Title: The Lantern Keeper
Boston, Massachusetts — 1851. Winter’s frost covered the narrow cobblestone streets as abolitionists whispered plans for freedom in hidden corners of the city. Among them was Jonas Whitfield, a quiet Black man with sharp eyes and steady hands.
By day, Jonas worked as a lamplighter, tending to Boston’s gas lamps, climbing ladders with his oil can and long pole.
But by night, Jonas had another role—he was a conductor on the Underground Railroad.
Everyone called him “The Lantern Keeper,” but few knew the truth behind the name.
Jonas used his route as a lamplighter to guide freedom seekers. Each night, the position of his lanterns told a different message.
A lamp burning in a window meant the safe house was open. A darkened street corner signaled danger. His seemingly simple job masked a vast network of signals.
One frigid evening, Jonas guided a group of escapees through the icy streets toward a waiting carriage at the harbor. With slave catchers lurking, the escape seemed impossible.
But Jonas’s lights flickered and danced in just the right pattern, confusing the watchers and opening a safe path to freedom.
That night, every gas lamp glowed just a little brighter across Boston—as though the city itself had joined the cause.
Years later, Jonas’s story became legend. Many of the old lamps he once tended still stand today, and every year, Boston holds a silent walk in his honor, their streets lined with glowing lanterns.
On one of the remaining lamp posts, a plaque reads:
“The Lantern Keeper—lighting the way to freedom
#community #historical #documentary
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