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From Slavery to Freedom: Frederick Douglass

From Slavery to Freedom: Frederick Douglass

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From Slavery to Freedom: Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass was born into slavery around 1818 in Maryland. He never knew his exact birthday because enslaved people were often not given this basic information. His early life was filled with hardship, but Douglass refused to let his circumstances define his future.

As a young boy, Douglass secretly learned to read with the help of his enslaver's wife, Sophia Auld. When her husband discovered this, he ordered her to stop. He said that an educated enslaved person would become unmanageable. Hearing this, Douglass understood that education was the key to freedom. He continued learning on his own, trading bread with poor white children in exchange for reading lessons.

In 1838, at the age of twenty, Douglass escaped to the North and began a new life as a free man. He settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he worked as a laborer and became involved in the abolitionist movement. He began speaking at anti-slavery meetings, and audiences were astonished by his intelligence and the power of his words.

In 1845, Douglass published his autobiography, 'Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave.' The book became an immediate bestseller and proved to skeptics that enslaved people were fully capable human beings with great intellect and feeling. Because the book revealed his true identity and put him in danger of being recaptured, Douglass traveled to Great Britain to continue his work safely.

When he returned to America, Douglass founded an abolitionist newspaper called The North Star. He became one of the most famous writers and speakers in the United States. During the Civil War, he advised President Abraham Lincoln and helped recruit African American soldiers to fight for the Union. After the war, he continued fighting for the rights of all Americans, including women. Frederick Douglass died in 1895, but his legacy as one of America's greatest champions of freedom lives on forever.

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