Introduction: Overview and Summary Statement Subway is one of the most important moves in the history of the United States, and both sides of the discussion point out the influence on the movement of the country to the civil war. This has been beautified as one of the most proud moments in the history of Americans, but this is an example of a weak position against the strong, and a violent criminal law that one person may be another person I actively refuse to recognize the legitimacy. Human property
Corsen Whitehead's Underground Railway - This is the story of Cora and Caesar fighting for freedom from Georgia's farm. It won the National Book Fiction Award in 2016 and was named Opra Book Club. Under Chinelo Okparanta 's Udala Trees - One day in 1968, Ijeoma' s father was murdered and her world changed forever, at the height of the civil war of Vihlan. Separating from her mother suffering from sorrow, she met another missing young girl Amina. Their relationship will shake the foundation of Ijeuma's faith, test her decision, and fill her heart.
Subway trail is a secret network organized by men, women, and those who help children get rid of slavery to freedom. It worked before the end of slavery in the Civil War (1861-1865) in the United States. Subway trail provides evacuation centers, food and transportation for fugitives trying to escape slavery. In the process, people also provide the safest way to go further north to a dangerous free trip. People who help slaves escape are called "conductors" or "engineers". The place on the evacuation route is called "station". Slaughter slaves are sometimes called "passengers". Sometimes they are called 'goods' or 'goods'. The conductor will help passengers from one station to another. Sometimes they ran away slaves from the south, they were slaves, they would be free to the north or Canada.
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