"I once knew a little colored boy whose mother and father died when he was
but six years old. He was a slave and had no one to care for him. He slept
on a dirt floor in a hovel, and in cold weather would crawl into a meal bag
head foremost and leave his feet in the ashes to keep them warm. Often he
would roast an ear of corn and eat it to satisfy his hunger, and many times
has he crawled under the barn or stable and secured eggs, which he would
roast in the fire and eat.
That boy
did not wear pants like you and I do, but a tow linen shirt. Schools were
unknown to him and he learned to spell from and old Webster's spelling book
and to read and write from posters on cellar doors, while boys and men would
help him. He would then preach and speak and soon become well known. He became
United States Elector, United States Marshall, United States Recorder, United
States Diplomat and accumulated some wealth. He wore broadcloth and didn't
have to divide crumbs with the dogs under the table. That boy was Frederick
Douglass." (Taken from a speach by Frederick Douglass promoting his
autobiography.)
Not long afterwards, Frederick was hired out to Baltimore, to work for the
Aulds. The Aulds treated Frederick kindly. They gave him food, clothes and
a warm bed to sleep in. Mrs. Auld even taught Frederick how to read. Mr.
Auld was not as kind as his wife. He thought that if a slave learned how
to read, "He'll get ideas out of books. He'll begin to think. Then he will
be unhappy with his life as a slave. He might even find out a way to get
free!" After hearing what his master said, Frederick vowed he was going to
learn as much as he could. He perfected his reading with discarded papers
from the gutter, street signs, posters and occasional lessons from neighborhood
boys. When he was twelve, he saved up 50 cents from shining shoes to buy
his first book, The Columbian Orator. One story would inspire him forever.
It was the story of a slave who argued so well with his master on the ills
of slavery that he was set free.
When Frederick Douglass turned sixteen, his master died. Douglass was left
to Hugh Auld's brother, Thomas Auld. Douglass then moved from Baltimore to
St. Michael's. For the first time, Frederick Douglass was whipped, starved
and forced to do field work. Not used to this type of treatment, he lashed
out. He was sent to live with the famous slavebreaker, Edward Covey. Covey
tried to work Douglass to death. Rain or shine, snow, heat, or hail,Douglass
worked. Covey even beat him so much that he bled and his back was raw. One
day, Douglass couldn't take it any longer. When Covey tried to beat him,
Douglass punched him. A fight ensued. Douglass was almost six feet tall and
had the advantage of great strength. He beat his master and overseer as all
the other slaves cheered him on. Covey never touched him again. Frederick
Douglass planned a slave revolt but it failed. Because of this, he was sent
back to Baltimore.
In Baltimore,Douglass got a job in a shipyard. He met some free African-Americans
who asked him to join a club called "the East Baltimore Mutual Improvement
Society." There he met his first wife, Anna
Murray. Frederick ran away to New
York. He met abolitionists and began public speaking. In 1895, he published
his autobiography. His owner, Thomas Auld, sent slave catchers after him.
Douglass was now the most famous runaway slave in the country. There was
nowhere to hide. So, he went to England, where he madae speeches. Abolitionists
there raised money and bought his freedom.
Douglass returned to America as a free man. He
started his newspaper, The North Star, a thing a slave was not allowed to
do. His house in Rochester became a stop on the Underground Railroad. He
became friends with such people as William Lloyd Garrison, Harriet Tubman
and President Abraham Lincoln. Douglass encouraged Lincoln to free the slaves,
just as he had been freed. Lincoln listened and issued the Emancipation
Proclamation. Douglass held many government positions until his death on
February 20, 1895.
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