I'm at the very preliminary stage of looking at underground railroad and related activity in western New York, and have run across several cases of the rescue or attempted rescue of fugitive slaves in Buffalo. July 1835: Fugitive slave family named Stanford, living in St. Catharines, Canada, kidnapped and taken to Buffalo. Kidnappers are followed by blacks from St. Catharines and Buffalo, and the family is freed at Hamburg, but there is a clash between the liberators and a sherriff's posse at Black Rock near Buffalo. Fugitives sucessfully return to Canada. [In a somewhat related incident, black residents around Niagara (now Niagara on the Lake) in Canada prevent extradition of fugitive slave Solomon Moseby in Sept. 1837. Moseby excapes, but two other people are killed.] July 1845. Slave nurse Rena, traveling with her master John Munn of Natchez, Mississippi, in Buffalo. A writ is made out against Munn, and the case is taken before a judge. Munn declares that he has told Rena she is free to leave, and judge tells Rena that she is free by law and by her master's action, but Rena states she is old and infirm, and does not want to leave her master. Newspaper reports fear of mob action. Sept. 1847. Agents capture Christopher Webb, fugitive working in Buffalo, but crowd gathers and Webb escapes or is released. Warrant is then filed against the slave catchers for assault, battery and false imprisonment, and "The last that was heard of them they were proceeding at a rapid rate out of town with the Deputy Sheriff in pursuit, backed by several colored persons on horseback." August 1851 (after the fugitive slave law). Fugitive or former slave Daniel is captured in Buffalo. One of the slave catchers is arrested and fined for assult and battery for hitting Daniel with a stick of wood during the capture. Court later determines that Daniel was a free man because he had been taken to Ohio. Daniel leaves for Canada. Sept. 1851. Fugitive from Virginia named Harrison captured in Busti, Chautauqua County, and taken to Buffalo. No apparent attempt to rescue Harrison. [While this case is ongoing, newspapers carry news of Jerry Rescue in Syracuse and "Christiana Riot" in Pennsylvania] I wonder how many other cases might exist in Buffalo and elsewhere in New York State. I believe that I ran across a legal case in Lockport, New York, concerning the status of a fugitive slave, but cannot now find my notes on that incident. Anyway, for Buffalo: Kidnapped family, released by mob action in 1835 Slave, declared free by master and judge in 1845, but declines to leave master. Slave, evidently freed by mob action in 1847; agents of master in danger of arrest by Buffalo authorities Reputed slave, determined to be a free man by local courts, August 1851; agent convicted of assult (prior to release of reputed slave) Slave, returned to master, apparently without incident, Sept. 1851. Christopher Densmore University Archives University at Buffalo 420 Capen Hall Box 602200 Buffalo, New York 14260-2200 Voice: 716-645-2916 Fax: 716-645-3714 E-Mail: [log in to unmask]