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Frederick Douglass: An African-American Slave

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Frederick Douglass was an African-American slave when he was born but escaped when he was 20 years old. Douglass wrote three autobiographies, one of them is a very famous piece, and he is known for his anti-slavery actives. He has offered a lot to the world and has first hand experience with slavery, which helped his movement to end slavery. Let’s start to what happened first, his slavery life.
Frederick Douglass (Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey) was a slave for 20 years, born into slavery and escaped at age 20. He was a slave in Talbot County, Maryland. He was selected to live in a home where the plantation owner also lived in. Later on Douglass eventually moved to another home and there he learned some important skills. The wife of the household taught Douglass the alphabet when he was 12. The husband forbid the wife to further teach Douglass, so Douglass wandered off and continued learning from other white children and others in a neighborhood. From learning how to read he started to take an interest in political writing and literature. He started to read the newspaper and started to teach his some plantation workers how to read at a weekly church service. The local slave owners …show more content…

He was given papers by Murray which contains an identity of a free black sailor man, Murray’s savings, and was also given a sailor uniform. When he arrived to his destination, he married Murray and settled in a free black community in New Bedford Massachusetts. Douglass joined an abolitionist meetings and told his slave life. Later on he was known to be a regular anti-slavery lecturer. He gave his first speech at the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, and attended lecture tour. During the tour, the crowd wasn’t all pleasing to him and started to chase and beat him. He was saved by a Quaker family during the chase. From there he started his first book in 1845, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American

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