Inscription
The David and Clarissa Harroun family migrated to Sylvania in 1835 and built their home, and in 1858 the barn, on this site. Four generations of this Harroun family called this property home, from 1835-1938. While here, David, Clarissa, and their son Edwin became involved in aiding fugitive slaves across the Underground Railroad to freedom in Canada. David secretly transported the runaways from Maumee to Sylvania in his lumber wagons. The fugitives were covered in hay, and the wagons were driven at night to avoid detection. Once on Harroun’s property, they were hidden in the attic of the home or the hayloft of the barn. The Lathrop family, who lived on a farm to the west, helped the Harrouns by hiding fugitives in the basement of their home. From Sylvania, the runaways were taken to Bedford, Petersburg, or Monroe in Michigan where they were then transported toward Detroit for their crossing into Canada.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Lucas
Sisters of St. Francis of Sylvania, Ohio
Sylvania, OH
In 1916, Bishop of Toledo Joseph Schrembs requested that the Sisters of Saint Francis, Rochester, Minnesota, send nuns to work with...
The Sight Center of Northwest Ohio
Toledo, OH
Joseph F. Clunk, a blind Ohioan and an advocate for workforce development, inspired Toledo leaders in 1923 to serve their blind community.
Ella P. Stewart (1893-1987) / Stewart’s Pharmacy (1922-1945)
Toledo, OH
Ella Nora Phillips Myers Stewart was one of the first practicing Black women pharmacists in the United States.
Ward’s Canal
To utilize the area’s rich timber stands, Detroit industrialist Eber Brock Ward (1811-1875) built a canal around 1870 in what was then...
Willys-Overland Finishing Plant
Toledo, OH
Willys-Overland Finishing Plant.
