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Frederick Douglass biography
Conservative Hall of Fame
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Frederick Douglass was born into slavery on the Eastern
Shore of Maryland in 1818, and was given the name Frederick Augustus Washington
Bailey (Baly), after his mother Harriet Bailey. During the course of his
remarkable life he escaped from slavery, became internationally renowned
for his eloquence in the cause of liberty, and went on to serve the national
government in several official capacities. Through his work he came into
contact with many of the leaders of his times. His early work in the cause
of freedom brought him into contact with a wide array of abolitionists
and social reformers, including William Lloyd Garrison, Elizabeth Cady
Stanton, John Brown, Gerrit Smith and many others. As a major Stationmaster
on the Underground Railroad he directly helped hundreds on their way to
freedom through his adopted home city of Rochester, NY.
Renowned for his eloquence, he lectured throughout
the US and England on the brutality and immorality of slavery. As a publisher
his North Star and Frederick Douglass' Paper brought news of the anti-slavery
movement to thousands. Forced to leave the country to avoid arrest after
John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, he returned to become a staunch advocate
of the Union cause. He helped recruit African American troops for the
Union Army, and his personal relationship with Lincoln helped persuade
the President to make emancipation a cause of the Civil War. Two of Douglass'
sons served in the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, which was made up entirely
of African American volunteers. The storming of Fort Wagner by this regiment
was dramatically portrayed in the film Glory! A painting of this event
hangs in the front hall at Cedar Hill.
All of Douglass' children were born of his marriage
to Anna Murray. He met Murray, a free African American, in Baltimore while
he was still held in slavery. They were married soon after his escape
to freedom. After the death of his first wife, Douglass married his former
secretary, Helen Pitts, of Rochester, NY. Douglass dismissed the controversy
over his marriage to a white woman, saying that in his first marriage
he had honored his mother's race, and in his second marriage, his father's.
In 1872, Douglass moved to Washington, DC where he
initially served as publisher of the New National Era, which was intended
to carry forward the work of elevating the position of African Americans
in the post-Emancipation period. This enterprise was discontinued when
the promised financial backing failed to materialize. In this period Douglass
also served briefly as President of the Freedmen's National Bank, and
subsequently in various national service positions, including US Marshal
for the District of Columbia, and diplomatic positions in Haiti and the
Dominican Republic.
http://www.nps.gov/archive/frdo/fdlife.htm
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