Eliza Harris
was the slave of Thomas Davis who owned a plantation near
Dover, Kentucky, about ten miles south of the Ohio River,
and almost directly across from Ripley, Ohio. This female
slave had learned that her master had arranged to sell her
to another southern plantation. Some accounts of Eliza's
story say she was a mulatto, others state she was a quadroon,
meaning she was one quarter Black. Irregardless, all accounts
claim she was strikingly beautiful, with long flowing black
hair, dark eyes and fair skin. An attractive, fair-skinned
female slave was a prized commodity on southern plantations.
She could be a housekeeper, a servant for the mistress and
a concubine to the master.
In the year 1838,
shortly before she was to be taken to jail to wait for the
slave wagon to take her further south, she grabbed her youngest
child and ran. She knew if she could get across the Ohio
River her chances of escape would greatly increase. She
thought the river would be frozen over but when she reached
its bank at daybreak she found that the ice had broken up.
Seeking refuge from the cold she took her chances and went
to a nearby cabin, where she was provided with shelter and
food by a sympathetic White man. After being there for a
while she heard the baying of dogs, which she knew were
on her trail. She grabbed her child and ran to the river,
with the dogs and slave catchers close behind. In desperation
she went onto the broken ice and jumped from ice flow to
ice flow until exhausted she reached the other side. Out
of nowhere came a hand that pulled her up the bank. The
helping hand was that of Chance Shaw, one of the Ohio Patrol.
Chance Shaw helped her to her feet stating, "any woman
who crossed that river carrying her baby has won her freedom."
He then guided her to the house of John Rankin. It was decided
it wasn't safe for her to stay there the night so after
being provided with warm clothing and food she was transported
from station to station until she reached the house of Levi
Coffin in Newport, where she remained for several days.
Coffin sent her to the Black settlement near Greenville
and from there she was transported to Sandusky, Ohio. In
the meantime, to elude slave catchers, her hair had been
cut and she was dressed as a man and her young son had been
dressed as a girl. They successfully boarded a steamboat
in Sandusky and were transported across Lake Erie to Canada.
Her first landing on Canadian soil was on Pelee Island and
she eventually settled in Chatham, Ontario. About fifteen
years later Levi Coffin and his wife were visiting Chatham
in Canada West. While attending a Black church meeting they
ran into Eliza. They visited her at her house in Chatham
and found her comfortable and contented.
This is just
one story of the many, about fugitive slaves who found freedom
and dignity in Canada. Eliza Harris had obtained a one way
ticket aboard the Underground Railroad by way of the Great
Lakes.
Submitted by
Spencer Alexander
Sources:
His Promised Land - Stuart Seely Sprague
The Mysteries of Ohio's Underground Railroad - Wilbur Henry
Siebert
The Underground Railroad - Blockson Prince Hall Press 1987
Goodbye to Uncle Tom - J.C. Furnas
Seek the Truth - Gwendolyn Robinson and John Robinson
From Slavery to Freedom - John Hope Franklin