2.8 Flashcards

1
Q

When was the first movement to abolish slavery in Canada?

A

late 1700s

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2
Q

Which place was the first place in Canada, led by who, to move towards abolition in what year?

A

Upper Canada led by Governor John Graves Simcoe, a loyalist military officer, in the year 1793.

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3
Q

What did the British parliament prohibite in 1807?

A

The buying and selling of slaves.

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4
Q

In what year did the British Parliament abolish slavery in the empire, which included Canada?

A

1833

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5
Q

Between___and___, before the American Civil War, African slaves followed the ___star on the Underground Railroad to find freedom in Canada.

A

1840 and 1860

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6
Q

What was the Underground Railroad?

A

Not an actual railroad but a secret network of routes and safe houses that helped people escape slavery and reach free states or Canada.

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7
Q

What were guides?

A

People who were available to help people find their way to the next stop along the way.

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8
Q

When did the “railroad” begin operating?

A

1780s

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9
Q

When did the “railroad” become known as the Underground Railroad?

A

1830s

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10
Q

What were the people who helped people move from place to place called? What were the regufees called? What were the safe places to stop and rest called?

A
  • Conductors
  • Passengers or Cargo
  • Stations
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11
Q

What were abolitionists (many conductors were abolitionists)?

A

People who wanted slavery abolished. They were Blacks and Whites, men and women. Many of them were Quakers or Methodists.

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12
Q

When was the first major immigration period to Canada for Blacks? Why?

A

During the war of 1812 as Canada captured several US forts, including Detroit and managed to burn the White House to the ground.

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13
Q

Besides the First Nations and their own militia, who was Canada’s success in the War of 1812 due to?

A

The Black slaves that fought with the British troops.

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14
Q

What were the Black slaves promised by Britiain if they fought with them?

A

Freedom, land, and provisions if they would leave their masters and support the English. However, Canada did not give all tha it promised making survivial difficult for the Black community and forcing dependence on the white settlements.

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15
Q

How many Black slaves helped Canada in the War of 1812? Where were they eventually taken?

A
  • Over 2000

- They were eventually taken to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick

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16
Q

Between what two years did tens of thousands of African-Americans seek refuge in Upper and Lower Canada via the Underground Railroad?

A

1815 and 1865

17
Q

What was Detroit known as? What was Detroit River called? What was it a refrence of?
Why did places need code names?

A
  • Midnight (many of the slaves left from this point)/
  • Jordan
  • A biblical reference to the river tha led to the primised land
  • They needed code names to keep the routes secret.
18
Q

What was the end of the journey known as?

A
  • Dawn

- Take the railroad from Midnight to Dawn

19
Q

Where did most refugees come to?

A

Southwestern Ontario to places such as Windsor, Fort Erie, Chatham, and Owen Sound

20
Q

Why hasn’t there been much documentation of the Underground Railroad?

A

Because of how secret it was.

21
Q

How many slaves are estimated to have found freedom by way of the railraod?

A

It may have been as many as 30 000

22
Q

When did the railroads traffic reach its peak?

A

Between 1840 and 1860

23
Q

When did the US pass its Fugitive Slave Act?

A

1850

24
Q

What was the Fugitive Slave Act?

A

The new law allowed slave hunters to pursue and capture enslaved persons in places where they would legally be free. It resulted in several attempts to kidnap escapees in Canada and return them to former owners in the Southern States.

25
Q

In which year did some states consider abolishing slavery all together (more in the middle of which year actually)?

A

Middle of the 1800s

26
Q

In which year did the Southern staes of the US threaten to separate from the North because of the differences in the belief of slavery?

A

1862

27
Q

Why did the South need slaves?

A

Economic reasons.

28
Q

How long did the American Civil War last (what years)?

A

Four years, from 1861 to 1865

29
Q

What was the result of the American Civil War?

A

The North won and slavery was abolished.

30
Q

Did Canada have slaves?

A

Before the 19th century Canada did have slaves but not many. It’s economy did not need them. Also, more and more Canadians were cmpaigning to abolish slavery.

31
Q

What did the Abolition Act do?

A

The Abolition Act was passed by the British government. It acted to end slavery throughout the British Empire.

32
Q

What did Tubman use for a guide?

A

She used the North Star as a guide on clear nights, and on cloudy nights she would feel for moss frowing on the north side of trees.

33
Q

Who did Tubman believe talked to her to help her move more slaves?

A

She believed it was the voice of God who told her to escape salvery, and God who prompted her to return to free others.

34
Q

Why would slave owners want Harriet dead and what was the reward? How many trips did she make and how many people did she lead into Canada?

A

Slave owners would want her dead because of the many people that she helped escape slavery. In total, she made 11 trips south and led around 300 people into Canada. The slave owners offered up to $40 000 for her capture, dead or alive.

35
Q

Were the free slaves equal in Canada?

A

No, the free slaves were not equal in Canada. There was prejudice against the, even though many Canadians were willing to help.

36
Q

How did Tubman help in the American Civil War?

A

In the AMerican Civil WAr, she left Canada and joined the Union Army to serve as a nurse, scout, and spy. By 1863, she had organized her own band of spies that she chose from former slaves because they knew the countryside and could guide the Union forces. In a raid at Combahee River in South Carolina, these spies told the Union soldiers how to avoid mine traps set in the river. Harriet Tubman led former slaves who piloted gunboats down the river and burned crops and buildings. Together, they freed more than 750 slaves, and Harriet Tubman was given credit for planning the raid while becoming the first and only woman in American history to lead a military attack.

37
Q

Who was Harriet Tubman?

A

She was called “Black Moses”. She was based out of St. Catherine’s Ontario. She was a conductor along the Underground Railway. Even though she had a $40 000 bounty on her head, she travelled into the slave states more than a dozen times in disguise with forges paper to help more than 300 slaves escape, including her elderly parents and four of her brothers. During the US civil war, she joined the Northern Army as a nurse, scout, and spy.

38
Q

Who was Josiah Henson?

A

An excaped slave who helped found the free Black community of Dawn (near Dresden, Ontario). He is said to be the model for the lead character of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Henson’s own “cabin” is preserved as a museum outside of Dresden.

39
Q

Who was Mary Ann Shadd?

A

A freeborn Black who moved to Canada West in the 1850s and established a newspaper, The Provincial Freeman. This newspaper fought against discrimination and segregation. When the American Slave hunters chased an escaped Black into Canada and captured him, Shadd pulled the boy free and ran to the courthouse where she rang the bell and called out the town. The Americans fled. After the Civil WAr, Shadd studied law in the US.