Page 43 - August 2024 Issue.pdf
P. 43

One of the many free Black people living in Caroline County   Tubman wasn’t the only one working to free Caroline and

            in the pre-Civil War era was James H. Webb. His log cabin,   Dorchester’s enslaved community. The Quaker Leverton
            which he built in 1852, still stands outside of Preston. He   family, along with a free African American man named
            lived there with his father, wife, and four children. Webb’s   Daniel Hubbard, operated in Caroline County, guiding
            home, which is no larger than a studio apartment, is used   freedom seekers through the area to safety. Th e Levertons’
            today as an educational tool to represent the lives of free   home in Preston, MD near Lincester Mill, served as an

            Black Eastern Shore dwellers. Despite the large free Black   Underground Railroad “station.” The Choptank River and
            population, discriminatory laws, unfair hiring and payment   its tributaries made Caroline prime real estate for grist and
            practices, disenfranchisement, and other hurdles caused   sawmills, places where free and enslaved people would
            by government-sanctioned racism prevented them from   have worked side by side, where they were able to share

            climbing the social and financial ladder. James’ wife, Mary   information and resources concerning escape.
            Ann, was enslaved.
                                                               The Choptank River stands as a powerful symbol of both

            Marriage between free and enslaved Black people was   oppression and resilience in Maryland’s history. Its waters,
            common. Whites encouraged their slaves to marry, as   once instrumental in sustaining the brutal institution of
            marriage meant procreation, and procreation meant more   slavery through the transportation of enslaved Africans
            people to treat as property. Over time, this system backfi red   and the cultivation of cash crops, later became pathways to
            on pro-slavery whites in the Eastern Shore region. There is a   freedom for many seeking freedom. In more ways than one,

            theory that the reason that two of American history’s most   the Choptank River was a tool for self-liberation, as freedom
            celebrated freedom-seekers, Harriet Tubman and Frederick   seekers used it to navigate Northward and into Delaware.
            Douglass, were from the Eastern Shore was due to this   Using its shores for evading capture, its plentiful resources for
            prolonged exposure to free African Americans. Th ey saw   food and herbal remedies, and the network of sympathetic
            firsthand that Black freedom could be achieved, and they   individuals for shelter and guidance, the Choptank River

            wanted it for themselves. Harriet Tubman’s fi rst husband,   that once carried their ancestors to their dismal fate proved
            John Tubman, was a free man, although he detested her   essential for those seeking to free themselves of bondage.
            freeing other enslaved people.
                                                               Believe it or not, this is just the tip of the iceberg to my full
                                                               research on this topic. To read the full version of this article,
                                                               complete with personal narratives, the details of the slave
                                                               trade in Caroline County, and more in-depth historical
                                                               analysis, visit my website at The River is the Center (https://

                                                               kthomason1209.wixsite.com/the-river-is-the-cen). I also lead
                                                               History on the Choptank historical river cruises. For tickets,

                                                               visit my website or find River City Cruise Co. on Facebook.








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