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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, 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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