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Frederick Douglass, abolitionist
and government official, was born of a white father and a black
slave mother in Maryland, in 1817. Despairing of his future under
slavery, he escaped and found his freedom in a coastal town in
Massachusetts, where he learned to read and write and to speak
tellingly and with prophetic strength about his ordeals as a slave
and as a runaway. The abolitionists were impressed with him, and
he was heard on hundreds of platforms in the US, and in Canada
and England, calling for rights for all. He opposed the colonization
movement, which would have freed slaves only for the purpose of
settlement in such African outposts as Liberia. He was a loud
and clear advocate of the uncompromising struggle for immediate
emancipation in his speeches and in the pages of his newspapers
as well. He became famous, and he numbered Abraham Lincoln and
Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth among his friends and admirers.
In later years he served his nation as diplomatic minister to
Haiti and as a government official in a succession of administrations.
He was Marshal in the District of Columbia for annual celebrations
of freedom. He traveled and lectured widely here and abroad, and
became an international figure whose judgments in speech or print
were widely respected. In his life story, My Bondage and My Freedom,
he wrote that "I have worked hardest to get equal rights
for Negroes" but this focus "does not keep me from working
to help people of all races."
The website Who2 provides excellent additional biographical information on many of the individuals portrayed in this exhibit. Click for additional information on Frederick Douglass.
Another excellent site is an Indiana University - Purdue University at Indianapolis project containing links to electronic versions of many of Douglass' writings.
Also excellent is Wikipedia