Plus: New music from Slope114 and The Reds, Pinks, and Purples; classic prog-rock from Brian Auger, Sessa at Rickshaw, more ...
Susie King Taylor, an educator and nurse who escaped enslavement, is now nationally recognized by the National Park Service.
For decades, Martha Suggs-Spencer has carried history not just in boxes and binders, but in memory and lived experience.
The wooden support beams overhead are a constant reminder that you’re inside a mountain, and the only thing between you and several million tons of rock is some timber and engineering that’s held up ...
The region's waters were a common means of escape from slavery, in addition to land-based networks of the Underground Railroad.
This is the first of a three-part series. Images are courtesy of Jack Woodbury and the Darwin R. Barker Museum. The early ...
After more than a decade researching her ancestry, Shanna Ward published a book about her forefather John T. Ward, a formerly enslaved man who became an Underground Railroad conductor, abolitionist ...
For enslaved people seeking freedom in 19th-century Texas, traveling north wasn’t the only option. The off-Broadway musical ...
Nation's largest gathering of its kind returns to Colorado Springs with anticipated record attendance during National ...
An 1858 Westerville home, now part of a new commercial development, served as a crucial stop on the Underground Railroad, hiding freedom‑seekers in a secret dugout.
Historians say pinpointing the first escape is really hard to nail down, and a lot of stories from enslaved people aren't ...
The Underground Railroad was an organized network in the United States that helped enslaved African Americans escape to freedom through safe houses and secret routes with the help of abolitionists, ...