In 1846, John Brown a self-emancipated freedom seeker headed north to the Upper Peninsula rather than cross the Detroit River into Canada. Brown later explained that while in shared captivity with a man named Glasgow, who claimed to be English-born and falsely enslaved, he began to believe, “if I could ever get to England, where he came from, and conducted myself properly, folks would respect me as much as they did a white man.” The prospect gave him hope through many challenging experiences. Born into slavery and raised in the deep south, Brown’s formative years were filled with trauma and loss. Brown eventually escaped to Marshall, Michigan aided by friends from the Underground Railroad network. In Marshall, Brown worked with other freedom seekers to build a church, among them future Ontonagon County mine speculator Noel Johnson. After the church’s last stones were laid, Brown went to Detroit where he “fell in with” a group of migrant Cornish miners led by mining captain Joseph Teague. Teague and his compatriots were in Detroit as they prepared for a voyage to the Copper Country under contract with a Boston-based copper mine investor named Jones. After eighteen months or so of working in the Copper Country, Teague’s party prepared to return to the Captain’s home in Redruth, Cornwall, Great Britain. Brown, recalling his prior companion’s advice, determined to follow him. Brown took a detour to Ontario’s Dawn Settlement, and upon his arrival in Cornwall learned that Joseph Teague died in Boston on the way home. Other Redruth miners of Teague’s party vouched for Brown, providing a letter of recommendation, which wasshared at lectures and, later, published in Brown’s book. Through Brown and his acquaintance Noel Johnson we see Underground Railroad freedom seekers choosing the Copper Country before the end of the Civil War. Do other such stories remain to be told? |
Last updated: February 28, 2024