Sara Lucy Bagby (1843 – July 14, 1906) was the last person in the United States forced to return to slavery in the South under the Fugitive Slave Act. Born in the early 1840s in Virginia, she eventually escaped slavery via the Underground Railroad and made her way to Cleveland, Ohio, in a free state. In January 1861, she was pursued by her owners, William Goshorn and his son, and arrested by a U.S. Marshall. After the Emancipation Proclamation, Bagby walked to Pittsburgh to leave the South. She eventually resettled in Cleveland, where she died in 1906 and was buried.
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| - Sara Lucy Bagby (es)
- Sara Lucy Bagby (en)
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| - Sara Lucy Bagby (1843 - 14 de julio de 1906) fue la última persona en Estados Unidos devuelta a la esclavitud en el Sur después de haber huido al norte, en virtud de la Ley de esclavos fugitivos de 1850, que establecía que las personas esclavizadas que habían escapado a un estado o territorio que no reconocía la esclavitud debían ser devueltas y entregadas a petición de los que tuvieran el "derecho de propiedad" en su estado de origen. Tras la Proclamación de Emancipación de 1863, se dirigió a Pittsburgh y se instaló en Cleveland, donde fallecería. (es)
- Sara Lucy Bagby (1843 – July 14, 1906) was the last person in the United States forced to return to slavery in the South under the Fugitive Slave Act. Born in the early 1840s in Virginia, she eventually escaped slavery via the Underground Railroad and made her way to Cleveland, Ohio, in a free state. In January 1861, she was pursued by her owners, William Goshorn and his son, and arrested by a U.S. Marshall. After the Emancipation Proclamation, Bagby walked to Pittsburgh to leave the South. She eventually resettled in Cleveland, where she died in 1906 and was buried. (en)
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| - Sara Lucy Bagby (1843 - 14 de julio de 1906) fue la última persona en Estados Unidos devuelta a la esclavitud en el Sur después de haber huido al norte, en virtud de la Ley de esclavos fugitivos de 1850, que establecía que las personas esclavizadas que habían escapado a un estado o territorio que no reconocía la esclavitud debían ser devueltas y entregadas a petición de los que tuvieran el "derecho de propiedad" en su estado de origen. Bagby nació a principios de la década de 1840 en el estado de Virginia en la esclavitud. Escapó de la propiedad de sus dueños a través de la red clandestina denominada el Ferrocarril subterráneo y se dirigió a Cleveland, en Ohio. Fue perseguida por sus propietarios, William Goshorn y su hijo, y arrestada en enero de 1861 por un miembro del Cuerpo de Alguaciles. A pesar de los intentos de intervención del gobierno estatal y de los ciudadanos de Cleveland -incluido un supuesto enfrentamiento armado en un juzgado- fue devuelta a Wheeling, en Virginia. Este episodio constituye el tema de un poema de Frances Harper, titulado To the Cleveland Union-Savers. Tras la Proclamación de Emancipación de 1863, se dirigió a Pittsburgh y se instaló en Cleveland, donde fallecería. (es)
- Sara Lucy Bagby (1843 – July 14, 1906) was the last person in the United States forced to return to slavery in the South under the Fugitive Slave Act. Born in the early 1840s in Virginia, she eventually escaped slavery via the Underground Railroad and made her way to Cleveland, Ohio, in a free state. In January 1861, she was pursued by her owners, William Goshorn and his son, and arrested by a U.S. Marshall. Despite the state government's and citizens of Cleveland's attempts to intervene—including a purported dramatic armed standoff in a courtroom—she was transported back to Goshorn's property in Wheeling, then still part of Virginia. This episode forms the subject of a poem by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, titled "To the Cleveland Union-Savers". After the Emancipation Proclamation, Bagby walked to Pittsburgh to leave the South. She eventually resettled in Cleveland, where she died in 1906 and was buried. (en)
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