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         Douglass Frederick:     more books (36)
  1. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick, 1817?-1895 Douglass, 1846-01-01
  2. Souvenir of Frederick Douglas Monument in Douglass Park at Central and by Frederick, 1817-1895 Douglass, 1941-01-01
  3. The World of Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895 (The African American History Reference Series) (Library Binding) by Paul Finkelman, 2008-01-01
  4. Addresses Of The Hon. W. D. Kelley, Miss Anna E. Dickinson, And Mr. Frederick Douglass: At A Mass Meeting, Held At National Hall, Philadelphia, July 6, 1863, For The Promotion Of Colored Enlistments by Douglass Frederick 1817?-1895, 2010-10-15
  5. The World of Frederick Douglass, 1817-1895 (The African American History Reference Series)
  6. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave by Frederick, 1817?-1895 Douglass, 1848
  7. The Frederick Douglass Papers, Series 2: Autobiographical Writings, Vol. 1: Narrative by Frederick Douglass, 1999-07-11
  8. The Teachers and Writers Guide to Frederick Douglas (Teachers & Writers Guides) by Wesley Brown, 2007-07-03
  9. Collected Articles of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass, 1994-01-01
  10. The Oxford Frederick Douglass Reader by Frederick Douglass, 1996-01-18
  11. Frederick Douglass: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies) by C. James Trotman, 2011-01-31
  12. Frederick Douglass' Civil War: Keeping Faith in Jubilee by David W. Blight, 1991-08
  13. Frederick Douglass: Selected Speeches and Writings (The Library of Black America series) by Frederick Douglass, 1999-09-01
  14. Frederick Douglass : Crusading Orator for Human Rights (Studies in African American History and Culture) by Ronald K Burke, 1996-01-01

61. Creative Essays - Free Essays, Free Term Papers, Free College Essays, Free Book
Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave was written by Frederick Douglass himself.He was born into slavery in Tuckahoe, Maryland in approximately 1817.
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62. TMC Videos (Title Order)
Ochberg, MD on PTSD RC552.P67 O34 1993 Stress disorders, Posttraumat FrederickDouglass E449.D75 F76 1994 Douglass, Frederick, 1817?-189 Frederick Douglass
http://www.andrews.edu/library/screens/vidstitleF.html
TMC Videos (Title Order)
As of 3/25/2004 Top A B C ... Z
F
F. Scott Fitzgerald PS3511.I9 Z558 1997 Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis
Faces on faith. An interview with Desmond Tutu
BX5700.6.Z8 B57 1989 Tutu, Desmond
Faces
HQ76 .F34 1994 Homosexuality
Failure to protect
HV742.M2 F342 2003 Maine. Dept. of Human Services
Failure to protect
HV742.M2 F34 2003 Marr, Logan, 1995-2001
The Fair weather friend
BJ1533.F8 F25 1989 Friendship
BL245 .F25 1998 Religion and science
Faith maturity
BV1464 .F25 1990 Spiritual formation
Faith Ringgold
N6538.N5 F34 1991 Ringgold, Faith
The Faithful revolution
BX830 1962 .F34 Catholic Church History
The Fall of the House of Usher
Falling in love with your baby BF723.I6 F34 1981 Infant psychology Families in the balance HQ778.7.U6 F35 Child care United States Families matter HQ535 .F32 1994 Family United States Families of Puerto Rico F1960 .F26 2001 Family Puerto Rico Families of young children with special needs HV891 .F34 1996 Developmentally disabled child Family and child care RG951 .F35 1993 Postnatal care

63. TMC Cassettes (Subject Order)
R42 Z26 1986 CASSSG Dorris, Michael Interviews Louise Erdrich and Michael DorrisPS3555.R42 Z26 1986 CASS-SG Douglass, Frederick, 1817?-189 An evening with
http://www.andrews.edu/library/screens/cassubjectD.html
TMC Cassettes (Subject Order)
As of 6/30/2003 Top A B C ... Z
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Dakar (Senegal) Social life Sojourn in Dakar, Senegal. R.C. 916.63 [4266]
Daley, Richard J., 1902-1976 Mayor Daley on the record R.D. 923.2 77311 [2108]
Daley, Richard J., 1902-1976 - Mayor Daley on the record R.D. 923.2 77311 [2108]
Dance To dance R.C. 793.3 [4287]
Dance Study and teaching (E
Dance music
Dancers Interviews To dance R.C. 793.3 [4287]
Danish language Conversatio Danish for travellers
Danish language Self-instru Danish for travellers
Danish language Self-instru Danish for travellers
Danish language Sound recor Danish for travellers Danish language Study and t Danish for travellers Dating (Social customs) You can make a difference BV4531.2 .C36 1984 CASS-SR Dating (Social customs) Rel Dating relationships Day care centers Day care for children R.C. 362.712 [5364] Day care centers Working parents R.C. 649.1 [5377] Day care centers Law and le Who's watching the children R.C. 362.712 [3703] Day care centers United Sta Who's watching the children R.C. 362.712 [3703] Death Cassette tape programs on death, grief and bereave

64. The Life And Times Of Frederick Douglass
Our Price $15.53 You Save $3.42 Pub Date Feb02 Format Paperback ISBN 0806508655Born in slavery in Maryland in 1817, Frederick Douglass escaped from
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View Products Search Products Shopping Cart New Arrivals ... Calendar The Life and Times Of Frederick Douglass
The Life and Times Of Frederick Douglass
Author: Frederick Douglass
List Price: $18.95
Our Price: $15.53
You Save: $3.42
Pub Date : Feb-02
Format : Paperback
ISBN: 0806508655
Born in slavery in Maryland in 1817, Frederick Douglass escaped from servitude twenty years later, joined the ranks of abolitionists such as William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips and John Brown, and devoted a long and fruitful life to the winning of freedom for his people. A fervent integrationist, Douglass believed that true freedom could not come for him until all blacks were free and equal, and he gave voice and direction to the movement to achieve this goal. Told in Frederick Douglass's own words, this volume stands as one of the most important chronicles of one man's courageous fight to end slavery.
Price: $15.53 # AB-0806508655 Quantity: View Products Shopping Cart Newsletter Daily Scriptures ... Calendar

65. Harvard University Press/Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass/Reviews
An American Slave, Written by Himself Frederick Douglass Edited by Douglass did notknow much about himself that he had been born somewhere around 1817; he had
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/reviews/DOUNAX_R.html
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
An American Slave, Written by Himself
Frederick Douglass
Edited by Benjamin Quarles
Bruce Catton, American Heritage Harvard has done us all a service in reviving [Douglass'] most important work.
Jim Walls, San Francisco Sunday Chronicle
Belknap Press
1 halftone, 1 map
192 pages
Paperback edition
January 1991 ISBN 0-674-60101-7

66. 1789- 1797 President:George Washington (Federalist)
1817 1825 President James Monroe (Republican). Douglass, Frederick Douglass wasa former slave who escaped to the North and became active in the abolitionist
http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~ekrulic/history.htm
President :George Washington (Federalist) President : John Adams (Federalist) 1801- 1809 President: Thomas Jefferson (Republican) President : James Madison (Republican) 1817- 1825 President: James Monroe (Republican) 1820- The Missouri Comprimise JACKSONIAN PERIOD 1825- 1829: President: John Quincy Adams (Republican) 1829-1837: President Andrew Jackson (Democrat) Prez : Martin Van Buren/ Willian Henry Harrison (Whig) US recognizes the republic of Texas Prez : John Tyler (Whig) 1845- Annexation of Texas Prez . James K. Polk 1846-1848- Mexican American War Prez . Zachary Taylor/Millard Fillmore 1850- The Comprimise of 1850 Prez . Franklin Pierce 1854- The Kansas Nebraska Act 1857- The Dread Scott Decision Dred Scott decision
In the Dred Scott decision (1857), the Supreme Court ruled that blacks were not citizens and could not sue in a federal court, and that Congress had no constitutional authority to ban slavery from a territory, that, in effect, the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional. The decision threatened both the central plank of the Republican party platform and the concept of popular sovereignty. Scott, a slave, had brought the lawsuit demanding his freedom based on his residence in a

67. A House Divided, America In The Age Of Lincoln
Frederick Douglass (181795). Frederick Douglass, 1845. Frederick Douglass,1845, from his autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass.
http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/ahd/slavery13.html
Frederick Douglass (1817-95) Frederick Douglass, 1845, from his autobiography,
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass As a youth, Frederick Douglass labored as a slave in rural Maryland and in Baltimore. He knew kind masters and harsh ones. Recalling his desire for freedom, he late wrote: "My feelings were not the result of any marked cruelty in the treatment I received; they sprang from the consideration of my being a slave at all. It was slavery, not its mere incidents, that I hated." In 1836 Douglass escaped to the North. Three years later, he began to lecture for the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. He soon became an internationally renowned spokesman for abolitionism and other reform movements, including women's rights. Douglass fought slavery on many fronts. He sheltered runaway slaves, edited several antislavery newspapers, and wrote an autobiography that was a powerful indictment of slavery. During the Civil War, Douglass met many times with Abraham Lincoln, urging the president to emancipate the slaves and enlist African-Americans in the Union army. He later held various public offices, including that of American ambassador to Haiti. To the end of his life Douglass challenged America to live up to its professed ideals. In 1876 he asked his fellow citizens, "The question now is: Do you mean to make good to us the promises in your Constitution?"

68. Template/black American
Related Links. Famous Americans Website. He was born a slave is 1817 on Valentine sDay. When he was. though, so Lincoln called Frederick Douglass for advice.
http://www.usd435.k12.ks.us/Garfield/famous/frederickdouglass.htm
Frederick Douglass Birth and Early Childhood Adult Life Accomplishments Interesting Facts ... Famous Americans Website He was born a slave is 1817 on Valentine's Day. When he was young, his mother was forced by her master to leave him. He was sent to live with his grandmother and then to live on a plantation. Whenever he cried, he was beat by the cook there. When he was older, he was tired of being a slave, so he tried to run away. Someone betrayed him though, and he was caught and thrown in jail. Later, he tried to run away again, and made it! Back to the table of content After he was freed, he met a woman in New York named Anna. They had 6 children, and their youngest daughter, Annie, died at a very young age. He made many great anti-slavery speeches. After he wrote his life story, he had to flee because his old master could have read the auto-biography, and might have known where he was then. Later he was able to go back. Back to the table of content When he was free, he wrote his life story, worked at the Underground Raildroad, and started a newspaper called "The North Star".

69. The Life Of Frederick Douglass Essay Direct Essays.com - Over 101,000 Essays, Te
Maryland. Frederick Douglass was born in Tuckahoe, Maryland around 1817,the offspring of a slave women and a white slave owner. Shortly
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70. Frederick Douglass Essay Direct Essays.com - Over 101,000 Essays, Term Papers An
Frederick Douglass Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in 1817,in Tuckahoe, Maryland. Because his slave mother, Harriet Bailey
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71. View
written. Frederick Douglass was born into slavery somewhere around theyear 1817 and his autobiography was published in 1845. Though
http://www.123helpme.com/assets/16352.html
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass and an Invisible Man The Black Revolution has been occurring for quite some time and in many different ways. Two primary examples of the struggle and yearn for change among African Americans include Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, the autobiography of Frederick Douglass and Invisible Man, a novel written by Ralph Ellison. Although both have the same foundation, the difficult task of being black and trying to make something of yourself, many important differences exist between these works. First, the language used by the authors is strikingly dissimilar. Next, the time periods in which these pieces of literature were written have a difference of over one hundred years. Finally, the main characters are faced with different circumstances and injustices. The next difference between these two pieces of literature is in the time periods in which they were written. Frederick Douglass was born into slavery somewhere around the year 1817 and his autobiography was published in 1845. Though his is a work of fiction, Ralph Ellison writes about the story of a black man living during his time. Ralph Ellison was born in 1914 and lived most of his adult life in New York, which is where the main character in Invisible Man is living. Douglass' story portrays the life of a black slave in the South, whereas Ellison depicts the struggles of a black man living in the eastern United States, specifically New York. Douglass is searching for freedom from slavery while Ellison's character is struggling to establish himself as a free man and fight discrimination.

72. Contemporary Reviews
life, commencing with his birth as a slave in Talbot Co., Md., in 1817, and ending Thelife of Frederick Douglass is of interest to every American citizen.
http://www.berea.edu/faculty/browners/chesnutt/Reviews/FrederickReviews/fred3.ht

Chesnutt's Works
Reviews Bibliography Biography ... Site Info Life of Frederick Douglas Langhorne, Orra. "Life of Frederick Douglass, By Charles W. Chesnutt." Southern Workman. 29 (January 1900): 55-56. In this convenient little book the publishers certainly carry out their promise of furnishing "brief, readable, and authentic accounts of those Americans whose personalities have impressed themselves most deeply on the character and history of their country." In this telegraphic age, when life does not seem long enough for the work that must be done, a hundred people will read a book like one of the Beacon series, with one hundred and thirty-five pages, where only one would read a large volume of four or five hundred pages, no matter how thrilling the record might be. Notwithstanding the limited space assigned him, Mr. Chesnutt has given us a full history of the leading events in the life of one of the most prominent figures in the long struggle for the emancipation of the Negroes in America. He tells of the birth and unhappy childhood on a Mary- /56/ land plantation, of the little slave boy who was to make his mark among the great ones of his times. A rapid but graphic sketch is given of the earlier part of Douglass' career, when he tasted to the full the bitter sorrows of slavery-a dark picture only relieved by the glimpse of happy chance which enabled the slave boy to acquire the rudiments of an education in spite of hardships and obstacles. One can but think what wonderful progress the colored youth of the present day might make, if they would use the abundant opportunities given them, half as well as Douglass did his scant chances to acquire knowledge.

73. The Frederick Douglass
Railroad stationmaster For 11 years Frederick Douglass saw the worst of city. Borna slave in February 1817, in Tuckahoe on Maryland s Eastern Shore, he was
http://themariner.net/frederick_douglass.htm
For more than years,
covering the Bay, its
people and pleasures
About us News Columns Weather Tides Calendar Photos Mariner Girls Boat Tests Links Marine Radio
Article Archives
Boat Show Basics
A Havre de Grace Maritime Wedding

New Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park in Fells Point
Sailing: Four rules to get you into the slip ... Nearly-perfect bottom painting
The Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park By Reed Hellman
Baltimore's maritime industries have historically been inter-racial. The harbor was packed with myriad watercraft ranging from small scows carrying produce and seafood to large ocean going steamships. The burgeoning oyster fishery required hundreds of boats and thousands of sailors to dredge, transport, and process the harvest. Many captains and companies pragmatically hired crews with little regard to a sailor's skin color, and some Blacks sailed their own boats.
To commemorate this rich African-American maritime heritage, the Living Classrooms Foundation and National Historic Seaport of Baltimore have joined with the City of Baltimore to construct the Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park at the historic Chase's Wharf site in Fells Point. An ongoing project, parts of the park are already in use and full completion is scheduled for April 2005. Envisioned as a gateway to Fells Point, the park will form an integral part of the Baltimore Waterfront Promenade, and the waterfront's first multicultural, African American heritage attraction.

74. History Today: Frederick Douglass: A Black Abolitionist In Ireland: Bill Rolston
visitor was Edmund Kelly, born in Columbia, Tennessee, in 1817, the son by far themost prestigious black abolitionist to visit Ireland was Frederick Douglass.
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m1373/6_53/103124761/p3/article.jhtml?term=

75. Frederick Douglas
Frederick Douglass, abolitionist and government official, was bornof a white father and a black slave mother in Maryland, in 1817.
http://www.templeton-interactive.com/lest2a.htm
FREDERICK DOUGLASS
Oil, about 1970, 40 x 30 inches F
rederick Douglass, abolitionist and government official, was born of a white father and a black slave mother in Maryland, in 1817. Despairing of his future under slavery, he escaped and found his freedom in a coastal town in Massachusetts, where he learned to read and write and to speak tellingly and with prophetic strength about his ordeals as a slave and as a runaway. The abolitionists were impressed with him, and he was heard on hundreds of platforms in the US, and in Canada and England, calling for rights for all. He opposed the colonization movement, which would have freed slaves only for the purpose of settlement in such African outposts as Liberia. He was a loud and clear advocate of the uncompromising struggle for immediate emancipation in his speeches and in the pages of his newspapers as well. He became famous, and he numbered Abraham Lincoln and Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth among his friends and admirers.
In later years he served his nation as diplomatic minister to Haiti and as a government official in a succession of administrations. He was Marshal in the District of Columbia for annual celebrations of freedom. He traveled and lectured widely here and abroad, and became an international figure whose judgments in speech or print were widely respected. In his life story, My Bondage and My Freedom, he wrote that "I have worked hardest to get equal rights for Negroes" but this focus "does not keep me from working to help people of all races."

76. Resources
Philip Foner (ed), The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass. Volume 1Early Years, 18171849 (New York International Publishers, 1950).
http://www.bulldozia.com/douglass/links.php
bulldozia
Douglass in Scotland
Jim Crow in Britain Home
Douglass in Scotland
Biography
Details of Visit

Douglass, Burns and Scott

Fellow Travellers
...
Links
Resources
Websites
Some websites of related interest, including electronic texts. Books
Books and articles on Douglass and his visit of 1845-47. Libraries
Other sources of primary materials.
Websites
General sites on Frederick Douglass: Electronic Texts:

77. Timeline: The United States
1817 The American Colonization Society is founded, espousing the return of African fromthere to New Bedford, where he takes on a new name, Frederick Douglass.
http://amistad.mysticseaport.org/timeline/united.states.html

Timeline: The United States
First Africans arrive in Virginia
Beginning of large-scale introduction of African slave labor in the British Caribbean for sugar production.
Connecticut and Rhode Island prohibit further importation of slaves (although Rhode Island merchants remain in slave trade to other colonies).
Society of Friends (Quakers) abolishes slavery among members.
Vermont Constitution prohibits slavery.
Massachusetts Constitution adopted with freedom clause interpreted as prohibiting slavery.
Pennsylvania adopts gradual emancipation, freeing slaves born after 1780 upon their 28th birthday.
Connecticut and Rhode Island pass gradual emancipation laws.
Connecticut prohibits residents from participating in slave trade. U.S. Constitution ratified with clause equating slaves to 3/5ths of a white citizen and provision that slave trade would end within 20 years. Eli Whitney’s invention of cotton gin sets stage for expansion of slavery in American South as short-staple cotton becomes economical product. Decade of greatest importation of African slaves into U.S., totaling approximately 200,000.

78. My Bondage And My Freedom By Frederick Douglass: Chapter 1
Literature Network Frederick Douglass My Bondage and My Freedom Chapter 1. whichI have since learned, I suppose myself to have been born about the year 1817.
http://www.online-literature.com/frederick_douglass/bondage_freedom/1/
Home Author Index Shakespeare The Bible ... Chapter 1
Chapter 1
PLACE OF BIRTHCHARACTER OF THE DISTRICTTUCKAHOEORIGIN OF
THE NAMECHOPTANK RIVERTIME OF BIRTHGENEALOGICAL TREESMODE
OF COUNTING TIMENAMES OF GRANDPARENTSTHEIR POSITION
GRANDMOTHER ESPECIALLY ESTEEMED"BORN TO GOOD LUCKSWEET
POTATOESSUPERSTITIONTHE LOG CABINITS CHARMSSEPARATING
CHILDRENMY AUNTSTHEIR NAMESFIRST KNOWLEDGE OF BEING A
SLAVEOLD MASTERGRIEFS AND JOYS OF CHILDHOODCOMPARATIVE
HAPPINESS OF THE SLAVE-BOY AND THE SON OF A SLAVEHOLDER.
In Talbot county, Eastern Shore, Maryland, near Easton, the
county town of that county, there is a small district of country,
thinly populated, and remarkable for nothing that I know of more than for the worn-out, sandy, desert-like appearance of its soil, the general dilapidation of its farms and fences, the indigent and spiritless character of its inhabitants, and the prevalence of ague and fever. The name of this singularly unpromising and truly famine stricken district is Tuckahoe, a name well known to all Marylanders, black and white. It was given to this section of country probably, at

79. Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass Frederick Douglass was one of the most important black leadersof the Antislavery movement. He was born in 1817 in Talbot County, MD.
http://www.midtermpapers.com/view.php/History/frederick_douglass.htm
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Frederick Douglass
Title Frederick Douglass Category History # of Words # of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)
frederick douglass: Frederick Douglass was one of the most important
black leaders of the Antislavery movement. He was born in 1817 in Talbot County,
MD. He was the son of Harriet Bailey and an unknown white man. His mother was a
slave so therefore he was born a slave.
Frederick Douglass was one of the most important black leaders of the Antislavery movement. He was born in 1817 in Talbot County, MD. He was the son of Harriet Bailey and an unknown white man. His mother was a slave so therefore he was born a slave. He lived with his grandparents until the age of eight, so he never knew his mother well. When he turned eight, he was sent to "Aunt Kathy," a woman who took care of slave children on the plantation of Colonel Edward Lloyd. When he was nine, he was sent to Baltimore where he lived with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Auld.

80. African American Registry For Thursday June 3rd 2004
February 14 1817 Abolitionist, Frederick Douglass, tireless humanitarian FrederickDouglass was born on this date in 1817. October 17 1817 Abolitionist, Rev.
http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/category/11/abolitionist
Thursday
June 3rd 2004 Home What Happened on Your Birthday? Search the Registry
by Category
... Contact This Date in History: November 10 1735
Abolitionist Abolitionist from his heart, Granville Sharpe!
Granville Sharpe was born on this date in 1735. August 6 1759
Abolitionist Philanthropist Paul Cuffe championed equality
This date celebrates the birth of Paul Cuffe in 1759. August 24 1759
Abolitionist British abolitionist, William Wilberforce
William Wilberforce was born on this date in 1759. March 13 1760
Abolitionist Thomas Clarkson was against slavery
The birth of Thomas Clarkson in 1760 is celebrated on this date. September 2 1766 Abolitionist James Forten, abolitionist and businessman James Forten’s birth is marked on this date in 1766. October 6 1767 Abolitionist Henri Christophe, revolutionary and King! On this date in 1767, Henri Christophe was born. December 31 1767 Abolitionist Slave revolutionary Denmark Vesey wanted freedom!

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