Juneteenth originated in Texas. A lost Underground Railroad route ran through, too.

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Sofia Bravo was raised along the U.S.-Mexico border in Hidalgo County, Texas. Not until adulthood did she learn the story of family ancestors who, historians say, helped enslaved people reach freedom in Mexico. 

A growing group of researchers and family members is unearthing more about this history. Much is known of the northbound Underground Railroad for freedom-seekers before the Civil War. Less is known about enslaved people’s journeys south to Mexico, which abolished slavery decades before the United States.

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Mexico played a role in the Underground Railroad as some enslaved people fled south. A growing group of researchers – and ancestors – brings to life their bravery.

Without many physical artifacts, families have relied on oral histories. Scholars, meanwhile, are tracking clues in other narratives like newspaper archives. 

“I want other Americans to understand what really happened,” says Ms. Bravo. 

One “Harriet Tubman” on the southbound railroad was Silvia Hector Webber. In the 1830s, Hector Webber and her partner bought her freedom, and that of their children, in Mexican Texas. Shortly after, when the Republic of Texas reintroduced slavery, she helped enslaved people seek freedom through her family’s ferry trading route.

Southbound routes to freedom in Mexico likely existed from the early 18th century until the U.S. abolished slavery in 1865. 

The cemetery stands in the middle of a field, squared in by a chain-link fence. Sofia Bravo says her father installed it years ago to keep vandals out and history in. 

Ms. Bravo was raised along the U.S.-Mexico border in Hidalgo County, Texas. Not until adulthood did she learn the lore of ancestors whose graves, likely here, face the broad sky. Before emancipation, historians say, her Webber family relatives helped enslaved people reach freedom in Mexico. 

“I want other Americans to understand what really happened,” says Ms. Bravo, caretaker of the cemetery overseen by her family’s nonprofit. She didn’t learn this history in school, she says.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Mexico played a role in the Underground Railroad as some enslaved people fled south. A growing group of researchers – and ancestors – brings to life their bravery.

“I’m glad that now it’s all, you know, coming out.”

As the Texan preserves her family’s slice of history, a growing group of researchers is unearthing more. Much is known of the northbound Underground Railroad for freedom-seekers before the Civil War. Less is known about enslaved people’s journeys south to Mexico, which abolished slavery decades before the United States.

Without many physical artifacts, families have relied on oral histories. Scholars, meanwhile, are tracking clues in other narratives like newspaper archives. More local and national media have taken note in recent years, some sparked by the construction of a Trump-era border wall close to historic sites. Those involved in this emerging field say they’re moved by a legacy of bravery long forgotten in two countries.

Sarah Matusek/The Christian Science Monitor

Sofia Bravo, a descendant of John and Silvia Hector Webber, who historians say helped enslaved people reach freedom in Mexico, is the caretaker for her family’s cemetery in Hidalgo County, Texas, Feb. 23, 2024.

The southbound Underground Railroad is an “important part of our transnational borderland history,” says researcher Roseann Bacha-Garza at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.

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