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FREDERICK DOUGLASS (1817-1895)

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 448 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FREDERICK DOUGLASS (1817-1895)  ,
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American orator and journalist, was born in Tuckahoe, Talbot county,
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Maryland, probably in
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February 1817 . His
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mother was a negro slave of exceptional intelligence, and his
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father was a white man . Until nearly eight years of age, he was under the care of his
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grand-mother; then he lived for a
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year on the plantation of Colonel
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Edward Lloyd, of whose vast estate his master, Captain
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Aaron Anthony, was manager . After a year he was sent to Baltimore, where he lived in the
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family of
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Hugh Auld, whose
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brother, Thomas, had married the daughter of Captain Anthony; Mrs Auld treated him with marked kindness and without her
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husband's knowledge began teaching him to read . With
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money secretly earned by blacking boots he
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purchased his first
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book, the Columbian Orator; he soon learned to write "
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free passes " for runaway slaves . Upon the
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death of Captain Anthony in 1833, he was sent back to the plantation to serve Thomas Auld, who hired him out for a year to one Edward Covey, who had a wide reputation for disciplining slaves, but who did not break Frederick's spirit . Although a new master, William
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Freeland, who owned a large plantation near St Michael's, Md., treated him with much kindness, he attempted to escape in 1836, but his plans were suspected, and he was put in jail . From lack of evidence he was soon released, and was then sent to Hugh Auld in Baltimore, where he was apprenticed as a
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ship caulker . He learned his trade in one year, and in September 1838, masquerading as a sailor, he escaped by railway train from Baltimore to New York city . For the
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sake of greater safety he soon removed to New
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Bedford, Massachusetts, where he changed his name from Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey to Frederick Douglass, " Douglass " being adopted at the
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suggestion of a friend who greatly admired Scott's Lady of the Lake . For three years he worked as a day labourer in New Bedford . An extempore speech made by him before an anti-
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slavery meeting at
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Nantucket, Mass., in August 1841 led to his being appointed one of the agents of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, and in this capacity he delivered during the next four years numerous addresses against slavery, chiefly in the New England and
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middle states .

To quiet the suspicion that he was an impostor, in 1845 he published the Narrative of the

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Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave . Fearing his recapture, his friends persuaded him to go to England, and from August 1845 to
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April 1847 he lectured in Ireland, Scotland and England, and did much to enlist the sympathy of the
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British public with the Abolitionists in
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America . Before his return a sum of 4150 was raised by subscription to secure his legal manumission, thus relieving him from the fear of being returned to slavery in pursuance of the Fugitive Slave Law . From 1847 to 186o he conducted an anti-slavery weekly journal, known as The North
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Star, and later as Frederick Douglass's Paper, at Rochester, New York, and, during this time, also was a frequent
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speaker at anti-slavery meetings . At first a follower of Garrison and a disunionist, he allied himself after 1851 with the more conservative
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political abolitionists, who, under the leader-ship of James G . Birney, adhered to the
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national Constitution and endeavoured to make slavery a dominant political issue . He disapproved of John Brown's attack upon Harper's Ferry in 1859, and declined to take any
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part in it . During the
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Civil War he was among the first to suggest the employment of negro troops by the
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United States government, and two of his sons served in the Union army . After the war he was for several years a popular public lecturer; in September 1866 he was a delegate to the national Loyalist convention at
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Philadelphia; and in 1869 he became the editor, at Washington, of a short-lived weekly paper, The New National Era, devoted to the interests of the negro
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race . In 1871 he was assistant secretary of the Santo Domingo commission, appointed by President Grant . He was marshal of the
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District of
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Columbia from 1877 to 1881, was recorder of deeds for the district from 1881 'to 1886, and from 1889 to 1891 was the American minister
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resident and consul-general in the Republic of Haiti . He died in Anacostia Heights, District of Columbia, on the 20th of February 1895 .

He was widely known for his eloquence, and was one of the most effective orators whom the negro race has produced in America . His autobiography appeared, after two revisions, as The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass (

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London, 1882) . See F . M . Holland, Frederick Douglass, The Colored Orator (New York, 1891); C . W . Chesnutt, Frederick Douglass, (Boston, 1899) ; and Booker T . Washington, Frederick Douglass (Philadelphia, 1907), in the series of American Crisis
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Biographies .

End of Article: FREDERICK DOUGLASS (1817-1895)
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