadd, Afua Cooper and Karolyn Smard
Frost – have come together to write a
comprehensive history of the experience of the former slaves as they escaped
their shackles and developed a thriving community in York (now Toronto).
In 1850, the United States passed a law called the Fugitive Slave Act where people
suspected of being a runaway slave could be arrested without warrant and turned
over to a claimant on nothing more than his sworn testimony of ownership. A
suspected black slave could not ask for a jury trial nor testify on his or her
behalf. This law forced many people to flee from the United States through the UGGR.
This network of secret routes and safe houses was used by escaped slaves and
indentured servants to escape the slave hunters. Upper Canada provided the
former slaves with a safe haven that did not allow the American fugitive
hunters to take into custody former slaves. It is estimated that between
fifteen to twenty thousand black people moved to Upper Canada from 1850 to
1860, increasing the black population from about 40 000 to 60 000. The majority
of the immigrants settled in southern Ontario where they were immune from the
slave hunters and could begin to settle and establish a new lifestyle. Although
life for the former slaves had far more potential for success and profit, they still
faced many problems in Canada as racist attitudes were very prominent despite
the Emancipation Act that had been passed nearly two decades prior to the Slave
Act.
Mary Ann Shadd |
Harriet Tubman |
As the black Canadian population grew in York, community members took active roles in exercising their agency to provide the new generation with as many opportunities as possible. Since the white community forbade the integration of the blacks in many public institutions, the fugitives began to build their own establishments while simultaneously fighting for the right to equal access despite racial differences. Sympathetic charities in the United States and Canada donated material and funds to the community to meet their needs as they began to rebuild.
The
Underground Railroad: Next Stop, Toronto! not only explores the experience of the community as a
whole, but also the experience of individuals. It includes actual newspaper
clippings from the time as well as illustrations that enhance the learning
experience. It is an engaging and highly readable account of the lives of black
people in Toronto in the 1800s.
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