Edward H. Nabb Research Center for Delmarva History & Culture Enduring Connections: Exploring Delmarva's Black History

Record Detail

Record #134 from Abstracts from William Still's Underground Railroad

Traveler's Names William Johnston
Age 19
Description Brown color, smart and good-looking
Alias
Origin- Town/City Powder Neck
Origin- County
Origin- State Maryland
Destination Canada
Birthplace
Slaveowner's Name John Bosley
Chapter Title Sundry Arrivals, 1860
Page Number 501
Other Travelers John Edward Lee, John Hillis, Charles Ross, James Ryan, William Johnston, Edward Wood, Cornelius Fuller and his wife Harriet, John Pinket, Ansal Cannon, James Brown
Other Conductors
Additional Names
Method of Travel
Additional Resources
Items in Possession
Full Narrative WILLIAM JOHNSON was owned by a man named John Bosley, a farmer, living near Gun Powder Neck, Maryland. One morning he, unexpectedly to William, gave him a terrible cowhiding, which, contrary to the master's designs, made him a firm believer in the doctrine of immediate abolition, andhe thought, that from that hour he must do something against the system?- if nothing more than to go to Canada. This determination was so strong, that in a few weeks afterwards he found himself on the Underground Rail Road. He left one brother and one sister ; his mother was dead, and of his father's whereabouts he knew nothing. William was nineteen years of age, brown color, smart and good-looking.

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[Author (if known)], Abstracts from William Still's Underground Railroad, [Date (if known)], Enduring Connections: Exploring Delmarva’s Black History, Nabb Research Center, Salisbury University.

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