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Slaves, Salt, Sex and Mr. Crenshaw
Slaves, Salt, Sex and Mr. Crenshaw: The Real Story of the Old Slave House and America's Reverse Underground R. R. | IllinoisHistory.com, Jon Musgrave
2 posts | 1 read
The Old Slave House has stood for some 166 years a few miles east of the village of Equality, Illinois. An antebellum plantation manor, it's long held the history of nefarious activities in its attic, stories of kidnappings and victims held against their will. It's been recognized for its ghosts some say it's one of the most haunted places in America. It's been recognized for its architecture. That's why it's on the National Register of Historic Places and in September 2004, the National Park Service recognized it for its history as a station on the Reverse Underground Railroad by naming it to its National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program. "Slaves, Salt, Sex & Mr. Crenshaw" is the result of eight years of research into the real history behind the stories long told to visitors, from the kidnappings and slave breeding to the visit of Abraham Lincoln and the potent political connections, both real and those just claimed, held by the owner John! Hart Crenshaw and his family.
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Tkgbjenn1
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Part 2 of the review: The kidnapping of not only escaped slaves but freed men and women who were sold in the south. It all happened in southern Illinois and so many, Illinoisans especially, know very little about this part of the states history. An interesting book.

review
Tkgbjenn1
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A story centered around a house that a great many people may have visited when they were young. The Old Slave House in Equality in deep southern Illinois. The house itself is more folklore than fact. Not the man who owned it, John Hart Crenshaw was not. This is the story of slavery in Illinois, and the salt industry that utilized that labor. And the dark story of the Reverse Underground Railroad. Part 1 of the review