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African Abolitionist T. J. Alexander on the Ohio and Indiana Underground Railroads

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Countless stories about the Liberty Lines (the Underground Railroad) have been written. Still, few ever mention the African abolitionists who established the Liberty Lines and managed the passage of thousands of self-emancipating Africans safely to freedom in the early 1800s. Thornton J. Alexander was an African abolitionist who used the power of his freedom to liberate the physical and intellectual constraints placed on African people in colonial America. His inspirational story transcends the sufferings of bondage. His lifetime of risks guaranteed the promises of liberty for anyone who reached his land. He knew “Eliza Harris” (Uncle Tom’s Cabin) because she made her escape to freedom from his property in Indiana. He allowed Bishop Paul Quinn to establish an AME church behind his family cemetery. In 1845, he donated land to construct the first private black college in the U.S. called Union Literary Institute (ULI). The first African American U.S. Senator, Hiram Revels, and his brother Willis were both educated at ULI, as was Rev. John G. Mitchell, a co-founder of Wilberforce University. No longer hidden in the oppressive shadows of American abolitionists, Thornton Alexander’s story of resistance, rebellion and success has finally been reclaimed from the clutches of invisibility.
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Title: African Abolitionist T. J. Alexander on the Ohio and Indiana Underground Railroads
Description:
Countless stories about the Liberty Lines (the Underground Railroad) have been written.
Still, few ever mention the African abolitionists who established the Liberty Lines and managed the passage of thousands of self-emancipating Africans safely to freedom in the early 1800s.
Thornton J.
Alexander was an African abolitionist who used the power of his freedom to liberate the physical and intellectual constraints placed on African people in colonial America.
His inspirational story transcends the sufferings of bondage.
His lifetime of risks guaranteed the promises of liberty for anyone who reached his land.
He knew “Eliza Harris” (Uncle Tom’s Cabin) because she made her escape to freedom from his property in Indiana.
He allowed Bishop Paul Quinn to establish an AME church behind his family cemetery.
In 1845, he donated land to construct the first private black college in the U.
S.
called Union Literary Institute (ULI).
The first African American U.
S.
Senator, Hiram Revels, and his brother Willis were both educated at ULI, as was Rev.
John G.
Mitchell, a co-founder of Wilberforce University.
No longer hidden in the oppressive shadows of American abolitionists, Thornton Alexander’s story of resistance, rebellion and success has finally been reclaimed from the clutches of invisibility.

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