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         Douglass Frederick:     more books (36)
  1. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick, 1817?-1895 Douglass, 1846-01-01
  2. Souvenir of Frederick Douglas Monument in Douglass Park at Central and by Frederick, 1817-1895 Douglass, 1941-01-01
  3. The World of Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895 (The African American History Reference Series) (Library Binding) by Paul Finkelman, 2008-01-01
  4. Addresses Of The Hon. W. D. Kelley, Miss Anna E. Dickinson, And Mr. Frederick Douglass: At A Mass Meeting, Held At National Hall, Philadelphia, July 6, 1863, For The Promotion Of Colored Enlistments by Douglass Frederick 1817?-1895, 2010-10-15
  5. The World of Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895 (The African American History Reference Series)
  6. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave by Frederick, 1817?-1895 Douglass, 1848
  7. The Frederick Douglass Papers, Series 2: Autobiographical Writings, Vol. 1: Narrative by Frederick Douglass, 1999-07-11
  8. The Teachers and Writers Guide to Frederick Douglas (Teachers & Writers Guides) by Wesley Brown, 2007-07-03
  9. Collected Articles of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass, 1994-01-01
  10. The Oxford Frederick Douglass Reader by Frederick Douglass, 1996-01-18
  11. Frederick Douglass: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies) by C. James Trotman, 2011-01-31
  12. Frederick Douglass' Civil War: Keeping Faith in Jubilee by David W. Blight, 1991-08
  13. Frederick Douglass: Selected Speeches and Writings (The Library of Black America series) by Frederick Douglass, 1999-09-01
  14. Frederick Douglass : Crusading Orator for Human Rights (Studies in African American History and Culture) by Ronald K Burke, 1996-01-01

1. Frederick Douglass NHS - Douglass' Life
Quotes from Frederick Douglass to inspire your creative thinking
http://www.nps.gov/frdo/fdlife.htm

The Life of Frederick Douglass
[Chronology] Frederick Douglass was born into slavery on the Eastern Shore of Maryland in 1818, and was given the name Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey (Baly), after his mother Harriet Bailey. During the course of his remarkable life he escaped from slavery, became internationally renowned for his eloquence in the cause of liberty, and went on to serve the national government in several official capacities. Through his work he came into contact with many of the leaders of his times. His early work in the cause of freedom brought him into contact with a wide array of abolitionists and social reformers, including William Lloyd Garrison, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, John Brown, Gerrit Smith and many others. As a major Stationmaster on the Underground Railroad he directly helped hundreds on their way to freedom through his adopted home city of Rochester, NY. Renowned for his eloquence, he lectured throughout the US and England on the brutality and immorality of slavery. As a publisher his North Star and Frederick Douglass' Paper brought news of the anti-slavery movement to thousands. Forced to leave the country to avoid arrest after John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry, he returned to become a staunch advocate of the Union cause. He helped recruit African American troops for the Union Army, and his personal relationship with Lincoln helped persuade the President to make Emancipation a cause of the Civil War. Two of Douglass' sons served in the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, which was made up entirely of African American volunteers. The storming of Fort Wagner by this regiment was dramatically portrayed in the film

2. From Revolution To Reconstruction: Outlines: Outline Of American Literature: Dem
An Outline of American Literature. by Kathryn VanSpanckeren. The RomanticPeriod, 18201860 Fiction Frederick Douglass (1817?-1895). *** Index ***.
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/LIT/douglas.htm
FRtR Outlines American Literature Democratic Origins and Revolutionary Writers, 1776-1820: Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
An Outline of American Literature
by Kathryn VanSpanckeren
The Romantic Period, 1820-1860: Fiction: Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
Index The most famous black American anti-lavery leader and orator of the era, Frederick Douglass was born a slave on a Maryland plantation. It was his good fortune to be sent to relatively liberal Baltimore as a young man, where he learned to read and write. Escaping to Massachusetts in 1838, at age 21, Douglass was helped by abolitionist editor William Lloyd Garrison and began to lecture for anti-lavery societies. In 1845, he published his Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave (second version 1855, revised in 1892), the best and most popular of many "slave narratives." Often dictated by illiterate blacks to white abolitionists and used as propaganda, these slave narratives were well-known in the years just before the Civil War. Douglass's narrative is vivid and highly literate, and it gives unique insights into the mentality of slavery and the agony that institution caused among blacks. The slave narrative was the first black literary prose genre in the United States. It helped blacks in the difficult task of establishing an African-American identity in white America, and it has continued to exert an important influence on black fictional techniques and themes throughout the 20th century. The search for identity, anger against discrimination, and sense of living an invisible, hunted, underground life unacknowledged by the white majority have recurred in the works of such 20th- century black American authors as Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, and Toni Morrison.

3. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) American Writer.
Douglass, Frederick Guide picks. (1817?1895) American writer. An escaped slave,Frederick Douglass was the most prominent African American orator, journalist
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/douglassf/
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Douglass, Frederick
Guide picks (1817-1895) American writer. An escaped slave, Frederick Douglass was the most prominent African American orator, journalist, and antislavery leader of the 19th century.
Frederick Douglass African-American Civil War Soldiers

Frederick Douglass recruited over one hundred free blacks from upstate New York for the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts. Frederick Douglass Papers
The Frederick Douglass Papers project collects and publishes the speeches and writings of Frederick Douglass. The site gives information about this 19th-century African American abolitionist and reformer. Frederick Douglass Resources helpful in the study of Douglass.

4. Creative Quotations From Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
Creative Quotations from . . . Frederick Douglass (1817?1895) born onFeb 14 US lecturer, author. He escaped slavery in 1838, became
http://www.creativequotations.com/one/438.htm
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Creative Quotations from . . . Frederick Douglass
(1817-1895) born on Feb 14 US lecturer, author. He escaped slavery in 1838, became active in the anti-slavery cause and edited anti-slavery journal.
Previous Set of Quotes
Random Quotes Next Set of Quotes A little learning, indeed, may be a dangerous thing, but the want of learning is a calamity to any people.
A man's character always takes its hue, more or less, from the form and color of things about him. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will . . . Slaves were expected to sing as well as to work. A silent slave was not liked, either by masters or overseers. A gentleman will not insult me, and no man not a gentleman can insult me.
Click here for more search engines and links to biographical websites The World's Largest Poster and Print Store All Categories Books ISBN (best) Title Author Clearance Movies DVD VHS Merchandise Sell Texts: Enter an ISBN The most comprehensive image search on the web.
Published Sources for the Quotations Shown Above: F: Commencement Address, The Colored High School, Baltimore, MD, 22 Jun 1894.

5. Picture History - Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
Frederick Douglass (1817?1895) Frederick Douglass was an African-American who escapedfrom slavery and wrote his story, Narrative of the Life of Frederick
http://www.picturehistory.com/find/p/5558/mcms.html

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All digital images are available for download as jpeg files at 300 dpi of original size. If you would like an image at a higher resolution, please email us your request at phinfo@picturehistory.com (be sure to include item number). Custom requests may take up to two weeks to be fulfilled and require an additional charge. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) Frederick Douglass was an African-American who escaped from slavery and wrote his story, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, which was daringly published in 1845. Douglass was an excellent orator whose literary brilliance thrust him into the forefront of the Abolition movement. He established the North Star, a newspaper he issued for seventeen years. Douglass was also United States minister to Haiti. Related Categories: Abolition Movement African-Americans Slavery

6. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
He was a devout abolitionist, a political leader, an author, among many othertitles. Frederick Augustus Douglass (1817?1895). Click here to go back.
http://www.geocities.com/jimbob585/douglass.html
Frederick Douglass
"You cannot write the bloody laws of slavery on those restless billows. The Ocean, if not the land is free."
click here for an audio clip
He was soon sent back to Auld only to be sent to Baltimore as an apprentice in a shipyard. Here he learned to write by printing letters on boats. In Sept of 1838 Frederick got papers by a free black seaman, dressed up like a sailor and took a train from Baltimore to New York City. Their he contacted David Ruggles (an abolitionist). With his help he changed his name to Frederick Johnson and he contacted his fiancee, Anna Murray. They were married days after. He then went to New Bedford, Massaschuesettes to become a ship caulker. Due to racial problems he had to work as a commen laborer. Frederick always struggled to provide for his wife and growing family. They eventually had 5 children (two fought in the Civil War). In New York he also changed his last name to Douglass because he thought Johnson was too common. He changed it to Douglass because of the poem The Lady of the Lake by Sir Walter Scott.
Douglass soon began to read the anti-slavery weekly called The Liberator . He sooned joined fellow abolitionists and spoke out in various places and occasions. He traveled throughout the North spreading his word. Douglass soon baecame one of the most famous black abolotionists. But many doubted that he ever was a slave. To show these doubtful people he published and autobiography called Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass

7. Frederick Douglass At The Blue Neon Alley
Frederick Douglass. Frederick Douglass 1817?1895. If there is no struggle,there is no progress. -Frederick Douglass. I prefer
http://www.geocities.com/terry_young/douglass.html
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Frederick Douglass
"If there is no struggle, there is no progress." -Frederick Douglass "I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence." -Frederick Douglass
"A Plea for Free Speech in Boston," 1860

Boston is a great city, and Music Hall has a fame almost as extensive as that of Boston. Nowhere more than here have the principles of human freedom been expounded. But for the circumstances already mentioned, it would seem almost presumption for me to say anything here about those principles. And yet, even here, in Boston, the moral atmosphere is dark and heavy. The principles of human liberty, even I correctly apprehended, find but limited support in this hour a trial. The world moves slowly, and Boston is much like the world. We thought the principle of free speech was an accomplished fact. Here, if nowhere else, we thought the right of the people to assemble and to express their opinion was secure. Dr. Channing had defended the right, Mr. Garrison had practically asserted the right, and Theodore Parker had maintained it with steadiness and fidelity to the last. But here we are to-day contending for what we thought we gained years ago. The mortifying and disgraceful fact stares us in the face, that though Faneuil Hall and Bunker Hill Monument stand, freedom of speech is struck down. No lengthy detail of facts is needed. They are already notorious; far more so than will be wished ten years hence.

8. Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895
Frederick Douglass, 1817?1895. - Born a slave in Tuckahoe, Maryland. - Escapedin 1838 from Baltimore shipyard. - Fled to New Bedford, Massachusetts.
http://depts.washington.edu/chid/chid110/lectures99/week6/week6.html
Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895 - Born a slave in Tuckahoe, Maryland - Escaped in 1838 from Baltimore shipyard - Fled to New Bedford, Massachusetts - Born Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey - Changed name to Frederick Douglass from Sir Walter Scott's Lady of the Lake - Agent of Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society - Lectured on slavery in England 1845-47 Freedom purchased for 150 pounds - Established the North Star in New York, 1847 - Seneca Falls movement in 1848 - U.S. Minister to Haiti 1889 - Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, 1845 - Life and Times, 1881 William Edward Burghardt Dubois, 1868-1963
  • Raised in poverty by his mother in Mass.
- Only black child in his school and church - Wanted to attend Harvard, but settled for Fisk University, Tennessee
  • Experienced segregation and Afro-American culture Commencement address on Bismarck who "made a nation out of a mass of bickering peoples"
- Isolated at Harvard, rejected by glee club Attracted to William James, Pragmatism - Graduated from Harvard cum laude in 1890 - Studied University of Berlin, 1892-94

9. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)
Frederick Douglass (1817?1895),
http://www.mrlincolnswhitehouse.org/templates/display.search.cfm?ID=38

10. Gale - Free Resources - Black History Month - Biographies - Frederick Douglass
Tells the story of the man who escaped slavery to become a leading voice for the abolitionist cause.Category Kids and Teens People and Society Douglass, Frederick......Frederick Douglass. (c. 1817?1895) Abolitionist. Born in Talbot County,Maryland, he was sent to Baltimore as a house servant at the
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/bhm/bio/douglass_f.htm
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Frederick Douglass
(c. 1817-1895)
Abolitionist Born in Talbot County, Maryland, he was sent to Baltimore as a house servant at the age of eight, where his mistress taught him to read and write. Upon the death of his master he was sent to the country to work as a field hand. During his time in the South he was severely flogged for his resistance to slavery. In his early teens he began to teach in a Sunday school which was later forcibly shut down by hostile whites. After an unsuccessful attempt to escape from slavery, he succeeded in making his way to New York disguised as a sailor in 1838. He found work as a day laborer in New Bedford, Massachusetts, and after an extemporaneous speech before the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society became one of its agents. Douglass quickly became a nationally recognized figure among abolitionists. In 1845 he bravely published his

11. Frederick Douglass
Douglass, Frederick, 1817?1895. Papers of Frederick Douglass, 1841-1964.Wash. DC, Library of Congress Photoduplication Service, 1975.
http://www.libraries.psu.edu/crsweb/docs/comm3/douglass.htm

12. Influence Of Prominent Abolitionists: African-American Mosaic Exhibition (Librar
From 1847 to 1863, escaped slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass (1817?1895)published the North Star with the aid of money and a press provided by British
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/african/afam006.html
African-American Mosaic
Influence of Prominent Abolitionists
Declaration of the Anti-Slavery Convention, 1833
The abolitionist movement took shape in 1833, when William Lloyd Garrison, Arthur and Lewis Tappan, and others formed the American Anti-Slavery Society in Philadelphia. The group issued this manifesto announcing the reasons for formation of the society and enumerating its goals. The broadside includes the names of delegates from ten states, to the Anti-Slavery Convention. Rare Book and Special Collections Division
Illustrations of the Anti-Slavery Almanac
Each year the American Anti-Slavery Society distributed an almanac containing poems, drawings, essays, and other abolitionist material. This broadside groups together illustrations of the horrors of slavery that were used in the 1840 edition. "Illustrations of the Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1840" New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1840 Broadside Rare Book and Special Collections Division
Frederick Douglass's North Star
From 1847 to 1863, escaped slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) published the North Star with the aid of money and a press provided by British philanthropists. The paper was published in Rochester, New York. Douglass's goals were to "abolish slavery in all its forms and aspects, advocate UNIVERSAL EMANCIPATION, exalt the standard of public morality, and promote the moral and intellectual improvement of the COLORED PEOPLE, and hasten the day of FREEDOM to the Three Millions of our enslaved fellow countrymen." The paper also advanced women's rights, a cause that Douglass had championed since his participation in the first women's rights convention of 1848. Douglass also published another abolitionist paper, the Frederick Douglass Paper.

13. The Political Graveyard: Index To Politicians: Douglass
Douglass, Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey (1817?1895) also known as FrederickDouglass of Rochester, Monroe County, NY; Washington, DC Born in
http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/douglass.html
Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
Index to Politicians: Douglass

14. Frederick Douglass
The foremost African American abolitionist in antebellum America, Frederick Douglass(ca. 1817?1895) was the first African American leader of national stature
http://www.africawithin.com/bios/frederick_douglass.htm
Frederick Douglass
c. 1817-1895 Nationality - American Occupation Abolitionist, Publisher, Politician
Narrative Essay
The foremost African American abolitionist in antebellum America, Frederick Douglass (ca. 1817-1895) was the first African American leader of national stature in United States history. Frederick Douglass was born, as can best be determined, in February 1817 (he took the 14th as his birthday) on the eastern shore of Maryland. His mother, from whom he was separated at an early age, was a slave named Harriet Bailey. She named her son Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey; he never knew or saw his father. (Frederick adopted the name Douglass much later.) Douglass's childhood, though he judged it in his autobiography as being no more cruel than that of scores of others caught in similar conditions, appears to have been extraordinarily deprived of personal warmth. The lack of familial attachments, hard work, and sights of incredible inhumanity fill the text of his early remembrances of the main plantation of Col. Edward Lloyd. In 1825 his masters decided to send him to Baltimore to live with Hugh Auld. Mrs. Auld, Douglass's new mistress and a Northerner unacquainted with the disciplinary techniques Southern slaveholders used to preserve docility in their slaves, treated young Douglass well. She taught him the rudiments of reading and writing until her husband stopped her. With this basic background he began his self-education.

15. HOBA - Frederick Douglass
Bridgewater State College Home Page. Frederick Douglass Statesman, Publisher,Abolitionist 1817?1895. Listen to narrative (need RealPlayer - free download).
http://www.bridgew.edu/HOBA/Inductees/Douglass.htm
Frederick Douglass
Statesman, Publisher, Abolitionist
Listen to narrative
(need RealPlayer - free download Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800's. Born a slave, Douglass became a noted author and speaker. He devoted his life to the abolition of slavery and the fight for Negro rights. Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey was born in 1817 in Tuckahoe, Maryland. At the age of 8, he was sent to Baltimore to work for one of his master's relatives. There, helped by his new master's wife, he began to educate himself. He later worked in a shipyard, where he caulked ships, making them watertight. In 1838, the young man fled his master and went to New Bedford, Massachusetts. To avoid capture, he dropped his two middle names and changed his last name to Douglass. He got a job as a caulker, but the other men refused to work with him because he was black. Douglass then held a number of jobs, among them collecting rubbish and digging cellars. In 1841, at a meeting of the Massachusetts Antislavery Society, Douglass told the audience what freedom meant to him. The audience was so impressed that the society hired him to lecture about his experiences as a slave. During the early 1840's, Douglass protested against segregated seating on trains by sitting in cars reserved for whites. He had to be dragged from the white cars. Douglass also protested against religious discrimination. He walked out of a church that kept blacks from taking part in a service until the whites had finished participating.

16. African Americans - Frederick Douglass Index
Frederick Douglass (1817?1895) was born a slave, but escaped Northto freedom in 1838. He became a celebrated abolitionist speaker
http://www.africanamericans.com/FrederickDouglassIndex.htm
Frederick Douglass Frederick Douglass once told a group of African American students from a school in Talbot County, Maryland, "What was possible for me is possible for you. Do not think because you are colored you cannot accomplish anything. Strive earnestly to add to your knowledge. So long as you remain in ignorance, so long will you fail to command the respect of your fellow men." Born Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey to a slave mother and a white father he never knew, Frederick Douglass grew up to become a leader in the abolitionist movement and the first black citizen to hold high rank (as U.S. minister and consul general to Haiti) in the U.S. government. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) was born a slave, but escaped North to freedom in 1838. He became a celebrated abolitionist speaker, and his speeches were widely circulated in print. Douglass used his lecture fees to aid fugitive slaves and headed the Rochester station of the underground railroad. One of the speeches in this pamphlet was delivered at a celebration of the anniversary of the abolition of slavery in the West Indies on August 1, 1834. Before emancipation in the United States, West Indian emancipation day was widely celebrated by opponents of slavery. In the second speech, Douglass denounces the controversial Dred Scott decision of March 6, 1857, in which the Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, denied Scott's claim that he was free because he had been taken into free territory and declared that no black could be a citizen under the

17. CJ Online - The Topeka Capital-Journal - Newspaper In Education
photo blackhistory. Frederick Douglass. Frederick Douglass, 1817?1895.It wasn't just white abolitionists who fought to get rid of slavery.
http://cjonline.com/stories/020601/bla_douglass.shtml

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Frederick Douglass Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895
It wasn't just white abolitionists who fought to get rid of slavery. Many blacks fought valiantly for freedom and equality for all. Frederick Douglass was one of the brave freedom Þghters. When he was born into slavery about 1817 on the eastern shore of Maryland, he was Frederick Bailey. His father was white, his mother a slave. Frederick was never sure who his father was. His grandmother really raised him because his mother died when he was just seven. Even as a small boy he wondered why dark-skinned people were slaves while whites were free. At the age of eight he was sent to work for the Auld family in Baltimore, Maryland. The mistress of the family, Sophia Auld, liked Frederick enough to teach him how to read. Frederick taught himself to write and he did it so well that he was able to forge passes for slaves who wanted to run away. He polished boots and earned a little bit of money, enough to buy a book of powerful speeches. He dreamed of someday growing up to be a great speaker. When Frederick was about 15 he was sent back to the plantation where he was born. At one point he helped a white man teach a class of slaves how to read. After just two meetings the class was discovered and the owner of the plantation stopped it. He was angry that Frederick was involved. He sent him to the home of Edward Covey who was known to be good at dealing with difficult slaves. Frederick and Covey did not get along and even had a physical Þght, but Frederick's will remained strong.

18. Frederick Douglass NHS
Frederick Douglass (1817?1895) moved to Cedar Hill, named after the cedar trees thatshaded the house, when he became US marshal of the District of Columbia in
http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/wash/dc91.htm
Frederick Douglass NHS
NPS Photo
From 1877 to 1895 this was the home of famous abolitionist, writer, lecturer, statesman, and Underground Railroad conductor , Frederick Douglass. Modest in its scale and ornamentation, Cedar Hill demonstrates the characteristics of a romantic cottage in natural surroundings. Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) moved to Cedar Hill, named after the cedar trees that shaded the house, when he became U.S. marshal of the District of Columbia in 1877. Douglass defied the District's racist housing laws by purchasing this home in a segregated neighborhood. At the request of his second wife, Helen Pitts Douglass, Congress chartered the Frederick Douglass Memorial and Historical Association, to whom Mrs. Douglass bequeathed the house. Joining with the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs, the association opened the house to visitors in 1916. The property was added to the National Park system on September 5, 1962, and was designated a National Historic Site in 1988. Douglass was born a slave on Maryland's Eastern Shore and was given the name Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey. At an early age, he learned to read and write, and escaped to freedom in the North, changing his name to Douglass to avoid recapture. Eventually he settled in Rochester, New York, and was active in the abolitionist cause. He was a leader of Rochester's Underground Railroad movement and became the editor and publisher of the

19. The Search For Frederick Douglass' Birthplace
ourselves, to learn more about Douglass and his place in local history.Here is what it says Frederick Douglass 1817?1895 NEGRO PATRIOT.
http://www.bluecrab.org/fdouglas/
The Search for Frederick Douglass' Birthplace
Frederick Douglass Born 1818 - Died 1895
Hey, this is our Web page about Frederick Douglass' birthplace. You can't get there by reading tourist books and highway historical markers . They're all wrong! But now, we've located the spot and can show you the way. My name is Amanda Barker. This project is a requirement of my Honors English class, but my dad and I are putting this Web site together just for fun.
You can hop right to....
    "Lost" Site Why it's so hard to find his true birthplace>
    Clues
    How we searched for facts and what we found >
    Maps
    How you can get there from anywhere >
    Photos
    Aerial and ground photos >
    About Us
    Who we are and why we did this >
. . . "Lost" Site Why You Can't Get There From Here
Road Signs To A Dead End
In 1995, the centennial year of the death of Frederick Douglass, Ebony urged its readers to plan family vacations so that the kids could see monuments to black history. They suggested you visit the birthplace of Frederick Douglass. ("How To Celebrate Black History Month 12 Months of the Year", Ebony , Feb. 1995, vol. 50 no. 4)

20. Frederick Douglass Biography And Links To Etexts At Owl-Eyes
Biography and links.Category Arts Literature 19th Century Douglass, Frederick Works......OwlEyes Biography and Etexts Frederick Douglass (1817?-1895), Click HERE foressays on Frederick Douglass' novels and stories from The Paper Store.
http://owleyes.org/douglas.htm
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Frederick Douglass
Click HERE for essays on Frederick Douglass' novels and stories from The Paper Store.
Frederick Douglass was born in Tuckahoe, Maryland. He was born into slavery, and he developed a hatred of slavery during this time that would last throughout his life. In 1838, he escaped and fled to Massachusetts. Soon after his escape, he married Anna Murray. Douglass began to be known as an eloquent anti-slavery speaker. His speeches for the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society cemented Douglass' role as an abolitionist. Douglass also worked for the Underground Railroad. In 1847, he founded the abolitionist newspaper The North Star . In 1860, Douglass campaigned for Abraham Lincoln. Douglass helped recruit two regiments of black soldiers once the Civil War began. After the war, Douglass fought for passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendements to the Constitution. Douglass' seminal literary work is the story of his life, The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass (1882). Douglass will forever be known as an important voice for freedom and against the evil of slavery.

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