John Parker (abolitionist)
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- For other persons named John Parker, see John Parker (disambiguation).
John P. Parker (1827 - February 4, 1900) was an African American inventor, industrialist and abolitionist who secretly participated in the Underground Railroad resistance movement. His house in Ripley, Ohio is a National Historic Landmark [1].
[edit] Background
Parker was born in Virginia, the son of a white father and African American slave mother. He was also a slave who was sold a number of times until he was finally purchased by a doctor from Mobile, Alabama. He worked as a servant in the doctor's house and secretly learned to read and write. After an aborted escape attempt and becoming too difficult to control, he was removed to another position in New Orleans where he earned enough money to buy his own freedom for $1,800. He married Miranda Boulden and they had six children (including Hortense Parker) in Ripley, Ohio.
[edit] Career
He joined the Underground Railroad while in Ripley, leading hundreds of slaves to freedom. He continued in spite of a $1,000 bounty placed on his head and after the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 meant that his forays into Kentucky endangered the freedom he had worked so hard to buy.
He also patented a number of inventions and founded the Ripley Foundry and Machine Company which he managed until his death.
[edit] External links
- Biography from the African American registry
- John Parker Papers, Duke University
- John Parker House in Ripley Ohio
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