Allegany County

A Second American Revolution? The Great Railroad Strike of 1877

A Second American Revolution? The Great Railroad Strike of 1877

In July of 1877, a strike on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad threw the United States into a crisis that shook its very foundations. The outburst became the first nationwide general strike in US history, travelling across major and minor railroad lines and spreading into countless other industries. The strike was borne out of the heightening contradictions of the Gilded Age, a period following the Civil War marked by the massive growth of wealth and a dominant system of industrial wage-labor. Workers who rose up were met with military force and violence erupted across fourteen states. In the Appalachian Forest, battlegrounds erupted in Cumberland, Keyser, Sir John’s Run and in the mountains and woods along the B&O line. The uprising crossed divisions of race, gender, and status as the downtrodden rose up against an absolute power. For some observers this massive upheaval appeared to be a second American Revolution.


Jane Gates: An African-American Trailblazer of Allegany County

Jane Gates: An African-American Trailblazer of Allegany County

Six years after the end of the Civil War, and three years after the Fourteenth Amendment declared that formerly enslaved people held rights as American citizens, Jane Gates purchased a house in Cumberland, Maryland. Jane Gates was born into slavery and denied the opportunity to learn how to read or write. Despite her illiteracy, oral history tells that she was the first black woman in Allegany County to have a bank account; she is known to have signed her name on legal documents with an X. With these achievements lies a great mystery. How did Jane, illiterate and listed in census records as a nurse and a laundress afford a house so soon after gaining her freedom? This question was pondered by her descendants, Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. and John Gates, when they dove into their ancestry. What they found was an inspiring, but incomplete history of their great-great-grandmother.


A Timeless Road to Freedom—Cumberland and Emmanuel Parish

A Timeless Road to Freedom—Cumberland and Emmanuel Parish

Situated at the top of the hill in the center of Cumberland, Emmanuel Parish stands for all to see. Visitors are drawn to the church on the hill with the steeple. Once inside, Emmanuel tells the story of our country from its earliest times to today. Situated at the crossroads of Native American trails and natural waterways, Cumberland and Emmanuel were known roads of freedom.  It is believed that the original foundations underneath the church were used as a stop on the Underground Railroad.