Cass Morgan, IL-2016 Telco
JACKSONVILLE’S UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
Asa Talcott Home
Asa Talcott was a bricklayer who was known for his participa- tion in the Underground Railroad and devotion to the anti-slavery movement throughout Jacksonville. One night in February 1844, Illinois College students helped a slave fleeing from his pursuers. They found him hiding in a small sub-com- munity of Jacksonville called Africa, where former slaves and free Negroes peacefully existed. As news of the search spread, he was quickly hustled out of the Negro houses across a ropewalk to a hiding place in the hay of Asa Talcott’s barn.
859 Grove Street
photo courtesy of the Jacksonville Area Visitors & Conventions Bureau
Woodlawn Farm
Michael Huffaker established Woodlawn Farm in 1824. Huffaker was a cattle farmer who employed freed Negro laborers. They lived in cabins on the farm. The stately struc- ture is located about five miles east of Jacksonville along the Mauvaisterre Creek, and it was known as one of the safest stations along the Underground Railroad. Runaway slaves traveled along the creek and were hidden in the basement of the home or in cabins with the Negro labor- ers. When the Civil War ended, the identity of the farm as a station along the Underground Railroad remained a secret.
photo courtesy of the Jacksonville Area Visitors & Conventions Bureau
Want to Learn More? Please contact the Jacksonville Area Visitors & Conventions Bureau at 217-243-5678 or 1-800-593-5678. Their website address is www.jacksonvilleil.org .
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