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    3 matches on "Ripley (Ohio)"
    Ripley and the Ohio River
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    Ripley and the Ohio River  Save
    Description: This image shows the Ohio River and countryside near Ripley, Ohio. Ripley was an early stop on the Underground Railroad. The Ripley Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 7, 1985. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06490
    Subjects: Ripley (Ohio); Brown County (Ohio); Underground Railroad--Ohio; National Register of Historic Places
    Places: Ripley (Ohio); Brown County (Ohio)
     
    Ripley, Ohio, from the Kentucky side of the Ohio River
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    Ripley, Ohio, from the Kentucky side of the Ohio River  Save
    Description: This illustration depicts the Ohio town of Ripley from the Kentucky side of the Ohio River. Ripley was an important station on the Underground Railroad. John Rankin, whose house can be seen on the hill, was a prominent abolitionist who helped many slaves escape north to freedom. This picture appears in "Historical Collections of Ohio," published by Henry Howe in 1909. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL04194
    Subjects: Ripley (Ohio); Underground Railroad--Ohio; Ohio History--Slavery, Anti-Slavery and Civil Rights; Rankin, John, 1793-1886
    Places: Ripley (Ohio); Brown County (Ohio)
     
    Ripley map
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    Ripley map  Save
    Description: Map showing the boundaries of Ripley, Ohio, along the Ohio River, from "Atlas of Brown County, Ohio / from actual surveys by D. J. Lake and B. N. Griffing. To which is added a map of the State of Ohio, also an outline and rail road map of the United States and the hemispheres" (1876). Ripley is the site of the Rankin House, an important stop on the Underground Railroad in the decades preceding the Civil War. Home to Presbyterian minister and abolitionist John Rankin, the Rankin House stood on a 300-foot-high hill known as "Liberty Hill," which overlooked the Ohio River. Rankin would signal fugitive slaves in Kentucky with a lantern or candle, letting them know when it was safe to cross the river. To access Rankin's home on the hill, those seeking their freedom had to climb 100 wooden steps. Rankin would provide the former slaves with sanctuary, keeping them hidden until it was safe for them to travel further north. He likely moved from his home to Ironton in the late 1860s, several years before this map was made. The home is now a museum, part of the Ohio History Connection's statewide network of historic sites, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: A912_771_B812L_Ripley
    Subjects: Rankin, John, 1793-1886; Ripley (Ohio); Underground Railroad--Ohio; Antislavery movements--Ohio--History--19th century; Maps;
    Places: Ripley (Ohio); Brown County (Ohio);
     
      3 matches on "Ripley (Ohio)"
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