National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

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National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
NationalUndergroundRailroadFreedomCenter.jpg
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
EstablishedAugust 2004
Location50 E. Freedom Way Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
TypePublic
Visitors180,000 annual
PresidentWoodrow Keown, Jr.
Website freedomcenter.org

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center is a museum in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, based on the history of the Underground Railroad. Opened in 2004, the center also pays tribute to all efforts to "abolish human enslavement and secure freedom for all people."

Contents

It is one of a new group of "museums of conscience" in the United States, along with the Museum of Tolerance, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the National Civil Rights Museum. The center offers insight into the struggle for freedom in the past, in the present, and for the future, as it attempts to challenge visitors to contemplate the meaning of freedom in their own lives. Its location recognizes the significant role of Cincinnati in the history of the Underground Railroad, as thousands of slaves escaped to freedom by crossing the Ohio River from the southern slave states. Many found refuge in the city, some staying there temporarily before heading north to gain freedom in Canada.

The structure

Main entrance to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center National underground railroad freedom center main entrance 2006.jpg
Main entrance to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

After ten years of planning, fundraising, and construction, the $110 million (~$170 million in 2023) [1] Freedom Center opened to the public on August 3, 2004; official opening ceremonies took place on August 23. The 158,000 square foot (15,000 m2) structure was designed by Boora Architects (design architect) of Portland, Oregon with Blackburn Architects (architect of record) of Indianapolis. Three pavilions celebrate courage, cooperation and perseverance. The exterior features rough travertine stone from Tivoli, Italy on the east and west faces of the building, and copper panels on the north and south. According to Walter Blackburn, one of its primary architects before his death, the building's "undulating quality" expresses the fields and the river that escaping slaves crossed to reach freedom. First Lady Laura Bush, Oprah Winfrey, and Muhammad Ali attended the groundbreaking ceremony on June 17, 2002.

Slave pen

The Slave pen, the principal artifact at the Freedom Center, was transported from its original Kentucky location and reconstructed on the second floor of the Center Slave pen exterior.jpg
The Slave pen, the principal artifact at the Freedom Center, was transported from its original Kentucky location and reconstructed on the second floor of the Center

The center's principal artifact is a 21 by 30-foot (6 by 9 m), two-story log slave pen built in 1830. By 2003, it was "the only known surviving rural slave jail," previously used to house slaves prior to their being shipped to auction. [2] The structure was moved from a farm in Mason County, Kentucky, where a tobacco barn had been built around it.

It was reconstructed in the second-floor atrium of the museum, where visitors encounter it again and again while exploring other exhibits. Passersby on the street outside can also see it through the center's large windows.

This shackle ring in the second-floor joist was used to secure male slaves in the pen Slave pen shackle ring.jpg
This shackle ring in the second-floor joist was used to secure male slaves in the pen

The pen was originally owned by Captain John Anderson, a veteran of the Revolutionary War and slave trader. Slaves from the area were transported from Dover, Kentucky to slave markets in Natchez, Mississippi and New Orleans, Louisiana; they were held in this pen for a few days or several months, as he and other traders waited for favorable market conditions and higher selling prices. The pen has eight small windows, the original stone floor and fireplace. On the second floor are a row of wrought iron rings (see photo at right) through which a central chain ran, tethering men on either side. Male slaves were held on the second floor, while women were kept on the first floor, where they used the fireplace for cooking.

"The pen is powerful," says Carl Westmoreland, curator and senior adviser to the museum. "It has the feeling of hallowed ground. When people stand inside, they speak in whispers. It is a sacred place. I believe it is here to tell a story – the story of the internal slave trade to future generations." [2]

Visitors to the museum can walk through the holding pen and touch its walls. The first names of some of the slaves believed to have been held in the pen are listed on a wooden slab in the pen's interior; they were documented in records kept by slave traders who used the pen.

Westmoreland spent three and a half years uncovering the story of the slave jail. Its authentication by him and other historians is considered "a landmark in the material culture of slavery." [2] Westmoreland said,

We're just beginning to remember. There is a hidden history right below the surface, part of the unspoken vocabulary of the American historic landscape. It's nothing but a pile of logs, yet it is everything. [2]

Other features

Prominent features of the Center include:

The Freedom Center's former Executive Director and CEO, John Pepper, was previously the CEO of Procter & Gamble.

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Fossett</span> Former slave (1815–1901)

Peter Farley Fossett was an enslaved laborer at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's plantation, who after he attained his freedom in the mid-19th century, settled in Cincinnati where he established himself as a minister and caterer. He was a captain in the Black Brigade of Cincinnati during the Civil War. Fossett was an activist for education and prison reform. He was a conductor on the Underground Railroad. His remembrances, Once the slave of Thomas Jefferson, were published in 1898.

References

  1. Winternitz, Felix; et al. (2007). Insiders' Guide to Cincinnati. Globe Pequot. pp. ix. ISBN   9780762741809 . Retrieved 2013-05-08.
  2. 1 2 3 4 PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN, "In a Barn, a Piece of Slavery's Hidden Past", New York Times, 6 May 2003
  3. Bauer, Marilyn (August 1, 2004). "Crossing to Freedom' evolved". www.cincinnati.com. Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved 9 March 2015.

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