THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD in RINGGOLD COUNTY
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The debate in Congress in
1819 and 1820 over whether Missouri should enter the Union as a
slave or free state made it clear to the entire nation that the
slavery issue was not going to simply evaporate. For free blacks,
the formation of the national American Colonization Society
persuaded them to organize for the abolition of slavery rather than
act individually. The Colonization Society wanted federal government
funds to pay the costs of settling free blacks in an African colony
they founded and called Liberia. The threat to free
African-Americans that this appeared to represent a need for a more
organized black response and for more white allies. The era of
immediate abolitionism is generally acknowledged to have begun on
January 1, 1831, when William Lloyd GARRISON first published his
abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator.
The abolitionists were divided over strategy and tactics, but
they were very active and very visible. Many of them were part of
the organized Underground Railroad that flourished between 1830 and
1861. Not all abolitionists favored aiding fugitive slaves, and some
believed that money and energy should go to political action. Even
those who were not abolitionists might be willing to help when they
encountered a fugitive, or they might not. It was very difficult for
fugitives to know who could be trusted.
Southerners were outraged that escaping slaves received
assistance from so many sources and that they lived and worked in
the North and Canada. As a part of the Compromise of 1850, a new
Fugitive Slave Act was passed that made it both possible and
profitable to hire slave catchers to find and arrest runaways. This
was a disaster for the free black communities of the North,
especially since the slave catchers often kidnapped legally-free
blacks as well as fugitives. But these seizures and kidnappings
brought the brutality of slavery into the North and persuaded many
more people to assist fugitives. Vigilance Committees acted as
contact points for runaways and watched out vigilantly for the
rights of northern free blacks. They worked together with local
abolition societies, African-American churches and a variety of
individuals to help fugitives move further on or to find them homes
and work. Those who went to Canada in the mid-nineteenth century
went primarily to what was then called Canada West, present-day
Ontario.
The term "underground railroad" probably dates back to an
incident that occured in 1831. In Kentucky, a runaway slave by the
name of Tice David ran away and his master followed his trail to the
banks of the Ohio River. The master lost the trail when Tice dived
into the water and swam across the river to Ripley, Ohio. When the
master returned to the plantation, he told everyone that Tice 'must
have escaped on an underground road."
Steam railroads were a new and exciting means of travel in 1831.
Maybe that's why the "underground road" became an "underground
railroad." Those who kept "safe houses" for freedom seekers were
called "station agents." Others who guided freedom seekers from one
place to another became "conductors." Freedom seekers themselves
were referred to as "passengers."
Because the issue of helping runaway slaves was against the law,
the entire operation was conducted in uptmost secrecy. Therefore, it
is difficult to trace the history of the underground railroad, who
was involved, and other such statistics. This was possibly even more
so for those in Ringgold County given the close proximity to the
State of Missouri.
If one was caught aiding a runaway, the maximum penalty was six
months in jail and a fine of $1,000.
Most runaway slaves didn’t get very far and were soon recaptured.
Only a few made it to the free states of the North or on to Canada.
One guess is that about 35,000 from 1830 to the end of the Civil War
in 1865 made it to freedom. There were 4 million slaves in the South
in 1860. The underground railroad was a serious annoyance to
slaveholders, but it didn’t make much of a difference in the number
of slaves held.
It’s harder to guess how many freedom seekers passed through Iowa
on the underground railroad. Most came from Missouri. Some came from
Arkansas or Indian Territory (Oklahoma). A few came from Kentucky,
Tennessee or Mississippi. Most likely not more than a few hundred
passed through Iowa on the underground railroad.
The population in western Iowa during this time was quite sparse.
Ringgold County, being one of the last counties to be organized an
populated, was among the sparsest populated counties at the time,
not requiring quite the level of care an precaution as necessary in
eastern Iowa.
The first station on the underground railroad in Ringgold county
ws the Milton TRULLINGER farm along Fiddler's Creek. The second
station was believed to be the home of G. K. GRIMES, located near
the town of Eugene in section 7 of Liberty township. Eugene, now a
ghost town, was located approximately eleven miles north of Mount
Ayr.
Thayer BENNETT relates a conversation he had with the late
Captain Andrew JOHNSTON (1829-1917) not long before the latter's
death. Captain JOHNSTON's neighbor, Stanberry WRIGHT, one of the
early pioneers of Ringgold county, made his home, before the Civil
War, a station on the "underground railroad." This was the name
commonly given to homes where fugitive slaves, on their way from the
southern states to freedom in Canada, were protected, fed and helped
on their way to freedom. Captain JOHNSTON's home in the northeast
corner of Liberty township is still owned and occupied by his
descendants, while the records show that prior to the Civil War,
Stanberry WRIGHT owned the land in the southwest corner of Union
township and the south eastcorner of Tingley township.
Little ALLEN, a native of Buncombe County, North Carolina, had
arrived in Middle Fork Township during the Spring of 1852, bringing
with him his two slaves, a boy of about the age of 16 and a girl
about 14. Public disapproval forced him to sell the slaves around
the year 1853 to a man from St. Joseph, Missouri, for $1,000. Squire
Milton S. TRULLINGER, who lived approximately five miles from the
ALLEN farm, was probably one who raised a protest over the ALLEN
slaves. TRULLINGER actively assisted fugitive slaves as they fled
towards freedom in Canada. TRULLINGER's farm was one of the
underground railroad stations and noted for the flock of pea fowl.
Renown for their shrill calls when their territory has been
"invaded," perhaps the pea fowl acted as an alarm when fugitves
and/or authorities arrived on the TRULLINGER farm.
Charles S. GRIMES, residing in the northern portion of Tingley
Township, also assisted fugitive slaves. According to legend, GRIMES
had as many as six run-aways hiding in the corn shocks, waiting
until they could proceed on to the next station, believed to be
locted in Hopeville, Clarke County, Iowa.
SOURCES:
Lena SAVILLE Collection, Mount Ayr Depot Museum, Mount Ayr, Ringgold
County, Iowa
"History Highlights" Mount Ayr Record-News, Mount Ayr,
Ringgold County, Iowa. August 28, 1974.
"Operating the Underground Railroad" www.nps.gov/history/nr/travel/underground/opugrr.htm
PARISH,
John C., ed. The PALIMPSEST Vol. II, No. 5. Pp. 45-49. State
Historical Society of Iowa. Des Moines. May, 1921.
Ringgold County History Complied and written by the Iowa Writers'
Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of Iowa,
Sponsored by
Ringgold County Superintendent of Schools, Mount Ayr, Iowa. 1942.
Harriet
TUBMAN photograph, Library of Congress