HISTORY · HISTORICAL MARKER
Dr. James Anderson House
Rockville, Maryland · 100 South Washington Street
History
2
Before the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, some enslaved people freed themselves by escaping to Canada. In 1856, Alfred Homer walked and ran more than 500 miles from this site to freedom despite the dangers of the Fugitive Slave Law. Dr. James Anderson's house stood on this site before the present 1893 house built by his daughter. On May 31, 1856, Alfred Homer escaped bondage by fleeing Rockville on foot, finding temporary refuge with the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee and finally gaining freedom in Canada. The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 required the return of runaway slaves even from the non-slavery northern states, and being caught meant severe punishment or being sold into worse conditions in the Deep South.
PHOTOS
Photo: Allen C. Browne
Photo: Allen C. Browne
Photo: Allen C. Browne
Photo: Allen C. Browne
Photo: Allen C. Browne
Photo: Tom Fuchs
Photo: Allen C. Browne
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Rockville, Maryland · USA
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