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The Bowery Boys: New York City History

#252 The Underground Railroad: Escape through New York

The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Tom Meyers

Places & Travel, History, Documentary, Society & Culture

4.7 • 3.9K Ratings

🗓️ 2 February 2018

⏱️ 63 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For thousands of African-American enslaved people -- escaping the bonds of slavery in the South -- the journey to freedom wound its way through New York via the Underground Railroad.  The Underground Railroad was a loose, clandestine network of homes, businesses and churches, operated by freed black people and white abolitionists who put it upon themselves -- often at great risk -- to hide fugitives on the run. New York and Brooklyn were vital hubs in this network but these cities were hardly safe havens. The streets swarmed with bounty hunters, and a growing number of New Yorkers, enriched by Southern businesses, were sympathetic to the institution of slavery. Not even freed black New Yorkers were safe from kidnapping and racist anti-abolitionist mobs. In this podcast we present some of the stops in New York along the Underground Railroad -- from offices off Newspaper Row to the basement of New York's first African-American owned bookstore. You'll be familiar with some of this story's leading figures like Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and Henry Ward Beecher. But many of these courageous tales come from people who you may not know -- the indefatigable Louis Napoleon, the resolute Sydney Howard Gay, the defiant David Ruggles and James Hamlet, the first victim of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act. PLUS: A trip to Brooklyn Heights and the site of New York's most famous Underground Railroad site -- Plymouth Church. Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/boweryboys

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Support for the Bowery Boots is provided by the Acting Company.

0:03.8

Don't miss their current production and New York Times critic pick X or Betty Shabbaz

0:09.4

versus the Nation, which has now been extended to February 25th, 2018.

0:15.6

Marcus Gardley's hit new play about Malcolm X's final days in New York City, called a

0:20.7

stroke of inspiration by the New York Times, continues its run at the theater at St.

0:25.5

Clements on West 46th Street.

0:28.0

Tickets at theactingcompany.org or call 866-811-411.

0:36.5

Use discount code BBS39 for $39 tickets for performances up to February 18th.

0:45.5

The Bowery Boys episode 252, Underground Railroad, the Escape through New York.

0:51.7

Hey, it's the Bowery Boys.

0:54.8

Support for the Bowery Boys is provided by our listeners.

0:58.1

Join us for as little as $1 a month by visiting patreon.com slash Bowery Boys.

1:06.2

How you there? Welcome to the Bowery Boys. This is Greg Young.

1:08.8

And this is Tom Myers.

1:10.4

Today we're going Underground to talk about New York's role in one of the most important

1:17.0

and certainly most mythologized parts of 19th century American history.

1:23.1

Our subject is the Underground Railroad.

1:26.0

That clandestine path that helped thousands of enslaved people from the American South

1:30.8

escaped to freedom in the northern states and to Canada.

1:35.2

Now New York's relationship with slavery and the abolitionist movement is pretty complicated

1:41.2

and it would take much longer than 50 minutes that we have today to tell well.

1:46.4

And we dabbled in the subject before.

...

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