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Voices On The Underground Railroad

Experience captivating stories on the Underground Railroad

The map below shows the actual locations of the Underground Railroad houses where these stories take place.

St. James AME Zion Church

116 Cleveland Ave, Ithaca, NY

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Griffith Cooper House

5825 Rt. 21, Williamson, NY

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Van Houten House

20 Pulteney Street, Geneva, NY

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Cobblestone Farm

3402 West Lake Road, Canandaigua, NY

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Esperanza Mansion

3456 NY-54A, Keuka Park, NY

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Mark's House

1 Mechanic St, Naples, NY

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Seward House

33 South St, Auburn, NY 13021

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The Simeon Dewitt Ferry

Cayuga Lake, NY

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John Ciprich House

1780 Main Street, Burdett, NY 14424

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The Stories

“Voices on the Underground Railroad” is a collection of short fictional narratives that Cornell University students have written and mapped on to documented and rumored underground railroad stations and safe houses in Central and Western New York. More

Mark’s House

Mark’s House

This two-story house in Naples was once the home and funeral parlor of William Marks Jr., who transported slaves in his horse-drawn hearses.

Cobblestone Farm

Cobblestone Farm

According to oral traditions, the freedom seekers were transported to the Cobblestone Farm from Naples, and were then hidden in a secret room in the attic adjacent to the south wall of the house.

Seward House

Seward House

An 1891 newspaper article wrote of the Seward House, “It is said that the old kitchen was one of the most popular stations on the Underground Railroad.”

Simeon Dewitt Ferry

Simeon Dewitt Ferry

The steamer The Simeon DeWitt reportedly transported refugees from Ithaca, at the southern tip of Cayuga Lake, to Cayuga Bridge at the northern end of the lake.

St. James AME Zion Church

St. James AME Zion Church

In 1833 this church was organized by Ithaca’s African-American community. It was the site of many abolitionist meetings and was a station on the Underground Railroad between Elmira and Auburn/Syracuse.

Griffith Cooper House

Griffith Cooper House

This three-story fieldstone house was built by Griffith Cooper, a Quaker and active abolitionist, in 1838. According to oral traditions, fugitive slaves were hidden in a secret chamber in the attic.

John Ciprich House

John Ciprich House

The oldest house in Burdett, John Ciprich House served as the next station on the Underground Railroad route from Mecklenberg for freedom seekers traveling west.

Esperanza Mansion

Esperanza Mansion

The mansion was built in 1838 by its owner, John Nicholas Rose, who built it as a wedding gift for his bride. The name Esperanza is an adaptation of the Latin word for “hope.”

Van Houten House

Van Houten House

When this house was remodeled years ago, a bullet hole was found in the front door. The oral tradition of this place tells that men chasing a freedom seeker fired the shot through the door.