They are usually family slaves (slaves / servants) who enjoy better living and working conditions because they usually live in owners' houses and work for hours (at least less than local workers) . Cora (Dana Michelle Gourrier) and Broomhilda Von Shaft (Kerry Washington) are examples of such slaves. Another type of slave is a slave driver managed by captain to manage slaves. Therefore, the remaining slaves dislike because they are doing their master 's job.
In the 1950s and 1860s, North America became a popular shelter for slaves who escaped from the fear of the southern United States plantation. Of the 30,000 slaves who fled to Canada, many were assisted by the subway trail - a secret network of free blacks and white compassioners to help escape from the house. However, others opposed the advertisement of slave owners and encouraged slaves to take off. Mary Anshad is a black woman from Delaware who settled in Canada. It is not born in slavery. She wrote a pamphlet on page 45 titled "Protect for immigrants" for African Americans, or moral, social and political notes in West Canada.
Students return to 1860 and pursue the young slaves who fled along the subway from the Kentucky Canadian Plantation. In the process they can read and hear unruly slaves explaining his terrible journey from slavery to freedom. They will realize that they are in great risk to help them escape from their homes and compare their lives, such as life as slaves, the danger of encountering the subway trail, and courageous abolitionists. Make students understand that the subway road is neither an underground train nor a real train. Instead, it is a hidden place, a loose route network, a secluded place that helps enslaved African Americans get away from the South to free people. Some slaves settled in the "free" state in the north, but many continued to move north to Canada. Until the end of the civil war in 1865, slavery was abolished and "operated" in the 19th century.
Harriet Tabman, probably the most famous conductor of the Mass Transit Railroad, helped hundreds of uncontrollable slaves escape from freedom. She has not lost one of them on the way. As an escaping slave, she was on the subway with the help of another famous conductor, William Still. He continues to write a book called "Underground Railway: Factual Records, True Story, Letters ..." which contains an explanation of the fugitives slaves who escape freedom through underground railroads. John Parker is a venture slave who escaped to slavery to help free others. He directed one of the busiest sections of the subway trail and carried the escaping slave to the Ohio River. Pastor John Rankin, his neighbors and fellow commander, worked with him on the subway. Both families are functioning as subway stations