The Underground Railroad was an informal network of people who helped thousands of African-American slaves escape to freedom. Anti-slavery organizations and Underground Railroad activities were the first integrated social movements in American history.
The old Knox County Jail is home of the Underground Railroad Freedom Station at Knox College. |
The Underground Railroad is a general term that describes the multi-faceted system and efforts of enslaved African Americans to achieve freedom by escaping bondage before the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865. In the middle west, one primary course that fugitives followed headed north, moving up the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, taking freedom seekers through Western Illinois toward Lake Michigan and Canada.
Galesburg and Knox College, located in West Central Illinois, were founded in 1837 by anti-slavery advocates who came to Knox County from upstate New York. The town and College, from their inception, were perceived as most likely the leading down-state center of abolitionism and Underground Railroad activity in Illinois. Though other down-state communities could lay claim to significant anti-slavery and Underground Railroad involvement, what made Galesburg unique was the fact that the overwhelming majority of its citizens, for the first 20 years of its existence, were opposed to the institution of slavery. The anti-slavery influence and Underground Railroad involvement of many Galesburg citizens gradually affected numerous people and communities in a wide circle surrounding the college town.
Galesburg Colony Underground Railroad Freedom Station at Knox College
Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, has been designated a "Freedom Station" by the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. Knox joins a nationwide network of more than 60 stations, with Underground Railroad heritage, that are affiliated with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. The national center is developing a network of sites in the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean, devoted to research and education about the Underground Railroad and anti-slavery movements.
The Galesburg Colony Underground Railroad Freedom Station was recognized in 2006 by the National Park Service Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Program. This designation recognizes the Galesburg station's program as making a significant contribution to the understanding of the Underground Railroad in American history.
Knox has created exhibits on the history of the Underground Railroad in the region and is gathering and preserving documents about the Underground Railroad.
The director of the Underground Railroad Center at Knox College is Owen W. Muelder.
The Knox College Underground Railroad Freedom Station, as viewed from Old Main, the site of the fifth Lincoln-Douglas debate. |
Address:
Old Knox County Jail
337 S. Cherry Street
Galesburg, IL 61401
Hours:
September-May: Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
June-August: Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Closed Saturday and Sunday
Contact:
Owen W. Muelder, Director
309-341-7757
omuelder@knox.edu
Exhibits:
After a serendipitous introduction during move-in day, Christopher Detchessahar '04 and Matt Nagel '04 became fast friends on the soccer field, in the fraternity house, and more recently, in business.
A Chicago television reporter turns to Knox College Psychology Professor Frank McAndrew, an internationally recognized expert on gossip, to find what he thinks about one business's ban on workplace rumors.
Jonathan Katz, former chief correspondent in Haiti for The Associated Press, recounts his experiences as a reporter covering the devastating 2010 earthquake. His lecture was sponsored by the Eleanor Stellyes Center for Global Studies.