Wisconsin Historical Marker identifying the site of the original court house and jail where Joshua Glover was rescued by a mob of 5,000 people, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Joshua Glover was a fugitive slave from St. Louis, Missouri who sought asylum in Racine, Wisconsin in 1852. Upon learning his whereabouts in 1854, slave owner Bennami Garland attempted to use the Fugitive Slave Act to recover him. Glover was captured and taken to a Milwaukee jail. A mob incited by Sherman Booth broke into the jail and rescued Glover, who then escaped to Canada via the Underground Railroad. The rescue of Glover and the federal government's subsequent attempt to prosecute Booth helped to galvanize the abolitionist movement in the state that eventually led to Wisconsin becoming the only state to declare the Act unconstitutional.[1]
A Wisconsin Historical Marker at Cathedral Square Park in Milwaukee marks the site of the original court house and jail where Joshua Glover was imprisoned by federal marshals, and later rescued by a mob of 5,000 people. Efforts are underway to create a park monument which meets the National Park Service's requirements for an official National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom site.
Contents
1See also
2References
3Further reading
4External links
See also
Jerry Rescue
List of slaves
References
^Wisconsin Historical Society. Glover, Joshua, in Dictionary of Wisconsin History.
Further reading
Baker, H. Robert. The Rescue of Joshua Glover: A Fugitive Slave, the Constitution and the Coming of the Civil War Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2006.
Jackson, Ruby West and Walter T. McDonald. "Finding Freedom: The Untold Story of Joshua Glover, Runaway Slave". Wisconsin Magazine of History, vol. 90, no. 3 (Spring 2007), pp. 48–52.
External links
Rescue of Joshua Glover
Group seeks to remember rescued slave
Joshua Glover's 1854 Journey on the Underground Railroad: As Told by One of His Conductors, Chauncy C. Olin
Wisconsin Court System
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Underground Railroad
People
William L. Chaplin
Levi Coffin
Richard Dillingham
Calvin Fairbank
Thomas Garrett
Laura Smith Haviland
Daniel Hughes
William Cooper Nell
Harriet Forten Purvis
Robert Purvis
John Rankin
Hetty Reckless
Gerrit Smith
William Still
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Charles Turner Torrey
Sojourner Truth
Harriet Tubman
Frances Harper
Delia Webster
Places
List of Underground Railroad sites
houses
churches
Levi Coffin House
Bialystoker Synagogue
Bilger's Rocks
Wilson Bruce Evans House
Cyrus Gates Farmstead
Sites in Indiana
Allen Chapel
Town Clock Church
Kelton House
F. Julius LeMoyne House
John Rankin House
Gerrit Smith Estate
John Freeman Walls Historic Site
Events
Pearl incident (1848)
Jerry Rescue (1851)
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852 book)
Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp (1856 book)
Oberlin–Wellington Rescue (1858)
Thirteenth Amendment (1865)
Topics
Songs of the Underground Railroad
Abolitionism in the United States
Abolitionism
opponents of slavery
African-American opponents
publications
Fugitive slaves
Fugitive slave laws
1850
Quilts
Signals
lawn jockey
Slave catcher
The Underground Railroad Records (1872 book)
Related
Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park
Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad State Park
visitor center
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
Harriet Tubman Memorial (Boston)
Negro Fort
The Railroad to Freedom: A Story of the Civil War (1932 book)
A Woman Called Moses (1978 miniseries)
Roots of Resistance (1989 documentary)
The Quest for Freedom (1992 film)
Freedom: The Underground Railroad (2013 board game)
Underground (2016 TV series)
See also: Slavery in the United States and Slavery in Canada
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