An American Family of the Underground Railroad
The story of one family's experience as safe-house operators on the nation's Underground Railroad, and the family’s twentieth century work in racially integrating important institutions of their country.
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Underground Railroad was a 280-year American phenomenon which served as the boldest and most active foil to slavery. Because the Underground Railroad was clandestine, its safe-house operators and conductors — black and white alike — who ushered people to freedom had to keep their roles hidden. If caught rendering aid to freedom seekers, they could be and were arrested, convicted of interfering with “property rights,” and sentenced. All who rendered aid risked all they had to do so, and some lost all they had for doing so. Because those who rendered aid could still be prosecuted long after the Civil War and the Underground Railroad ended, most took their noble secrets to the grave. One who didn’t was the author’s great-grandfather Marion Michael who could not be prosecuted because he was a minor when he rendered aid. Marion Michael told of his family’s work on the Underground Railroad, and his descendants keep this family history quite alive today. An American Family of the Underground Railroad is told by the actual safe-house operators’ descendant who owns the very farm where his ancestors sheltered freedom seekers. Cooling Springs Farm might be the sole remaining Underground Railroad safe-house in the nation still owned by the same family that used it in Underground Railroad times. An American Family of the Underground Railroad provides to general reader and scholar alike a wealth of detail about more than fifty Underground Railroad sites in a single county with a map of the sites, and identifies several safe-house operators and a key Underground Railroad conductor there. With a bibliography of over 200 sources, this book might be the most thoroughly documented work on any single safe-house. An American Family of the Underground Railroad helps reawaken the nation to its defining heritage of the Underground Railroad.
About the Author
Peter H. Michael is the owner of Cooling Springs Farm, one of the nation’s few still-existing Underground Railroad safe-houses, and is the seventh consecutive generation of his family there. His great-great-grandparents and their children used the farm and its spring house as a haven for Underground Railroad freedom seekers through the end of the Civil War. Mr. Michael and his family have opened Cooling Springs Farm as a historic site for tours and study to the public and to a number of national Underground Railroad and historical organizations. Mr. Michael is a co-founder and officer of Friends of the Underground Railroad, an international organization which promotes the memory of the Underground Railroad and the preservation of remaining Underground Railroad safe-houses and routes.
Peter Michael is the author of Out of This World, an exposé of the United Nations’ failure to adequately assist poor nations in lowering their population growth rates, and is the founder and president of Michael Strategic Analysis, an award-winning firm practicing strategic planning, market analysis, and litigation support. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland which he attended on academic scholarship, took his MBA at the Haas School of Business at the University of California at Berkeley where his thesis was published as the cover story of a magazine of national circulation, and completed a post-graduate program in demography at Princeton University which he attended on a Population Council fellowship.
He is married to Vicki Michael, a painter and civic leader. The couple resides at Cooling Springs Farm near