After reading my article about the Underground Railroad published in Lifestyles 2000, my friend told me about her great aunt, Laura Haviland. In fact, she shared her first edition of Laura’s autobiography, “A Woman’s Life Work.” (You can find a full transcription of the book online.) Laura was born in Canada in 1808 to American Quaker parents, Daniel and Sene Smith. At the age of 16, she married Charles Haviland. Shortly after, they moved with other Quakers to Lenawee County, Michigan.
Quakers had always condemned slavery, but initially
did not work actively for abolition. Restless, determined, and driven to
action, Laura Haviland took up the more active role of Wesleyan Methodists to
fight slavery. With Elizabeth Chandler, Laura formed the Logan FemaleAnti-Slavery Society, the first abolitionist organization in Michigan. The Havilands began hiding fugitive slaves. Their home became the first Underground Railroad station in Michigan.
Laura Haviland Statue in Adrian, Michigan
Laura also founded the Raisin Institute, the first racially integrated school in Michigan. The Havilands brought several teachers
from Ohio’s Oberlin College who helped them make it one of the best schools in
the territory.
In 1845, the family was struck by erysipelas. Laura
became desperately ill. Upon her recovery she learned that her husband, sister,
parents, and young baby had died. Despite these tragedies, Laura remained as determined
as ever to carry on her battle against slavery.
She made trips into the Deep South to aid escaped
slaves. In an effort to bring the children of a fugitive slave couple to
freedom in Michigan, she traveled to the tavern of slave owner John Chester of
Washington County, Tennessee. Chester held Laura, her son, and another at gunpoint,
threatening to kill them. They managed to escape only to be chased by slave
catchers. For the next 15 years, Chester and his son harassed Laura Haviland in
court, with slave catchers, and with threats of violence. After the Fugitive
Slave Act, she began escorting runaway slaves to Canada. In 1851, she helped
found the Refugee Home Society in Windsor, Ontario, a settlement with a church,
school, and 25 acres for each family.
When the Civil War broke out, Haviland traveled
throughout the South, distributing supplies, caring for the wounded, and
working for better hospital conditions as far the Gulf of Mexico. At war’s end
General O. O. Howard appointed Haviland Inspector of Hospitals for the Freedmen’s Bureau. Haviland traveled to Virginia, Tennessee, Kansas, and
Washington, D.C. teaching, lecturing, and volunteering as a nurse.
The Raisin Institute went through many changes,
becoming the Haviland Home, an orphanage for African American children.
Eventually, the home was purchased by the state and became known as the
Michigan Orphan Asylum.
Even in her later years Laura Haviland continued to
work tirelessly to help freed slaves. Using her own money, Laura bought 240
acres in Kansas where African Americans escaping the violence of the KKK could
farm, raise their children, and attend school. Both Haviland, Kansas and
Haviland, Ohio were named in her honor. The image nearby is that of a statue of
Laura Haviland in Adrian, Michigan.
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