| Levi Coffin - Fugitive slaves - 1880 - 758 pages
...colored women of the neighborhood, busied themselves in preparing provisions to be sent to the fugitives. A large stone jug was filled with hot coffee, and...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. West Elkton, twenty-five or thirty miles from College Hill, was the first Underground Railroad... | |
| United States - 1903 - 450 pages
...carried out, and the party reached College Hill in safety, and were kindly received and cared for. When it was known by some of the prominent ladies...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. I wrote to one of my particular friends at West Elkton, informing him that I had- some valuable... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, Elizabeth Stevens - Slavery - 1903 - 448 pages
...carried out, and the party reached College Hill in safety, and were kindly received and cared for. When it was known by some of the prominent ladies...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. I wrote to one of my particular friends at West Elkton, informing him that I had some valuable... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, John Gould Curtis - United States - 1901 - 768 pages
...carried out, and the party reached College Hill in safety, and were kindly received and cared for. . . . When it was known by some of the prominent ladies...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. West Elkton, twenty-five or thirty miles from College Hill, was the first Underground Railroad... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, John Gould Curtis - United States - 1901 - 772 pages
...all the clothing we had that was suitable for the occasion; the rest was furnished by the noblewomen of College Hill. I requested friend Cable to keep...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. West Elkton, twenty-five or thirty miles from College Hill, was the first Underground Railroad... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, John Gould Curtis - United States - 1901 - 758 pages
...all the clothing we had that was suitable for the occasion; the rest was furnished by the noblewomen of College Hill. I requested friend Cable to keep...of Hamilton, West Elkton, Eaton, Paris and Newport, Indiana. West Elkton, twenty-five or thirty miles from College Hill, was the first Underground Railroad... | |
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