Life and Times of Frederick Douglass

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Frederick Douglass 1892
English
  • Introduction
  • Author's Birth
  • Removal from Grandmother's
  • Troubles of Childhood
  • A General Survey of the Slave Plantation
  • A Slaveholder's Character
  • A Child's Reasoning
  • Luxuries at the Great House
  • Characteristics of Overseers
  • Change of Location
  • Learning to Read
  • Growing in Knowledge
  • Religious Nature Awakened
  • The Vicissitudes of Slave Life
  • Experience in St. Michaels
  • Covey, the Negro Breaker
  • Another Pressure of the Tyrant's Vice
  • The Last Flogging
  • New Relations and Duties
  • The Runaway Plot
  • Apprenticeship Life
  • Escape from Slavery, Part 1
  • Escape from Slavery, Part 2
  • Life as a Freeman
  • Introduced to the Abolitionists
  • Recollections of Old Friends
  • One Hundred Conventions
  • Impressions Abroad
  • Triumphs and Trials
  • John Brown and Mrs. Stowe
  • Increasing Demands of the Slave Power
  • The Beginning of the End
  • Secession and War
  • Hope for the Nation
  • Vast Changes
  • Living and Learning
  • Weighed in the Balance
  • Time Makes All Things Even
  • Incidents and Events
  • Honor to Whom Honor
  • Retrospection
  • Appendix
  • Later Life
  • A Grand Occasion
  • Doubts as to Garfield's Course
  • Recorder of Deeds
  • President Cleveland's Administration
  • The Supreme Court Decision
  • Defeat of James G. Blaine
  • European Tour
  • Continuation of European Tour
  • The Campaign of 1888
  • The Administration of President Harrison
  • Minister to Haiti
  • Continued Negotiations for the Mole St. Nicolas
Frederick Douglass published his highly acclaimed third autobiography, Life and Times of Frederick Douglass, in 1881 and revised it in 1892. The emancipation of American slaves during and following the American Civil War enabled him to relate in this volume more details of his life as a slave and his escape from slavery than he could in his two previous autobiographies, which would have put him and his family in danger. It is the only Douglass autobiography to discuss his life during and after the Civil War, his encounters with several American presidents including Lincoln and Garfield, his account of the ill-fated "Freedman's Bank", and his service as the United States Marshall of the District of Columbia and as U. S. Minister to Haiti. This masterfully written book is all the more remarkable because it is the product of one who as a slave was denied the right to any schooling. ~ Adapted from Wikipedia by Lee Smalley

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