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Freedom House
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18152 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
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11 / 1990 |
1,862 Words |
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Kate Tsubata Kate Tsubata is a freelance writer on issues pertaining to
media, education, health, and family and works in the
Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. |
In August 1776, a Scots-Irish minister and his young family broke ground on a house in what was then called the Marsh Creek settlement of Pennsylvania, soon to be renamed Gettysburg. Reverend Alexander Dobbin's home still stands, a monument to the American dream of liberty and justice for all. While serving as a family home and academy for local students, the manse guarded an important secret - its role as a way station on the Underground Railroad. Ingenious restoration by present owner Jacqueline Dick White has allowed the eighteenth-century structure to be preserved for posterity.
With its foot-thick stone walls and huge beams, the house was built for maximum containment of warmth in cold weather and coolness in the hot summer months. Under construction as the members of the Continental Congress were affixing their signatures to the Declaration of Independence, the mansion incorporated three naturally occurring springs into the crawl space under the house. The spring house doubled as a natural refrigerator and source of fresh, cold water for the family.
A wall-sized stone fireplace dominated the 1 1/2 story kitchen, which was tacked onto the main body of the house. When additional bedchambers were added above, a small spiral strair case was created to access them from the kitchen. Mounted into the wall of that staircase was a simple cupboard to hold the family crockery. These shelves slide back to reveal a ten-foot square room, barely two and a half feet high - a perfect hiding place for fugitive slaves.
Today, as a restaurant and museum, the Dobbin House refreshes travelers and local residents alike with food for the body and
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