Page:The Under-Ground Railroad.djvu/127

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been quite willing to have squared accounts with them by giving them the horses and wagon. They searched in vain for their live stock; though we dared not move with the fugitives until the excitement had somewhat abated there; and many others found their way to Canada without much trouble. It is with grief and much pain, after all our carefulness, that we lose some of our fugitives; the northern judges deliver them up to the claimants and they reluctantly go back in bondage. In 1853, in the state of Pennsylvania, twenty-six were delivered up to the claimants, as the report of the Anti-Slavery Society of that year shows. A slave, named Jerry, was rescued from prison in Syracuse, New York, October 1851, and at the sitting of a United States court, at Buffalo, twenty or thirty persons were indicted for having participated in the rescue. Last year, a fugitive Slave was arrested in Oberlin, Ohio, by being decoyed out of town, then seized by the United States marshal, and he was immediately on his way to slavery. The news spread like lightning, and the citizens lost no time in following these men-stealers, and at a distance of ten miles overtook them. The Slave was put in the house of a Democrat for safe keeping. The company informed the proprietor as well as the Slaveholder that they wanted the Slave, and intended to have him, peaceably