Showing posts with label underground railroad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underground railroad. Show all posts

2/02/2012

Michigan Underground Railroad Tour

It is alleged that the Munro House Bed and Breakfast in Jonesville Michigan was a Station on the Underground Railroad. There is no written documentation--as it was an illegal activity--but local legend insists that the stories are true. Runaway slaves from the South would funnel through Michigan to get to the furthest Southern point of Canada which is near Detroit. The Sauk Trail was a well travelled path that led across Southern Michigan to Detroit. Jonesville is situated in the middle of the state along the trail. Munro House has a portion of what is left of a 200 foot long tunnel, along with a pair of secret rooms that are only accessible through a panel in the first floor ceiling. The evidence points to the distinct possibility that the legend is fact.

February is Black History Month. The local elementary school traditionally sends all of its 4th grade students to tour Munro House. We give a great tour and talk about the Underground Railroad, the history of Jonesville, and life in the mid 1800's. We like to split the classes into groups of about 20 students and schedule them throughout the month--we only charge $1 per person. Individuals and small groups can also take the tour for $5 per person. All tours are by appointment only and can be scheduled at any time.

Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
1-800-320-3792
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

11/21/2011

Jonesville MI B&B Feature in National Publication

The Conde Nast Traveler featured the Munro House, a Jonesville Michigan B&B, in the Daily Traveler section.

Five Fascinating Underground Railroad Bed-and-Breakfasts  

History buffs, take heart. A National Park honoring Harriet Tubman could open as early as 2013 in Auburn, New York, and Dorchester County, Maryland, thanks to legislation that finally passed the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee last Thursday (lawmakers rejected the bill on its first two go-arounds, in 2008 and 2009). If the full senate OKs the measure, the parks will preserve 32 acres of historic properties in Auburn, including Tubman’s home, and build a visitor center in Dorchester County, where Tubman was born. Can’t wait another year? There are dozens of Underground Railroad stations-turned-B&Bs where you can explore the trap doors, secret passageways, and sly escape routes that transported slaves to freedom in the North.

1852 Hall Place B&B, Glasgow, Kentucky: Mother Nature herself supplied the escape route at Hall Place: A string of caverns, accessible from the house, lead to an above-ground spring. Original homeowner Judge Christopher Tompkins once taught Abraham Lincoln, was an ardent supporter of the Underground Railroad, and supplied lifetime care for each of his own slaves in his will.

Ashley Manor, Barnstable, Massachusetts: Ashley Manor, built in 1699, has been on both sides of history: As a Revolutionary War hideout for Tories and as an Underground Railroad stop in the nineteenth century. Slaves were thought to have used a secret passageway connecting the upstairs and downstairs to escape via the cellar.

Samuel Fitch House, Westford, Massachusetts: Two spaces offered slaves refuge in this Massachusetts home: A tunnel beneath the house, and a warm hideout next to the chimney, hidden behind a removeable wall in a bedroom closet.

Munro House, Jonesville, Michigan: A ceiling entrance conceals a basement room large enough for 12 adults in the Munro House, which is believed to have sheltered some 400 runaway slaves seeking safety and freedom in nearby Canada.

Great Valley House of Valley Forge, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania: A tunnel from the main house originally intended to store vegetables became an important hideout for fleeing slaves in the nineteenth century. Today, two green doors at the entrance commemorate the history.

Photographs courtesy of the properties

Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

9/16/2011

Home School Tour Underground Railroad Site

2 families of home schooled children made an appointment to tour my house today. The youngsters seemed fascinated with my stories of early Michigan history, progress in Jonesville, the tale of the Privy Digger, and my tour of the oldest house in Hillsdale County. The Munro House has a connection to the Underground Railroad. The kids enjoyed a walk through the tunnel that slaves may have used on their trip to freedom and a description with photos of our Secret Room in which runaway slaves had allegedly spent time on their way to freedom in Canada. I give a 45-60 minute tour for a nominal fee that children and adults seem to enjoy.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

3/23/2011

An Underground Railroad of History

The Hillsdale College Newspaper "The Collegian" interviewed me and wrote a nice article about the Munro House and its connection to the Underground Railroad.





Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

2/06/2011

B&Bs have ties to Underground Railroad from Michigan to Florida - MSNBC Article

More than a bed: B&Bs have ties to Underground Railroad - By Tanya Mohn - MSNBC - 02/01/2011



Relive history by staying at places thought to have been 'stations' or safe houses

The Munro House bed and breakfast in Jonesville, Mich., has a 100-foot tunnel that was used as part of the Underground Railroad during slavery times and a trap door from the basement to a secret room between the first and second floors. "If you didn't know it was there, you could never find it," said innkeeper Mike Venturini.

Secret rooms. Hidden passageways. Trap doors. An underground escape route through a network of caves, surfacing at a nearby spring. Sounds like a James Bond movie, but these clandestine places actually exist in (or under) dozens of America’s oldest homes.

Today, many are bed & breakfasts and everyone from history buffs to school children can relive history — especially during Black History month, which begins Feb. 1 — by staying at places thought to have been “stations” or safe houses on the Underground Railroad, an informal network that helped slaves escape to freedom.

Bringing it home

“It is kind of special to be so close to history,” said Vince Toreno, innkeeper at Ashley Manor Bed and Breakfast, in Barnstable, Mass., built in 1699, where a secret passageway connects the first and second floors to the attic. “Staying in a room so close to where a runaway slave might have been hiding and thinking ‘Am I going to live through until tomorrow? What’s going to happen to me?,’” Toreno said, “personalizes it, it brings it home.”

Visitors can see a ladder behind a secret panel in the Queen Charlotte Suite where the passageway begins, and a bookcase that swings open to reveal it in the King George Suite, on the second floor.

The Munro House, in Jonesville, Mich., has the remains of a 100-foot-long tunnel and a trap door from the basement to a secret room between the first and second floors. “If you didn’t know it was there, you could never find it,” said Mike Venturini, innkeeper, who regales guests with stories of how more than 400 runaway slaves allegedly hid in the secret room during a 15-year period on their way to Canada.

“Kids just love being in places out of the ordinary,” said Jared Maxwell, a teacher at nearby Williams Elementary School, where each year some 100 fourth grade students visit.

Lynne Smithwood grew up in the Samuel Fitch House in Westford, Mass., and with her five brothers played hide and seek in a basement tunnel believed to have been part of an escape route. Smithwood, now the innkeeper, said her childhood bedroom has a walk-in closet with a movable bookshelf that disguises a space where, according to family lore, slaves hid next to the warmth of the chimney. When she takes young guests exploring, “I give flashlights and big paintbrushes, to make sure there are no cobwebs in the way,” she said.

Educational overnight stays


The history was a surprise to Michael Rader, of Brookline, Mass., who stayed at the Samuel Fitch House recently with his daughter, Gavriel, 7, and son Adriel, 5. “We didn’t know anything about the house until we got there,” said Rader, who chose it because of its proximity to the Nashoba Valley Ski Area. “It was great,” especially for the children, who had “not yet been exposed to the Civil War or slavery,” he said. “We all learned something.”

Some B&Bs were not stations but are near historic sites, like the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center in Connecticut, the Harriet Tubman Museum in Maryland, and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati — built near the Ohio River, a popular route for escaping slaves.

Pennsylvania had many stops on the Underground Railroad, as Quakers were active participants. Visitors to the Lancaster area can attend "Living the Experience," a spiritually inspired interactive re-enactment at the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church. “We try to highlight the role of faith and the church,” and to portray the strength and courage of the slaves who fled, said the Reverend Edward M. Bailey, the church’s pastor.

If you go ...

Bedandbreakfast.com has a list of B&Bs thought to have been stations on the Underground Railroad or near historic sites.

For information about the Underground Railroad, visit freedomcenter.org.

The lessons of the Underground Railroad can help people today overcome adversity and become agents of change, said Katie Johnson, public programs manager at The Freedom Center, which recently opened a permanent exhibit, “Invisible: Slavery Today.” “Some of the numbers are shocking: between 12 and 27 million people are thought to be enslaved today,” Johnson said, including 17,500 people trafficked into the United States each year.

Many spaces where runaway slaves hid were originally built to store guns, hide valuables, or function as root cellars. Some spaces were thought to be hiding places during Indian raids or the Revolutionary War.

Reinforcing history's important lessons

Because they were rarely built solely to help slaves, “it makes it very difficult to tell whether or not a home was a station on the Underground Railroad,” Johnson said, adding, “historical accounts backed by contemporary research have shown that there are many examples of these features being used for hiding escaping slaves.”

Some innkeepers say they have little if any proof that their B&Bs were once stations, but dates and ownership provide important clues.

Venturini, innkeeper of the Munro House, said the deed shows that the house was built during an active time of Underground Railroad activity in the pre-Civil War period by George Clinton Munro, a known abolitionist, and newspapers accounts of the era serve as further documentation.

“It’s exceedingly difficult to separate out what’s true and what’s not” said Ian Finseth, associate professor of English at the University of North Texas, specializing in 19th century American and African American literature.

While scholarship is important, visiting places where slaves may have stayed can reinforce important lessons of history. “By imagining the ghosts of people who didn’t make it and walking in the footsteps of people who did,” guests can “feel the human qualities of history,” said Finseth, who is also editor of “The Underground Railroad: Authentic Narratives and First-Hand Accounts,” a new abridged version of a book by William Still, originally published in 1872.

Pattye Benson, innkeeper of the Great Valley House of Valley Forge, Pa., recounted how such a visit once impacted a guest from Colorado, an elected official, who had her photo taken in front of the remains of a former tunnel believed to have sheltered slaves moving north. The woman used the photo for holiday cards, which she mailed to constituents. “She was really moved by the experience,” said Benson, who tells the house’s history to guests over breakfast in front of the walk-in fireplace, built circa 1690 (no cell phones allowed). “It was almost a sense of triumph.”

Debunking myths

Some B&Bs tell stories of how quilts were laid out to air but would also signal the home as a “safe house,” and how the interlocking patterns were coded maps to direct slaves.

But James O. Horton, professor emeritus of American studies and history at George Washington University, and other historians say the legend has been debunked. “There may have been some incident when someone, somewhere, used a quilt as a signal, but there is no historical evidence that there were elaborate quilt codes that helped many people escape from slavery.”

At the Amelia Island Williams House, in Fernandina Beach, Fla., a secret room, once accessible from a trap door in the dining room, is closed up now. But Deborah McCutchen, innkeeper, relishes telling guests how an earlier owner was “friends” with Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy during the Civil War. “While Davis may have been dining at the dinner table, slaves hid in the safe room,” she said.

In addition to learning about the Underground Railroad, many B&Bs offer other activities. Guests at the Williams House can visit the local museum, housed in an old jail, take horse-driven carriage rides to see the historic homes built in the 1800s, and walk to the nearby seaport. “It’s like taking all the historical parts of Savannah and Charleston and just putting them on a little island,” McCutchen said. “It’s just so beautiful.”

see the original article at © 2011 msnbc.com.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

1/31/2011

Michigan Underground Railroad Secret Room Tour

I live in a house in Southern Michigan that was used as an Underground Railroad Station. The original house is a 2 story wood framed Salt Box that was constructed in 1834. It is the oldest house in Hillsdale County. George Munro bought it and then started adding on. He attached a 3 story brick framed Greek Revival style home to the East side of the original structure. The new construction began in 1840 and was completed in 1848. The final portion of the house was designed to contain a secret room.

There is only one way in and one way out of the secret room. It is through a trap door in the ceiling of a room that is now being used as a bathroom. The secret room is about 20 feet long, 6 feet wide, and 5 feet tall. There is a wall with a door that divides the space into 2 separate rooms.  Local lore claims that over 400 runaways spent some time with the Munro's on their way to freedom across the Detroit River to Canada. 
 This space has no windows, no air ducts, and no heat.  I rarely go up there because at some point someone decided to fill it with blown insulation.  To open the trap door results in the outpouring of what feels like fiberglass. It is very itchy on the skin. The accumulation of years of dust and airborne fiberglass particles make it an uncomfortable place to try to breathe for a prolonged period of time. In over a decade of residence, I have only ventured into the secret room a handful of times.

 Before the insulation was blown in, I am sure that it was a much more comfortable place to hide. There is room for a dozen or more people to gather or lie down in reasonable comfort. The secret room is hidden in what is basically an attic on the second floor of a three story building! The timing is right for the use of this space as a hiding place for runaway slaves for the 15 years preceding the American Civil War.

 The building has been known as the Munro House for almost 2 centuries. George Munro was a pillar of the community having a hand in several businesses including a grist mill, foundry, and hotel. He was also a fur trader and contractor for the Michigan Southern Railroad. He was appointed Brigadier General of the Munro Guard of Jonesville, was involved in government and politics on several levels, and was one of the most prominent Masons in the state of Michigan.

Munro House became the first bed and breakfast in Jonesville, Michigan, in 1985. The innkeepers welcome tour groups to hear the stories of the early settlement, its important location on the Old Sauk Trail, and the Underground Railroad connection. Martin Luther King Day and Black History Month are typical dates when schools can schedule a 45 minute tour of the historic home and the stories it holds.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

1/24/2011

Michigan Underground Railroad Tunnel Tour

I live in a house in Michigan with a tunnel that was used on the Underground Railroad. Local lore claims that over 400 runaway slaves came here to seek shelter over a 15 year period preceding the American Civil War. Jonesville is located  about 100 miles from Canada's furthest Southern point and easiest crossing point--the Detroit River near Windsor, Canada. A runaway slave seeking the shortest route between the Deep South and Canada would certainly have traveled into Michigan to get to Canada. However, at a time before good maps and GPS, getting lost and crossing into Canada via Minnesota, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine was a common occurrence.

Take yourself back in time and put yourself in a position where the color of your skin makes you immediately suspect of being a runaway slave. This immediate recognition would force you to avoid civilization and take an overland route at night following the stars to avoid capture. Uneducated black folk would need to use their wits to make it all the way to Canada. To travel 10 miles under these circumstances in a 12 hour period of darkness would be a great undertaking.  Taking a zig zag course north by foot at night could take up to 2 years to reach freedom outside of the United States.

Along the way, food and shelter could be found by abolitionists and good people who disapproved of owning people as slaves.  Finding these helpful locations was broadcast by subtle symbols and markings on farms and in communities that were willing to help the slaves get away. This path was cryptically known as the underground railroad, the safe houses were referred to as stations, and the people who helped them were called conductors. Many of the homes that were used as stations used hand made quilts with specific patterns embroidered into them to communicate a safe route, food, shelter plus other hints and warnings.

Munro House in Jonesville still uses 20 feet of a stone walled tunnel that ran underneath the wood framed portion of the historic house. The tunnel is about 7 feet high and about 4 feet wide. It was once over 200 feet long. It is said to have connected the basement of the brick framed portion of the Munro House with the remote carriage house that was near the St. Joseph River.  The remains of the tunnel are now being used as a landing to the basement.  

It is thought that as the runaways followed the St. Joseph River, they were to look for the safe house in Jonesville.  Upon identifying the Munro House and possibly mingling with the Negro servants under employment of George Munro, they were able to enter the carriage house and be undetected as they made their way into the secret room of the Munro House where they could eat and rest and obtain instructions of where to seek additional help for the remainder of their journey.

In the 1950's, a fire burned down a portion of the wood framed home.  The adjoining property that held the carriage house was sold.  The need to keep the properties connected by tunnel was no longer needed. The largest portion of the tunnel was filled in and a slab of cement was poured to form a sturdy foundation for the rebuilding of the damaged section of the house.  The part of the tunnel underneath the unburned portion of the house was kept to use as a landing to gain interior access to the basement.

Local schools schedule tours of the house around Martin Luther King Day, Black History Month, or when their curriculum focuses on the Civil War or local history. A 45 minute tour can be scheduled on most any school day.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

1/05/2011

Martin Luther King Day Special Deal

Martin Luther King (MLK) day is a holiday that is celebrated on Monday January 17 in 2011. MLK day is one of those holidays that banks, the post office, and the government give their employees a day off of work to create a 3 day weekend. But to many laborers, it's just another Monday.

The Munro House is a Southern Michigan Bed and Breakfast that offers special pricing on MLK weekend to allow time for a winter getaway. Folks who are able to make it a long weekend can get a room on Sunday January 16 for as low as $49 when they stay Saturday night. Optionally, any 2 night getaway package is available for $100 off when it includes Sunday night.

With a staff of on-call masseusses and cosmetologists, masssage and spa services are available 7 days a week. With a nice selection of restaurants in the area, there are plenty of choices for lunches and dinners. Winter getaway packages have many options for spa and romance.

The Munro House connection to the Undergound Railroad makes this an educational opportunity as well as a getaway. The remains of the tunnel and the secret room that was used to shelter hundreds of runaway slaves are great subjects of interest to historians and folks tracing their roots.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

6/29/2010

Underground Railroad Tunnel is Still a Safe Place During a Tornado Warning

We have regular tornado watches and an occasional tornado warning, but a devastating tornado has not hit Hillsdale County since the 1960's.  The locals are still talking about that fateful Palm Sunday when 2 tornados landed and pretty much wiped out all of the homes on Baw Beese Lake.

It's a good thing that our house was once an Underground Railroad Station. The remains of the tunnel that the runaway slaves used is now a landing to our basesment and is easily the safest place in the house when a tornado warning is in effect.  It is a stone wall corridor that measures about 4 feet wide, 7 feet high, and 20 feet long. 

My wife and I took shelter in the tunnel this past week when the local weather service issued a tornado warning. Our guests were away, so we left a note for them to join us if they arrived home before the warning expired.  There were heavy winds that knocked down some branches and ravaged a few trees here and there, but no extreme damage.  We were safe in our Underground Railroad Tunnel.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

5/19/2010

Underground Railroad History of Jonesville MI Tour by Williams Elementary School

The 4th grade students at Williams Elementary School in Jonesville, Michigan, take an annual field trip to tour the Munro House Bed and Breakfast. Legend has it that Munro House was once used as a Station on the Underground Railroad and hid over 400 runaway slaves for at least one day on their journey to freedom in Canada. The tour can last from 20 to 45 minutes--depending on time constraints. 
The elementary school students are invited to walk into what is left of a tunnel that was once over 150 feet long. Only about 30 feet of the tunnel remains and it is currently used as a landing to the basement.  Additionally, Munro House has a secret room that allegedly hid hundreds of runaway slaves over a 15 year period preceeding the American Civil War. A photo array shows several views of the hideaway that is large enough for thirty 4th graders to stand in. Unfortunately, to let 30 kids go up there would be an exercise in futility.  Only 2 people have been up there in the last 11 years.  The pictures are a much better alternative.
The Munro House can arrange tours of the house for various size groups.  Thirty kids or twenty adults at a time would be about the limit. Weekdays are preferred and Sunday afternoons are O.K., by appointment only. A group of 53 car club enthusiasts are coming by in waves next month. They love their old cars and they enjoy the historic tales of cool old buildings, too.
In addition to the tales of the Underground Railroad, the tour guides also tell about the history of Jonesville, early pioneers in Hillsdale County, and the tribe of Pottawatomie Indians who originally lived in the area. It happens that George Munro, the namesake for the house, was a local politician, businessman, and entrepreneur with many interesting stories of early Michigan settlers and politics. The legacy of his deeds are some of the foundations upon which Jonesville was built. Munro House has historic significance because it is the oldest house in Hillsdale County (circa 1834) and has a "new" addition that is the first brick building in Hillsdale County (1840).


Mike Venturini - Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"

2/25/2010

Elementary School Tour of Historic Home

The Munro House Bed and Breakfast is a historic home in downtown Jonesville, Michigan, that arranges private tours and shares tales of our local history. This pre Civil War home (1834) has a link to the Underground Railroad. The original owner, Brigadier General George Clinton Munro, was a pillar of the community and was very active in business and politics of the day. 
Every overnight guest gets to hear about the history of our house, and the family that owned it for over a hundred years.  We have also led many tours to private groups like Elder Hostel, the Red Hat Society, and elementary schools form all around Hillsdale County.  I try to keep it interesting and fact-filled.
This week, as a field trip for a group of local 5th graders, we are giving tours and telling stories about the early pioneers and the runaway slave route through Southern Michigan. The kids seem to be very interested in this piece of American history that has a link to our community.  They like being in this big old house,  walking into our stone walled tunnel, and viewing photographs of our secret room that was used to hide runaway slaves during the Underground Railroad era.
I would like the groups to be no larger than 15 adults or 25 children.  In the case of many schools, that means that I may have to offer several tours over several days and times to accommodate an entire class.  It also makes for a nice size group to take into what's left of our tunnel.

There are many great old houses in almost every city in America.  Most are private residences and are not open to the public on a regular basis.  The Munro House can be made available for private tours every month of the year.  A phone call can set up a day and time for any size group.


Mike Venturini - Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
1-800-320-3792

5/22/2009

School Tour Underground Railroad & History of Jonesville Michigan

We own the Munro House Bed and Breakfast in downtown Jonesville, Michigan. It happens to be the oldest house in Hillsdale County and is said to have once been a station on the Underground Railroad. We have performed countless hours of research to find out more about the original owners, the legacy they have left, and the effects on the community, the county, and the state.

Over the years, we have put together some interesting, historically accurate stories that we tell to our guests. Robin Wormser, a teacher at Williams Elementary School in Jonesville found out about our entertaining tales and asked if we would be willing to take on the entire 4th grade and give them a tour of the house and tell them about life in Jonesville back in the mid 1800's. We agreed.

Upon discovering that there are generally over 100 kids in fourth grade, we decided that they would need to be split up into groups of 20-30 for this annual field trip.

Depending on time constraints, we offer a 30 minutes to one hour tour. We talk about Benaiah Jones, the founder of Jonesville and George Munro, an early pioneer, entrepreneur, and the original owner of our house. We show them the differences between our original Salt Box house and the new addition that is Greek Revival style.

We tell stories about settlers moving west along the Sauk Trail and how they picked places to settle. We talk about runaway slaves folowing the Underground Railroad to Canada and how they found out the the Munro House was a safe haven.

We take them into what is left of our tunnel. We have pictures of a secret room in our house where it is alleged that over 400 runaway slaves hid for at least one day on their trek to freedom.

We enjoy interacting with the children and providing them with an informative and interesting field trip. This year, we had 4 groups of about 30 kids (plus chaperones) tour our house over 3 days. We arrange a day and time and eagerly await their arrival. We give a quality, informative, and fun tour of our great old house. Any group is welcome to contact us and arrange for a private tour at a mutually agreed upon day and time.

Mike Venturini - Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"