when you have people like william lambert, george d baptista, william webb, madison lightfoot, you can go on and on in terms of these pioneering abolitionists. they were joined at some extent by the white abolitionists, many of them being quakers, is william lambert had been schooled, educate and lived among the quakers when you left trenton, new jersey, -- he is a phenomenal individual because like what of the name conductors of the underground railroad. i know in my class at the newark city when i talk about the underground railroad, the first ticket semite is the a train, the d train, no. colson has done his thing in terms of the metaphorical treatment of the underground railroad, but this was a process, the byway in which these here fugitive slaves could get away from bondage come to get away from the so-called peculiar institution and end up in detroit. so this year, sculpture symbolizes the people and after 1850 when you had the fusion is slave law, when the act was passed that meant -- fugitive slave law. we got the blackburn case, the blackbird affair, of these runaway fugitive