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Frederick Douglass, American SlaveFrom Slave to Free ManBorn a slave in Maryland, Douglass escapes to the North and writes a best-selling account of his life.
Across the Ocean
Leader and Statesman From Slave to Free ManFrederick Douglass was born a slave in Maryland in 1818 on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. As a boy he was taken away from the Great House Farm to Baltimore, as the family servant of Thomas and Sophia Auld. Later he was hired out to work on plantations across the Bay, but in 1836 returned to Baltimore, where he was employed in the shipyards. With the help of Anna Murray, a free black woman from the city, he escaped to the north by train to New York, disguised as a sailor. He was just twenty years old.He was soon reunited with Anna, whom he married. They moved to New Bedford, a whaling port in Massachusetts, and within three years, he was lecturing on behalf of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, speaking at public halls across New England. At first he simply told of his own experiences in Maryland, but before long, he found 'it did not entirely satisfy me to narrate wrongs; I felt like denouncing them.'
But by providing the details of his experience in slavery, 'giving names of persons, places, and dates', he put himself in grave danger. This statement soon became known in Maryland, and I had reason to believe that an effort would be made to recapture me...So in August 1845 he set sail for England.
He revisited Scotland in 1859-60, but his speeches lacked the radical edge of 1846. No doubt he was shaken by the recent hanging of his friend John Brown, who had attempted to spark off a major slave insurrection by seizing the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia. But he also found that British support for abolitionism was on the decline. He died in February 1895 at Cedar Hill, the beautiful house he acquired 17 years earlier, in woodland across the Anacostia River from Washington, DC. The house is now a national monument and site of a museum devoted to this major politician and writer of the 19th Century.
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| Part of the Black and Asian History Map | info@bulldozia.com 11 July 2007 |