Chicago magazine

The Fugitive

IN NOVEMBER 1860, CHICAGO WASN’T YET KNOWN AS A THEATER town, but a remarkable piece of stagecraft — front-page news in its day but now all but forgotten — played out on its streets: A crowd surrounded a woman and, poof, she vanished.

The woman in question, 20-year-old Eliza Grayson, had good reason to want to disappear: She was a fugitive from slavery. Two years earlier, she and her sister had escaped their slaveholder, aided by a free black man from Iowa. Grayson then made a harrowing 500-mile journey from Nebraska, likely taking refuge in safe houses on the Underground Railroad. She’d been among the first enslaved people to arrive in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago magazine

Chicago magazine1 min read
Spectacular Stargazing On The Lakefront
It’s rare to find a place where you can see the actual Milky Way spilling itself across the firmament and contemplate the cosmos on an elemental level. But one of the best spots to do so in the Upper Midwest is Newport State Park in Ellison Bay, near
Chicago magazine3 min read
When More Is More
EVEN THE MOST EXTROverted homeowners need a place to escape. So when Dave Patel, a Dunkin’ franchise operator, and his wife, Gauri, a homemaker, first discussed their dream-home concept with architect Orren Pickell, he understood that these serious e
Chicago magazine1 min read
Parsing Power
Another busy week, same question. @MaryAnnAhernNBC via X Looking at just the major players in sports, it’s wild but somehow fitting that no one named McCaskey appears on the list. @readjack via X I have pushed myself to the brink like this once [“The

Related Books & Audiobooks