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Take a 'Journey on the Underground Railroad' Aug. 24-25

Children and adults can experience what it was like to be a passenger on the Underground Railroad at 6:30 and 8:15 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Aug. 24-25, at Graue Mill and Museum, 3800 York Road, Oak Brook. This theatrical experience begins with a skit in which passengers will meet the legendary Harriet Tubman.

Tickets for "Journey on the Underground Railroad" cost $15 or $10 for children. For reservations, call the Graue Mill at (630) 655-2090.

As early as the 16th century, western European nations constructed a slavery system in the Western Hemisphere. There was slavery in all 13 original American colonies.

After the Revolutionary War, the northern states found slavery to be unprofitable and abolished it; the largely agricultural southern states found slavery to be profitable and continued it.

Although both black and white people were temporarily bound as indentured servants in the early colonial period when demand increased for a perpetual labor force, laws were passed which established chattel (that is, lifelong) slavery. People of African origin were taken from their homelands to supply this labor.

Enslaved Africans took considerable risks to gain freedom by escaping from their masters.

Their escapes were carried out in secrecy (therefore, "underground") and were most numerous about the time that newly built steam railroads had captured the public imagination.

The "Underground Railroad" became a major impetus leading to the eradication of slavery. Runaway slaves ("passengers") usually traveled to their destinations by night either alone or in small groups. Whenever possible black and white abolitionists provided food and shelter at stopping places known as "stations" or served as "conductors" providing transportation between stations. The Underground Railroad remained active until the end of the Civil war as black bondsmen continued to use the system to flee the horrors of slavery. DuPage County played a significant role in this pivotal chapter in American history.

In the 1800s, Wheaton, Glen Ellyn, Glendale Heights, Wayne Center, Warrenville, West Chicago, Lombard, Naperville, Downers Grove, Hinsdale, Lyons and Oak Brook had "stations" on the Underground Railroad.

DuPage County was situated in such a way that "passengers" coming from the south, southwest, and western parts of the state passed through the area.

Wheaton College, the Filer House (Glen Ellyn), the Peck House (Lombard), and the Blodgett Home (Downers Grove) are examples of the few remaining structures in DuPage County which provided havens for slaves seeking their freedom.

Graue Mill and Museum in Oak Brook is one of the remaining "stations." Frederick Graue, a miller by occupation, housed slaves in the basement of his gristmill.

Graue Mill's location on Salt Creek, a tributary of the Des Plaines River, made it an ideal location for harboring slaves.

Today, the exhibit "Graue Mill and the Road to Freedom" uses photographs, documents, a computer interactive system and additional displays to illustrate the issue of slavery, the Underground Railroad and the importance of Graue Mill and DuPage County in assisting fugitive slaves to escape to freedom.

Visit www.grauemill.org.

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