

An edition of Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the Reputed President of the Underground Railroad; Being a Brief History of the Labors of a Lifetime in Behalf of the Slave (1876)
By Levi Coffin,Levi Coffin,Levi Coffin,Levi 1798-1877 Coffin
Publish Date
1968
Publisher
Arno Press
Language
eng
Pages
720
Description:
Levi Coffin (1798-1877) was a Quaker who, with his wife Catharine, sheltered over a hundred escaping slaves per year while living in Fountain City (then Newport) in Wayne County, IN from 1826 to 1847. Their home was known as ‘Grand Central Station’ on the Underground Railroad because of the scale of their work. He then moved to Cincinnati, OH where he continued to be very active in the Underground Railroad. One of the slaves they helped was immortalized as Eliza, the heroine of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s classic novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin. - Information from the Indiana Historical Society website.
subjects: Abolitionists, Biography, Fugitive slaves, Slavery, Underground railroad, Slavery in the United States
People: Levi Coffin (1798-1877)
Places: Ohio, United States
Times: 19th century