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Frederick
Douglass Biography
Frederick Douglass
stood at the podium, trembling with nervousness. Before him sat
abolitionists who had travelled to the Massachusetts island of
Nantucket. Only 23 years old at the time, Douglass overcame his
nervousness and gave a stirring, eloquent speech about his life
as a slave. Douglass would continue to give speeches for the
rest of his life and would become a leading spokesperson for the
abolition of slavery and for racial equality.
The son of a slave woman and an unknown white man,
"Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey" was born in
February of 1818 on Maryland's eastern shore. He spent his early
years with his grandparents and with an aunt, seeing his mother
only four or five times before her death when he was seven. (All
Douglass knew of his father was that he was white.) During this
time he was exposed to the degradations of slavery, witnessing
firsthand brutal whippings and spending much time cold and
hungry. When he was eight he was sent to Baltimore to live with
a ship carpenter named Hugh Auld. There he learned to read and
first heard the words abolition and abolitionists. "Going
to live at Baltimore," Douglass would later say, "laid
the foundation, and opened the gateway, to all my subsequent
prosperity."
Douglass spent seven relatively comfortable years in Baltimore
before being sent back to the country, where he was hired out to
a farm run by a notoriously brutal "slavebreaker"
named Edward Covey. And the treatment he received was indeed
brutal. Whipped daily and barely fed, Douglass was "broken
in body, soul, and spirit."
On January 1, 1836, Douglass made a resolution that he would be
free by the end of the year. He planned an escape. But early in
April he was jailed after his plan was discovered. Two years
later, while living in Baltimore and working at a shipyard,
Douglass would finally realize his dream: he fled the city on
September 3, 1838. Travelling by train, then steamboat, then
train, he arrived in New York City the following day. Several
weeks later he had settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts, living
with his newlywed bride (whom he met in Baltimore and married in
New York) under his new name, Frederick Douglass.
Always striving to educate himself, Douglass continued his
reading. He joined various organizations in New Bedford,
including a black church. He attended Abolitionists' meetings.
He subscribed to William Lloyd Garrison's weekly journal, the Liberator.
In 1841, he saw Garrison speak at the Bristol Anti-Slavery
Society's annual meeting. Douglass was inspired by the speaker,
later stating, "no face and form ever impressed me with
such sentiments [the hatred of slavery] as did those of William
Lloyd Garrison." Garrison, too, was impressed with
Douglass, mentioning him in the Liberator. Several days
later Douglass gave his speech at the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery
Society's annual convention in Nantucket-- the speech described
at the top of this page. Of the speech, one correspondent
reported, "Flinty hearts were pierced, and cold ones melted
by his eloquence." Before leaving the island, Douglass was
asked to become a lecturer for the Society for three years. It
was the launch of a career that would continue throughout
Douglass' long life.
Despite apprehensions that the information might endanger his
freedom, Douglass published his autobiography, Narrative of
the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written By
Himself. The year was 1845. Three years later, after a
speaking tour of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Douglass
published the first issue of the North Star, a four-page
weekly, out of Rochester, New York.
Ever since he first met Garrison in 1841, the white abolitionist
leader had been Douglass' mentor. But the views of Garrison and
Douglass ultimately diverged. Garrison represented the radical
end of the abolitionist spectrum. He denounced churches,
political parties, even voting. He believed in the dissolution
(break up) of the Union. He also believed that the U.S.
Constitution was a pro-slavery document. After his tour of
Europe and the establishment of his paper, Douglass' views began
to change; he was becoming more of an independent thinker, more
pragmatic. In 1851 Douglass announced at a meeting in Syracuse,
New York, that he did not assume the Constitution was a
pro-slavery document, and that it could even "be wielded in
behalf of emancipation," especially where the federal
government had exclusive jurisdiction. Douglass also did not
advocate the dissolution of the Union, since it would isolate
slaves in the South. This led to a bitter dispute between
Garrison and Douglass that, despite the efforts of others such
as Harriet Beecher Stowe to reconcile the two, would last into
the Civil War.
Frederick Douglass would continue his active involvement to
better the lives of African Americans. He conferred with Abraham
Lincoln during the Civil War and recruited northern blacks for
the Union Army. After the War he fought for the rights of women
and African Americans alike.

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