Underground Railroad
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Proper Noun:
- A secret network of routes, safe houses, and individuals (both Black and white) in the United States that helped enslaved African Americans escape to free states and to Canada in the decades before the American Civil War (c. 1830-1860). It was not an actual railroad but a metaphorical system of "conductors," "stations," and "passengers."
Usage Examples
- Proper Noun:
- Harriet Tubman was a famous conductor on the Underground Railroad, leading many to freedom.
- Learning about the Underground Railroad is essential to understanding American history.
- Many Quaker households served as stations on the Underground Railroad.
Advanced Usage
- The term is often used metaphorically to describe any secret network that helps people escape oppression.
- During the war, an Underground Railroad was established to smuggle refugees across the border.
Variants and Related Words
- Underground Railroad (capitalized) is the standard historical term.
- Underground Railway: A less common variant with the same meaning.
Synonyms
- Freedom network
- Escape network
Related Idioms and Phrases
- To conduct on the Underground Railroad: To actively guide or assist escaping individuals.
- She risked her life to conduct on the Underground Railroad.
- A station on the Underground Railroad: A safe house or hiding place.
- Their farm was a station on the Underground Railroad.
Noun
- secret aid to escaping slaves that was provided by abolitionists in the years before the American Civil War