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Indiana
A
National Historic Landmark, Eleutherian College was constructed between
1854 and 1856, and was the first college in Indiana to admit students
without regard to race or gender. Some of the college's trustees were
among the most active participants in the Underground Railroad in and
around Lancaster. From the Greek Eleutheros' meaning "freedom
and equality," the school embodied its founders antislavery
sentiments, and the school's location, atop the highest hill in the
area, was a physical
and symbolic statement of the community's beliefs. Continuing to operate
as a private, coeducational secondary school until the mid-1880s,
the
college was purchased by Lancaster Township in 1888 and used as a public
school until 1938. Today, Eleutherian College Classroom and Chapel
Building
stands vacant.
Lancaster
was a known stop for fugitive slaves traveling from Madison, Indiana to
Indianapolis. Three of Eleutherian's trustees, Samuel Tibbetts, Lyman
Hoyt, and James Nelson, were frequently mentioned in connection with the
Underground Railroad and its efforts in the vicinity of Lancaster and
Madison. James Nelson was arrested by a local sherrif under the Indiana
Fugitive Slave Act of 1851 for "encouraging Negroes to come into
the state." Judge Stephen C. Stevens, sympathetic to the antislavery
cause, had the case thrown out of court.
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MICHIGAN
INDIANA
OHIO
PENNSYLVANIA
NEW
YORK
VERMONT
MAIN
MASSACHUSETTS
CONNECTICUT
NEW
JERSEY
DELAWARE
COLUMBIA
MARYLAND
VIRGINIA
FLORIDA
RAILROADMAP

TIMELINE
RUNAWAY
SPIRITUALS
CANADA
FREE
BLACKS
HENRY
BROWN
ELLEN
CRAFT
SUPPORTER
CODE
WORDS
QUILTS
ANTISLAVERY
TOM
S CABIN
GOURD
SONG

TIMELINE
INTRODUCTION
COLONIAL
ERA
THE
CHALLENGE
ANTEBELLUM
SECTIONAL
EMANCIPATION
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