Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, and Fort Pickens areas on Santa Rosa Island were accepted into the National Park Service’s National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Program on March 29, 2022.
The National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom is a federal program that commemorates the stories of the men and women who risked everything for freedom and those who helped them. It honors, preserves, and promotes the history of resistance to enslavement through escape and flight worldwide.
During the Civil War, some enslaved individuals self-liberated when the U.S. Army came near. Approximately 600 freedom seekers followed the U.S. Army during the Marianna Expedition on Santa Rosa Island. For example, Armstrong Purdee marched along Santa Rosa Island to Pensacola Bay, where eventually, he reunited with his father. Purdee became the first Black attorney in Jackson County, Florida, where descendants still live. Many others who escaped during the expedition joined the United States Colored Troops and fought through the remainder of the Civil War.
“Santa Rosa Island became a bridge to freedom for hundreds of enslaved people,” said Superintendent Darrell Echols. “These stories remind us that freedom seekers were a major force that helped make emancipation an outcome of the Civil War.”
The Marianna Expedition on Santa Rosa Island joins 16 new listings from the 43rd round of Network to Freedom applications in 11 states. It joins Fort Pickens, Fort Barrancas Area, and Pensacola Pass at Gulf Islands National Seashore on the federal list of Network to Freedom sites.
Original source can be found here.