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Home / Crime and Justice / Hidden NYC Passage Reveals Underground Railroad Secret

Hidden NYC Passage Reveals Underground Railroad Secret

12 Feb

•

Summary

  • A secret opening under a dresser was found in a Manhattan house.
  • The passage likely served as a route for enslaved people escaping South.
  • This discovery offers rare physical proof of New York's abolitionist history.
Hidden NYC Passage Reveals Underground Railroad Secret

A concealed opening, found beneath a dresser in a Manhattan row house, has emerged as significant evidence of New York City's role in the Underground Railroad.

The discovery was made within the Merchant's House Museum on East Fourth Street, a historic four-story building. Researchers uncovered the roughly cut, two-by-two-foot shaft in the floorboards, which leads to a vertical space with a ladder descending to the ground floor.

Architectural historian Patrick Ciccone noted that the design was intended to evade slave hunters and city marshals, highlighting the rarity of abolitionist sentiment among wealthy New Yorkers at the time. Joseph Brewster, the house's original builder in 1832, was an abolitionist.

Preservation attorney Michael Hiller described the find as a 'generational' discovery, underscoring its immense importance for historical preservation. City officials emphasize that this physical evidence illuminates New York's contribution to the fight against slavery, a part of history often overshadowed.

The Merchant's House, designated Manhattan's first landmarked building in 1965, now offers crucial insights into this vital, yet often forgotten, period of American history.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
A concealed opening, likely used as part of the Underground Railroad, was discovered beneath a dresser in a Manhattan row house, now the Merchant's House Museum.
The evidence was found in the Merchant's House Museum on East Fourth Street in Manhattan, hidden beneath a dresser on the second floor.
This discovery provides rare physical proof of New York's role in the abolitionist movement and the Underground Railroad, a chapter often overshadowed by events in the South.

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