Freedom Fighters: Civil Resistance and the fight against slavery in Antebellum Syracuse: This presentation examines the work of a small but dedicated group of abolitionists in Syracuse New York, led by Rev. Samuel May and Rev. Jermain Loguen. Loguen, a man who escaped his own enslavement in Tennessee and settled in Syracuse in 1841, became one of the era's most successful and well-known Station Masters on the UGRR. These men and their compatriots helped make Syracuse a center for abolitionist activity and organization and were primary participants in of the era's most significant acts of civil disobedience, the Jerry Rescue, in October 1851. Additionally, the talk will place the efforts of local reformers in the larger national context of the growing sectional controversies over slavery, which ultimately resulted in the Civil War in 1861.
Robert Searing, Onondaga Historical Association, Curator of History
$10 General Admission can be purchased at https://chittenangolanding.networkforgood.com/events/93328-freedom-fighters-civil-resistance-and-the-fight-against-slavery-in-antebellum-syracuse-with-robert-searing
Museum Members and Students are FREE. Please call the museum to reserve free tickets