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Visitors: 37024
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Written by Debra McCauslin
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Tuesday, 24 February 2009 |
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NEW TOUR in 2009! Echoes from the Past African-American Voices at Gettysburg Every year thousands visit Gettysburg to learn about the battle and how it shaped American history. But visitors seldom hear the story from the point of view of the many local people of color whose lives were irrevocably altered by what happened here. Hear echoes from the past in the voices of African-American citizens of Gettysburg and others who took part in their struggle to end the bondage of centuries and rise to position of common equality. To make tour reservations, contact Debra McCauslin at (717) 528-8553 or
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, or complete and send our email form and we’ll get in touch. Magg Palm, Francis Scott Key, Daniel Payne, William Wright and the Quakers, Thaddeus Stevens, and Frederick Douglass are just a few of the people you’ll meet on your tour. A portion of the proceeds from African-American Voices tours support preservation of local historic sites |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 February 2009 )
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Welcome to Freedom Lies North! |
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Written by Debra McCauslin
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Thursday, 10 May 2007 |
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Thousands visit Gettysburg every year to learn about the effects and aftermath of the Civil War. On your next visit, take some time to learn about a cause of the war. Get acquainted with those who sought freedom and those who fought for it. Some of them lived just north of Gettysburg, in the heart of our scenic fruit belt. See the place where some of Gettysburg's African American community fled during the Confederate Invasion of June and July of 1863. Visit Yellow Hill, see remnants of the African American church and cemetery that existed here at the center of a thriving "colored" community. Learn about the veterans fo the United States Colored Troops who were once buried there. Learn how Yellow Hill got its name. See the historic Menallen Friends Meeting House and learn about the abolitionist Quakers who spoke against slavery prior to the Civil War. Visit the cemetery where prominent Friends, including Cyrus Griest, are buried. Griest aided former Virginia slave Kitty Payne and her children after their 1845 kidnapping. Griest used his connections to Friends below the Mason Dixon Line in Virginia to get her an attorney. She was later freed and returned to Adams County where she later married Gettysburg's Abraham Brien. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 07 September 2007 )
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Underground Railroad Tours are Gettysburg's Newest Attraction |
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Written by Debra McCauslin
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Thursday, 26 July 2007 |
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Gettysburg, PA - July 11, 2007 - There's something new to do while visiting Gettysburg - Underground Railroad Tours of Adams County are underway. The new tour, created and guided by Debra McCauslin, allows visitors to get acquainted with those who sought freedom and those who fought for it. Portions of tour proceeds from the tour are donated to historic preservation.
The tour showcases several people who were involved in the Underground Railroad in Adams County including Gettysburg's Bazil Biggs, Bendersville's Edward Mathews, the founder of the Yellow Hill Settlement and Menallen Township's Cyrus Griest, a Quaker who aided Kitty Payne and her children during their 1845 kidnapping from their Bendersville home. The Quakers who lived near Bendersville were related to and worked with William and Phebe Wright who aided over 1,000 freedom seekers in their York Springs' home.
"The Underground Railroad was a contributing cause of the Civil War and two million visitors come to Gettysburg each year to see the affects of its largest battle. Maybe we could help those visitors understand a cause of the war by talking about the freedom seekers and freedom fighters that once walked on this land prior to that war seeking a free life away from the horrors of slavery," states tour creator and tour guided Debra McCauslin. Stops on the tour include the Yellow Hill Cemetery where a pre-Civil War African American community existed and the Menallen Friends Meetinghouse and cemetery where Quakers still have meetings for worship today. Both were named to the National Park Service's National Network to Freedom in 2006 for their involvement in the Underground Railroad.
Historic Gettysburg Adams County, a member-supported preservation organization assisted Deb McCauslin by crafting an access agreement with a Butler Township landowner to allow foot traffic over private property to see the Yellow Hill Cemetery. The Yellow Hill Cemetery is not open to the public and access is allowed only with a pre-scheduled and pre-approved tour under McCauslin's guidance.
McCauslin is a lifelong Adams County resident and is related to George Washington Sandoe, the first soldier killed at Gettysburg who died near McAllister's Mill which was reputed to be a station on the Underground Railroad. McCauslin is a member of Toastmasters International and she teaches at Harrisburg Area Community College. She has spoken to groups and organizations throughout Pennsylvania, Maryland, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Ohio, and Virginia. The author of Reconstructing the Past Puzzle of a Lost Community at Yellow Hill, Deb donates book sale proceeds, tour proceeds and speaking fees to several local preservation organizations. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 January 2008 )
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