Inscription
Prior to the Civil War, Ohio was a leading state for enslaved Americans of African decent traveling the Underground Railroad to freedom in Canada. For these fugitives, their final stop in Ohio was a Lake Erie port community in the north. One such port was at the mouth of the Black River in Lorain that came to be identified as Lorain Station 100, named because it was thought to be one of the last stops or stations before the fugitive slaves reached freedom in Canada. Many arrived here in a wagon driven by Robbins Burrell who owned a farm five miles up the Black River. Concealed by vegetables, grains, or hay, the slaves were smuggled into schooners, some of which belonged to Burrell’s cousin Captain Aaron Root. From Lorain Station 100, the determined travelers were transported across Lake Erie, completing the final leg of their long journey to freedom.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Lorain
Wilson Bruce Evans House
Oberlin, OH
The Wilson Bruce Evans House, 33 East Vine Street, is a rare example of a residence built and occupied by an African American...
Toni Morrison, Lorain Native / Toni Morrison, Prize Winning Author
Lorain, OH
Author Toni Morrison was born, Chloe Ardelia Wofford, in Lorain on February 18, 1931.
Ambassador William Graves Sharp
Elyria, OH
William Graves Sharp lived at this location before and after his tenure as Ambassador to France during World War I. He was born to George...
Beach Park Station / Beach Park Station
Avon Lake, OH
From the 1890s to the 1930s, interurban railways were an important form of travel in the Midwest.
Village of South Amherst Town Hall
South Amherst, OH
The Village of South Amherst incorporated in 1918.
