MAINE FREEDOM TRAILS, INC.


 


The City of Portland officially proclaimed the establishment of the Portland Freedom Trail on November 9, 2006 with the installation of a granite and bronze marker at the Eastern Cemetery.  The cemetery was chosen as the first site to be unveiled on the trail in honor of the final resting place of many of Portland’s abolitionist leaders. 

The marker is one of sixteen that will constitute a permanent walking trail highlighting the people, places, events and daily life associated with the Underground Railroad and anti-slavery movement in Portland. 

The trail represents the first project of the Maine Freedom Trails, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to:

Establishing a network of marked sites across the state that acknowledge individual, organizational and community participation in the Underground Railroad and abolitionist movement;

Linking the state’s network of sites to national Underground Railroad routes and the related activities of the National Park Service;

Producing materials related to this period of Maine’s history;

Engaging the community in the ongoing research, identification and documentation of the Underground Railroad and anti-slavery movement in Maine to best interpret, commemorate and preserve this legacy;

Advancing the public discourse on the many struggles for social justice, economic justice and human rights – past and present – thereby connecting the history of the Underground Railroad to global movements for freedom; and

Collaborating with other efforts to preserve Maine’s African American history and culture.

The Portland Freedom Trail was officially dedicated on July 14, 2007 at a ceremony in Lincoln Park, Portland

 

MARKER LOCATIONS

SITES TO RECEIVE GRANITE PEDESTAL MARKERS


 
1. Franklin Street Wharf
Casco Bay Lines

2. Barber Shop of Jacob C. Dickson
243 Fore Street

3. Hack Stand of Charles H. L. Pierre
29 Middle Street

4. Abyssinian Church
73 Newbury Street

5. Home of Charles  Frederick, Harriet Stephenson Eastman, and Alexander Stephenson
Corner of Mountfort and Newbury Streets

6. Eastern Cemetery
Corner of Congress and Mountfort Streets

7. Home of Elias and Elizabeth Widgery Thomas
Corner of India and Congress Streets

8. Home of General Samuel C. Fessenden
31 India Street

9. Friends (Quaker) Meeting House
Lincoln Park corner of Federal and Pearl Streets

10. Hack Stand of Reuben Ruby
Corner of Federal and Temple Streets

11. First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church    
425 Congress Street

12. Secondhand Clothing Store of Lloyd Scott
44 Exchange Street

13. Mariners' Church
Corner of Fore and  Market Streets
 

 

Bicycle Coalition of Maine

Maine Bicycle Trails & Tours
Greater Portland & Casco Bay

bikemaine.org/trails/portland.htm