Places where they could rest and sleep were called 'stations', and those who organized such sites were called ' station-masters'. Abolitionists ( people who believed that slavery was wrong), Quakers and other religious groups who supported the railway, were known as ' stockholders', while those who guided the slaves were known as ' conductors'. One such conductor was the former slave, Harriet Tubman. As a slave, she endured years of inhumane treatment from her various owners.
[Translation from English to Japanese ] Places where they could rest and sleep were called 'stations', and those who ...
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